Ever feel like there's a better way to build?
Speaker:So do we.
Speaker:I'm Matt and welcome to the Mindful Builder Podcast, where we believe
Speaker:in education through storytelling.
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Speaker:breaking barriers and sharing our experience within the building industry.
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Speaker:Thank you so much for being part of our community.
Speaker:We truly appreciate you.
Speaker:And now onto this week's episode.
Speaker:Laura, thank you for coming on today.
Speaker:Um, I think you are coming on here to solve the marketing problem around
Speaker:high performance and passive house.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So go tell us where you're, tell us where you're from first, because we're recording
Speaker:here at Performance Membranes, right?
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:So, and the connection is
Speaker:I am from Sorted Digital Marketing.
Speaker:This is my, uh, company and we've been working with Devon and
Speaker:Justin at Performance Membranes for a good couple of years now.
Speaker:So we help out with all of their social media marketing, um, and yeah, sort of.
Speaker:Marketing this new business, ex expansion for them as well.
Speaker:Who do you enjoy working with more?
Speaker:Devon or Justin?
Speaker:Uh,
Speaker:who does the camera love more?
Speaker:Devon.
Speaker:Devon.
Speaker:Devon, I don't think just,
Speaker:I don't know if he's actually gotten in front of the camera like organically.
Speaker:I wanna see
Speaker:more Justin.
Speaker:We want, yeah, actually he hides
Speaker:down in Tassie.
Speaker:He is a hard man too.
Speaker:He does.
Speaker:Oh no,
Speaker:I can't make that a hold of 'cause I'm Tazzie.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:I will change that.
Speaker:And then he'll
Speaker:give you like three days notice that he is in Melbourne, Mike.
Speaker:Both,
Speaker:both are beautiful people.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:So, um, it's great having you on today because, you know, I would say that the
Speaker:more broader industry is probably not as nerdy when it comes to the details
Speaker:and the science and the spreadsheets and all that kind of stuff as what.
Speaker:Matt and I were attracted to in the beginning.
Speaker:Mm. And you know, we're sitting here 5, 6, 7 years later from when we first, um,
Speaker:started down that kind of high performance and passive house path and wondering like,
Speaker:why the fuck is not everybody doing it?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And there's probably some real, are
Speaker:you talking about consumers going down that path?
Speaker:I'm talking, I'm talking about
Speaker:consumers.
Speaker:I'm talking about what, yeah.
Speaker:Why hasn't it been Yeah.
Speaker:Like more broadly adopted.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I feel like more and more people are getting there, but, um, I mean,
Speaker:I like every, like, everything like marketing plays a massive
Speaker:role in actually telling the story.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Um, and you're probably
Speaker:also a good example because you probably came into.
Speaker:Performance membranes, working with the Proclama products,
Speaker:having no idea what they were.
Speaker:Absolutely no idea.
Speaker:Actually sound like another language, like extra or something.
Speaker:And I'm like, what the hell is this?
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:Um, so yeah, it's, it's taken a lot to come in with my marketing knowledge,
Speaker:but understand this whole new industry because it's not easy to understand.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I think that's what we're gonna sort of Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:Chat through today.
Speaker:So do
Speaker:you have to maybe talk a little bit about your background, um, and then
Speaker:how you got to be working with, uh, the guys from Performance Membranes?
Speaker:Yeah, absolutely.
Speaker:So, um, I've been running the digital marketing business
Speaker:for last nearly eight years.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So, straight out of uni.
Speaker:Just notice that there's a lot of awesome small businesses on the
Speaker:Mornington Peninsula that like no one really knew about online.
Speaker:There was a good bit of word of mouth, but just not enough.
Speaker:So I was like, they deserve more.
Speaker:And I was studying business at the time, so.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Business sort of, yeah.
Speaker:Came about.
Speaker:So you didn't
Speaker:go work for it, you just went straight into it From I went
Speaker:straight into it.
Speaker:I have never worked in corporate.
Speaker:I've never really had a boss.
Speaker:I
Speaker:love that entrepreneur.
Speaker:It's very, it's a very carpenter thing though, isn't I'm exactly the same.
Speaker:I've never had a boss.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I love it.
Speaker:No
Speaker:one, no.
Speaker:What tells me what to do do.
Speaker:So, so you, so
Speaker:are you, you big focus on, so you're obviously digital marketing agency.
Speaker:Are you pushing a lot of that stuff through social media?
Speaker:Is it web-based?
Speaker:Yeah, so
Speaker:organic social media has been our bread and butter for the last seven years, and
Speaker:now this last year we're really sort of transitioning into more other digital
Speaker:marketing services that compliment the organic work that we're doing.
Speaker:So
Speaker:for those who don't know what organic social media is, can you maybe just
Speaker:put a little bit of context in that?
Speaker:So
Speaker:when you are scrolling on your phone at night and you see posts
Speaker:on Facebook, um, that is organic, if you are scrolling on Instagram
Speaker:and it comes up with sponsored Yep.
Speaker:That is paid.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So it's everything that a business or a personal account posts on their
Speaker:newsfeed, it appears on their grid.
Speaker:It for a business is crucial to actually showcase who you are, what you do.
Speaker:And just create that almost parasocial relationship with the audience.
Speaker:And do you think as a, as someone who's worked with a lot of small
Speaker:businesses, um, that you need a nice balance of both sponsored or paid ads?
Speaker:My question, you've stolen it.
Speaker:Sorry.
Speaker:Uh, or, or organic.
Speaker:And what do you think works best?
Speaker:I
Speaker:think a combination does, ideally work best, but for the most part of
Speaker:like the last seven years, we have primarily worked with businesses
Speaker:that could only, um, afford in their marketing spend for, you know, creative
Speaker:photo shoots and organic posts.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:There wasn't actually the budget there to do, um, paid, paid ads.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So we actually started with, um, Emerald Building Services.
Speaker:Oh, Tim.
Speaker:Tim.
Speaker:Tim.
Speaker:Tim.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, down in Mount Eliza we met at a networking group.
Speaker:So yeah, it's been really cool.
Speaker:That was sort of my deep dive into like the passive house,
Speaker:high performance industry.
Speaker:Obviously coming with like PM.
Speaker:Yeah, it's been a whole new level of detail.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, but yeah, Emerald was really like the, the, the Guinea pig in
Speaker:terms of social media because Tim is willing to share information.
Speaker:He's great at speaking to the camera.
Speaker:He's got a lot of education and information to deliver.
Speaker:Tim's
Speaker:a great guy.
Speaker:And, and I wanna ask you, for someone who's come outta uni, you're not a
Speaker:builder, you're not a trades person.
Speaker:Not at all.
Speaker:And how, like, did the whole performance construction thing or passive
Speaker:house thing make any sense to you?
Speaker:Um, not for a long time.
Speaker:Can I ask you, can I
Speaker:ask you now, if you were to build your own home, what would you build?
Speaker:Oh.
Speaker:Um, would
Speaker:you, would you, would you adopt all of the things that you are seeing
Speaker:here now and put 'em in your home?
Speaker:Or would you just be like, oh, who cares?
Speaker:The code's not telling me to do that.
Speaker:I'll be able a coil
Speaker:if I'm living in there and that's, say in like five, 10 years, I'm building
Speaker:my dream home, which would ideally be down like toy, like the coast.
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:Then yeah, absolutely.
Speaker:Because as well, like those more coastal areas, they get impacted hugely.
Speaker:Um, so yeah, now understanding the longevity and also doing a couple
Speaker:of renovations myself with, um, investment properties and my partner's
Speaker:property, I can really see the dodgy works and the, the financial, um,
Speaker:situations and the stressful situations.
Speaker:It puts you in not doing it properly.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Yeah, I was just, I was curious to hear for someone who's sort of outside the
Speaker:industry and you know, I guess looking in and now kind of learning about
Speaker:it, um, I. Whether it kind of swayed you to, you know, build more durable
Speaker:and, you know, healthier buildings.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And it sounds like it has.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Well I think as I'm sort of growing and learning more as a
Speaker:business owner about numbers, I'm paying more attention to that.
Speaker:And I understand upfront it's more expensive, but if you think about
Speaker:potential renovations and all the works and upkeep because the build's
Speaker:just deteriorating because it's not done well and all of the other things
Speaker:like electricity costs and all of the other factors that, you know,
Speaker:the more high performance, um, energy efficient homes provide, like long
Speaker:term, it just completely outweighs it.
Speaker:So numbers, numbers, numbers.
Speaker:This is where I think the industry fucks up when we talk about building better
Speaker:because we throw out these numbers that make sense to maybe Hamish and myself.
Speaker:Um, and I always use, my wife, she's, she's a marketing too.
Speaker:I use, always use her as a bit of a test dummy to be like.
Speaker:Well, not even her anymore now, because she's sort of immune to my jargon.
Speaker:How do I use my friend who she scrolls and wants to see pre pictures?
Speaker:How do I capture her attention?
Speaker:Because the numbers do not appeal to her.
Speaker:No, absolutely.
Speaker:And it's, um, so the first thing with organic social media is understand
Speaker:who you're wanting to speak to.
Speaker:So create your customer avatar.
Speaker:Who are they?
Speaker:Where do they live?
Speaker:How old are they?
Speaker:What are they doing?
Speaker:What are their needs?
Speaker:And really like, almost like psychoanalyze it to the point of
Speaker:like what really triggers them?
Speaker:What are they needing and wanting for themselves, their family.
Speaker:And then, you know, as you say, the numbers aren't going to
Speaker:appeal to say a 45-year-old.
Speaker:Female who is the decision maker of the home.
Speaker:She wants more emotional, she wants to know that her kid with asthma is going
Speaker:to be safe and comfortable in the home.
Speaker:And that those huge energy bills are gonna, you know, decrease and that it's
Speaker:gonna afford them a more comfortable life.
Speaker:So it's really shifting the narrative from, you know, talking, just
Speaker:stuff that makes sense to fellow builders, to speaking to the end
Speaker:consumer at the end of the day.
Speaker:So this is an issue I have with builders and the way they market is that, how
Speaker:do I, how do I say this politely?
Speaker:Well, I won't, but you see, I see you haven't.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:You haven't ever been polite.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:So, alright.
Speaker:I'm gonna be really honest here.
Speaker:I see builders doing videos or, and maybe more specifically certain traits, but
Speaker:a video on a side about them whacking a wall together and, uh, this really
Speaker:curated, um, video that they put together
Speaker:with the, with the slowmo drop saw.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker:Who the fuck is that appealing to sword us?
Speaker:Honestly, like the client doesn't give a shit about that.
Speaker:Absolutely not.
Speaker:Like it appeals to other tradies and this is where, and they'll be
Speaker:like, oh, that's sick, good gear.
Speaker:But the reality is that trade doesn't pay the bills.
Speaker:Absolutely not.
Speaker:That
Speaker:follows you.
Speaker:Um, it does if you have a huge social following and you can make income
Speaker:from that, that means, but very slim
Speaker:chance that that's the case.
Speaker:But the reality
Speaker:is like, just because Instagram is sexy, and I'll get more into other
Speaker:social media channels in a second, but that doesn't mean it transitions into.
Speaker:Purchases because at the end of the day, we only need three
Speaker:or four people to buy a year.
Speaker:That's a client.
Speaker:We don't need the, the trad that constantly follows us and likes us.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:That's not, that doesn't pay the bills.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I think that's where we go wrong.
Speaker:And that's where you really need to come back to every single piece of content.
Speaker:You should have your core content pillars.
Speaker:So the key things that you are pushing with your key messaging,
Speaker:and then make sure that every single post relates to a customer avatar.
Speaker:So you could have say 45-year-old, um, Angela and that, and you've
Speaker:got her full customer profile.
Speaker:And then there might be 55-year-old Dave and his full customer profile
Speaker:and one of your, like each post needs to relate to either Angela or
Speaker:it needs to either relate to Dave.
Speaker:Otherwise, if you're just putting out stuff that you think is appealing
Speaker:as a builder, I can almost guarantee that like the everyday consumer who
Speaker:you want, you know, engaging you guys is not gonna be interested.
Speaker:And as well, is your content just.
Speaker:Talking to people in the industry, is it just trying to
Speaker:attract new like apprentices?
Speaker:If that's, you know, if you are flat chat and you just need staff cool.
Speaker:Go nuts with like the, you know, fun videos and the slowmo and this
Speaker:and that, but like the everyday person does not give a shit.
Speaker:So I've, I it's interesting we're having this conversation now.
Speaker:So I've, um, my VA does a lot of our marketing now and we're, every
Speaker:Monday we have a conversation around, um, you know, what we are
Speaker:putting out for the next month.
Speaker:And we're actually, we've just developed a report that we're gonna
Speaker:start doing, which is tracking a whole bunch of different metrics.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And ironically, how we run our social media is probably not as designed as
Speaker:what it might appear from the outside.
Speaker:So we've got kind of three key key posts that we do.
Speaker:Uh, Tuesdays are educational.
Speaker:Wednesdays are a collaborative, we do with sustainable Bills Alliance.
Speaker:Um, Sundays are nice pretty pictures and finished posts.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:In between we fill them in with some reels and stories and stuff like that.
Speaker:And it's interesting as we're starting to track all the metrics, um, the reels
Speaker:are getting by far the most views.
Speaker:They're, whenever we do a reel and, you know, it's hitting 40,
Speaker:50, 60,000 views, we're getting a massive uptick in our following.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Now, I have a theory on this and I'd love to kind of hear your thoughts about it.
Speaker:I am very well aware that the 40, 50, 60,000 views that we're getting aren't, I
Speaker:would say such a small percentage of them are gonna be, um, people will actually end
Speaker:up in a transaction relationship with me.
Speaker:And I've kind of looked at the numbers.
Speaker:And the metrics, you know, 95% of them are men.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And 95% of them, or a big percentage of them are 25 to 35 year olds.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Because they're, you know, looking at the social, um, they're, but that's
Speaker:also the, that's also the tra age.
Speaker:Exactly.
Speaker:However, our, um, educational ones are not getting anywhere near as many views.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Anywhere between five.
Speaker:You mean a sexy photo?
Speaker:No, no, no, no, no.
Speaker:The education one between five and 10,000 views.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:We're getting maybe just under a hundred likes.
Speaker:However, I know that those ones have a higher female
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Engagement.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Uh, and it's really fitting in with that profile with where our sort of
Speaker:target market or demographic sits.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, and even though they're not getting the likes or the views, they're probably
Speaker:resulting in more, um, brand identity, brand building, you know, credibility.
Speaker:Credibility.
Speaker:Um, and then our.
Speaker:Finished pitches are kind of just sort of wrapping a nice bow around
Speaker:the fact that, hey, we can educate, we can do these sort of videos showing
Speaker:that we can put stuff together.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And then at the end of the week, we're showing a finished mm-hmm.
Speaker:Project.
Speaker:Are you running like a 30, a 40, 30, 20 split?
Speaker:Sorry.
Speaker:Technical.
Speaker:Uh, like are you, are you working a, like a split between say real post
Speaker:carousel?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Well, not, and again, this is not by design, but I guess just from what we
Speaker:are seeing the data we're getting back.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:The reels are getting our followers up.
Speaker:They're getting engagement, which is great.
Speaker:I think I still want do that, but I'm not focusing heavily on five reels a week.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And getting a hundred thousand followers.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, but in your opinion, do you think it's the finished projects and the educational
Speaker:stuff that's that brand building, brand alignment kind of piece and the finished
Speaker:projects of, you know, oh hey, they can build what we want 'em to build.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Do you think their.
Speaker:The ones that are actually getting worked through the door.
Speaker:It's hard to tell because the decision making process, there's
Speaker:all these different phases that a consumer will go through.
Speaker:But the reason why everyone, when they talk about organic social media
Speaker:will bring it back to content pillars.
Speaker:And the reason it's not just content pillar, it's pillars is having
Speaker:diversity in your content because not everything will appeal to someone
Speaker:and be the checkbox in their brain.
Speaker:But can I jump in as well there?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Is it's just not diversifying the content.
Speaker:'cause when most pe if we were to do a, a survey out there, people would say, what?
Speaker:What's marketing?
Speaker:I'd say the high proportion people just say Instagram.
Speaker:There are actually other social media channels and other
Speaker:avenues of marketing as well.
Speaker:So I think that's also another thing is people just see
Speaker:Instagram as a marketing tool.
Speaker:There's so many other.
Speaker:Just like, there's different posts.
Speaker:Um, there's carousels, there's a, there's reels, there's stories, whatever.
Speaker:There's other options out there to push us across.
Speaker:And just Facebook, I just hate sitting on Facebook.
Speaker:That is my most hated social media channel because I feel like
Speaker:everyone is an armchair expert.
Speaker:And for some reason you have people listening to John at the pub and Susie
Speaker:from the hairdresser over the builder.
Speaker:I'm gonna digress just a tiny bit.
Speaker:So the metrics that I'm seeing are on Instagram and Facebook.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So in my,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:When I'm kind of going into the stats or whatever Yeah.
Speaker:I get trolled so much more on Facebook Oh yes.
Speaker:Than I do on Instagram.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Like.
Speaker:I'm talking like someone will say something and then there is
Speaker:hundreds of comments underneath.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Now I don't give a shit.
Speaker:'cause it's great for the algorithm.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So I'm just like, Hey, you bite back.
Speaker:Oh, I said to Lucy last night, I'm like, I just, I can't, I don't
Speaker:have the energy be more Matt.
Speaker:Ah.
Speaker:I don't have the energy for it, but, but Instagram on the other hand, much less.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So one thing that people need to really understand is each social media platform
Speaker:for every individual and every business account is gonna operate really different.
Speaker:We've got builders in the same industry.
Speaker:We've got builders from like, you know, Ballarat way to East Gippsland, a part
Speaker:of the GJ Gardner Homes franchise.
Speaker:And their insights are totally different.
Speaker:Interesting.
Speaker:So you can't just come in with these preconceived ideas of this
Speaker:is how Facebook interacts, this is how people interact on Instagram,
Speaker:because that's just your experience.
Speaker:I've hit Facebook a lot more recently because it's more of a boomer generation
Speaker:and they're the ones that have the houses and the ones that need to.
Speaker:Thought I have
Speaker:actually, I have actually thought about that.
Speaker:Our target market's probably spending more time than I'm,
Speaker:I'm, I'm, I'm not moving away from Instagram, but I, there are other,
Speaker:that's why I go to other options.
Speaker:Like you've got Facebook's, Facebook is a great tool.
Speaker:Um, and using the backend of the ads management isn't a hard software.
Speaker:It's not like Google Ads where like, I don't even know where
Speaker:the fuck to start with that.
Speaker:Like, that is, like, I try to play around with that.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, which is something I probably, I'll write that down.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:'cause I also wanna, 'cause I've, I've got so many notes around talking
Speaker:about different social media channels, but where, where are you finding
Speaker:value for money on, on these sort of things in marketing at the moment?
Speaker:So, with organic social media, there is no way to actually showcase
Speaker:the, you know, cost per click.
Speaker:With paid ads.
Speaker:You've got that.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So that's what I'm saying.
Speaker:Just going back to your point with a different type of content, the reason
Speaker:for having content pillars and that diversity is to, if someone needs
Speaker:social proof, you can tick that box.
Speaker:If they need credibility, you can tick that box medication.
Speaker:So what you're, what you are
Speaker:reeling off now are content pillars.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Correct.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So all of these different things will help with that consumer, um, decision making
Speaker:process to be able to get them feeling confident enough and whatever they need
Speaker:personally, whether it's that social proof or credibility or, you know, just seeing
Speaker:the, the beautiful homes that you guys create to be able to go and, you know, be
Speaker:like, Nope, I'm going with this builder.
Speaker:Well, Instagram is now I'll, I'm gonna use Instagram specifically here.
Speaker:Um, it's almost like a bit of a Google now that you.
Speaker:100% people
Speaker:type into cafe what's local and they can find their local cafe.
Speaker:Look at the food.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The video photos are tagged in
Speaker:with all of the AI integration.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So I want to talk about specifically alt texts and the SEO through an Instagram.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Say post or social media posts like Yeah.
Speaker:Because the way that you word your posts, the words that you use within that
Speaker:post, and this applies to architects, engineers, building designers.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Um, anyone really Builders tradies.
Speaker:The words that you are using have a really important, um, meaning
Speaker:behind, behind being found.
Speaker:Um, how, how have you found that?
Speaker:Because it's still, from what I've read, we're still working out how to navigate
Speaker:that through social media channel.
Speaker:Where if with Google, it's very easy, you type in sustainable builder and
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It comes
Speaker:up, yeah.
Speaker:Instagram, they're trying to give a fair go to people.
Speaker:That's though someone with five followers also has the same chance of being found as
Speaker:someone with a hundred thousand followers.
Speaker:But this space here, I'm trying to work out my brain, like how,
Speaker:how to navigate that section.
Speaker:Does that make sense?
Speaker:What I'm getting at
Speaker:a little bit.
Speaker:So in terms of the actual copy that you're putting with your social media
Speaker:posts, so many people either I feel like there's this big variation, either
Speaker:it's short, sharp and it really is just like, almost like a headline.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And it doesn't give you anything.
Speaker:Or there's this massive essay and that's also not suitable
Speaker:for social media generally.
Speaker:That's more appealing builder to builder on a technical aspect.
Speaker:So it's working out key words that, bringing it back to the customer avatar.
Speaker:What is, uh, 45-year-old Angela from, you know, Mornington searching for her family?
Speaker:What's, you know, 65-year-old Dave?
Speaker:Searching and actually working out what they're going to be putting in and
Speaker:having those keywords float somewhere in the caption, but also talk directly to
Speaker:them like you're having a conversation.
Speaker:And as well, you can use things like chat GPT to help with copywriting, but you
Speaker:really need to put so much information for it to actually sound authentic,
Speaker:because I can spot one a mile away and everyone else is getting, you know, in,
Speaker:in conclusion.
Speaker:Or they, the big one that I hate is you see them, they're even
Speaker:like, change their zeds to an S
Speaker:Oh, and the M dash and the, the craftsmanship.
Speaker:And I'm like, oh, that's all that word for me.
Speaker:Even,
Speaker:even the, even the, uh, emojis.
Speaker:Yeah, like, get rid of the, if you're gonna use chat pizza,
Speaker:get rid of the fucking emojis.
Speaker:The only thing that I will say.
Speaker:Um, is good is um, the, I think his name's Adam, head of Instagram.
Speaker:He's come out recently and said hashtags we're shortening these and we're three.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So it went from five, now it's going down to three and this will, it was 30 only a
Speaker:few months ago.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:This will continue to evolve.
Speaker:And this why I was gonna, I was gonna ask you about
Speaker:hashtag, so are hashtags still a thing?
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
Speaker:But that's a filing system though.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:And this comes back to the key words, but it also needs to, you can't
Speaker:now just have a set, you know, slab a 10 that you just copy and paste
Speaker:onto everything it needs to talk to.
Speaker:What's in the actual post.
Speaker:So say you are talking, so is that the old text
Speaker:behind it?
Speaker:Are you also, is that the same thing or a bit different?
Speaker:No different.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So you are saying your copy that sits underneath your post should talk to.
Speaker:The, with the message that you're trying to get across.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:And then your hashtags need to relate back to that post.
Speaker:Exactly.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Because you need to think about things.
Speaker:People consume content in a very, very different way.
Speaker:Some people consume it, literally sitting on the toilet,
Speaker:scrolling with no sound at work.
Speaker:So you've gotta have subtitles.
Speaker:It's every commercial
Speaker:training, isn't it?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So you've gotta have subtitles.
Speaker:Then if someone is maybe reading it, they're not even swiping
Speaker:through the carousel where you've given them the information.
Speaker:You then need to have it in the caption.
Speaker:So there's lots of different ways.
Speaker:So you need to basically assume that people are maybe a little bit silly
Speaker:and they're not going to consume it in the way that you've created
Speaker:it and like, you know, fail proof.
Speaker:It
Speaker:do.
Speaker:Do you wanna go onto alt text as well?
Speaker:In the Instagram post behind the scenes?
Speaker:No, no, no.
Speaker:Okay, cool.
Speaker:That's fine.
Speaker:Um, the, I'm curious, I don't wanna know what that is now.
Speaker:So if you go in the back, the old text is practically, you are writing the, this
Speaker:is my understanding could be a little bit wrong, is it's a bit like SEO but you
Speaker:are going into the backend of a photo.
Speaker:So when it goes through, 'cause I'm pretty sure now Instagram photos can al
Speaker:will also come from Google image search.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So you want the right words in your alt your photo.
Speaker:So we could be saying here, three people here sitting in a podcast
Speaker:with a blue membrane in the back talking about passive house.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So when that words get brought into the text, so it, it's, think about someone
Speaker:who might be, say, um, uh, blind, but they can click it and it reads out what's
Speaker:happening so they can under understanding.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:I think that's what it does.
Speaker:So it's actually categorizing the photo and you're describing
Speaker:the photo in the backend, in your settings before you upload the.
Speaker:I could be completely wrong.
Speaker:A lot of work.
Speaker:I think it's over engineering.
Speaker:It just, just, yeah.
Speaker:I've, I've, I've got, I've got copied.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:I copied.
Speaker:But the other thing I found really helpful with, with my social media posts is I
Speaker:went through probably about a year and a half of every single post, copied all
Speaker:the content into a Word doc, and then it took me a long time and then uploaded in,
Speaker:I created my own AI bot that essentially now writes and helps me write in the
Speaker:same tone and format for each post.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I've got, um, one of my, um, AI writing tools.
Speaker:I've put so much information for one of my clients who's also my
Speaker:business coach, and it actually sounds like he's talking to me.
Speaker:Yeah, that's like, it's, it's freaky.
Speaker:So that's how you should use
Speaker:AI as an assistance tool for social media.
Speaker:Yeah, definitely.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It's all about the information and, and where they're
Speaker:drawing that, that data from.
Speaker:So, um, Matt and I are passive house builders.
Speaker:You know, I would say a lot of our audience are passive house builders.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:I wanna know from your outside opinion.
Speaker:And I'm not gonna target and say Australian Passive House Association.
Speaker:I'm just gonna say passive house in general.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:What do you think passive house in general is doing wrong?
Speaker:From a marketing point of view,
Speaker:it's just way too technical.
Speaker:You are talking to people in the industry and they're not your
Speaker:consumers at the end of the day.
Speaker:Can you give an example?
Speaker:Um, there's just so much content out there that is just way too detailed.
Speaker:It's like, here's every little step and.
Speaker:Here's
Speaker:the number
Speaker:of this.
Speaker:Here's the heating demand of your house.
Speaker:No one gives a fuck.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Like even a blower door test, the average person doesn't understand
Speaker:what the purpose of that is.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And why this big machine and all the smoke and everything is being done.
Speaker:Like, they're like, what, what wizardry are you doing in the home?
Speaker:Like it's, but
Speaker:describe it in a text.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So
Speaker:you can educate through that platform and be like, Hey,
Speaker:do a voiceover in like a way that
Speaker:actually relates.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So this, so this, this is a good one.
Speaker:Let's, let's, let's, let's sit on lower doors for a second because, um, I know
Speaker:you would've experienced with Tim and you would've experienced with Devon as well.
Speaker:In my opinion, I think it's a thing that you actually want
Speaker:to be communicating with people
Speaker:100%.
Speaker:But how would you sell it?
Speaker:How would you make it engaging?
Speaker:Like if I've got a blower door test, how would you recommend
Speaker:to us and the audience to make
Speaker:that engaging?
Speaker:So
Speaker:we're gonna get like 300 very similar posts on social media now.
Speaker:So we recently did one for, um, it'll be coming out soon for
Speaker:JJ Gardner Homes in Warragul.
Speaker:And they went through the entire home and we filmed probably 15 little clips.
Speaker:And then we have got, um, the company that did it for them and the director
Speaker:speaking and doing a voiceover.
Speaker:So basically combining from a building perspective to the homeowner what
Speaker:they're doing, and then adding in the technical information as well.
Speaker:But do that later off
Speaker:site.
Speaker:You don't need to do the voiceover as they're doing it.
Speaker:This is the hard part.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:'cause
Speaker:we, we will go and edit it and then be like, cool.
Speaker:You've got like 35 seconds.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Like you need to put, you know, this, this, and this into it.
Speaker:So hook body of information and then your conclusion wrap up CTA.
Speaker:Cool.
Speaker:Hook.
Speaker:Great word.
Speaker:Are you using negative hooks or are you I love a negative hook.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:I feel like the world we live in is so, uh,
Speaker:well, if you think about it, like a new, like an, you know, old school
Speaker:tabloid, like all the negative ones are gonna get the clicks.
Speaker:I'm gonna get something up.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Keep talking.
Speaker:And all the positive ones are so far down.
Speaker:So, so
Speaker:I, I, you know what, I know that this is the case, right?
Speaker:And if you look at like, Matt's strategy, right, with some of his
Speaker:social media, lots of negative books.
Speaker:And I think for a long time I was like, that's not me.
Speaker:You know, I'm not, I don't, I don't, you can
Speaker:have fun with it though.
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:Look, I know you can have fun with it and like, I just want to
Speaker:exist in a world where we don't have to use a negative book.
Speaker:Alright,
Speaker:so words of negative hooks.
Speaker:These are the ones like loophole, unhinged, hidden, like taboo,
Speaker:forbidden, scam, warning, banned.
Speaker:Breakthrough.
Speaker:Like controversial.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Those words.
Speaker:If you start with a post.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Do you stop yourself?
Speaker:I know, I know.
Speaker:You wouldn't believe what I found on site today.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So, and like it.
Speaker:If we break it down, I saw something recently and it was like we are
Speaker:actually like almost training the audience to be like little monkeys.
Speaker:Like being like, Ooh, like I need this, like to, it's a massive dopamine hit.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:To grab my attention and then like, you know, I need to give them a hook
Speaker:and I need to give them this and this.
Speaker:And it's like if you really break down like our attention span, um, it's
Speaker:like three seconds and how we're, you know, interacting with social media
Speaker:and how we use it in our daily life.
Speaker:It is a little scary that we really need this very like, curated type of
Speaker:content delivered to actually like alert something in our brain to consume
Speaker:it because we are fed so much that our attention span has just decreased.
Speaker:I had this conversation literally with my wife last week about her
Speaker:grandparents, like 92 and nine three, and they just like, happy as Larry just
Speaker:sitting like, and totally with it too.
Speaker:Like can communicate about anything.
Speaker:But the ability that I'm like, don't they get bored?
Speaker:Like when we're older, we're gonna have Netflix and we can sit on the
Speaker:couch and still scroll on Instagram.
Speaker:They're just happy, just sit and watching whatever comes on tv.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But their attention span is just so much like they happy
Speaker:to sit and read a book all day.
Speaker:And
Speaker:I think technology has, uh, decreased our patience and it's made us want to
Speaker:live in like a frictionless society.
Speaker:Anxiety driven.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So everything is just smooth.
Speaker:And I was listening to a podcast recently and they're like, oh, you know when
Speaker:you're going out for a night out and you're waiting for the taxi to come, like
Speaker:you didn't know when it was gonna come.
Speaker:And like, that was the best like, fun time.
Speaker:Now if your Uber's like two minutes late, you're freaking out and
Speaker:like, it's ruined you tonight.
Speaker:And I think it, it does tie back into social media.
Speaker:Like we want everything like in two seconds.
Speaker:And it's a competitive market.
Speaker:Anyone can open up an account, anyone can post and share their information.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:and it doesn't have to be right either.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:So you've gotta be in it, you've gotta be authentic and deliver it in a way that.
Speaker:You know, resonates and you'll sleep well at night.
Speaker:But as well, you've gotta be smart about it.
Speaker:And if you are doing things in a, maybe a slower, long form,
Speaker:it's probably not gonna take off.
Speaker:I, I wanna go back to this whole conversation around why
Speaker:passive house doesn't sell.
Speaker:And I don't even wanna put the word passive house.
Speaker:I wanna use like, building better.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Because you'd think with the words building better, people go, oh,
Speaker:I want to build a better home.
Speaker:But they don't, and I don't, I've been playing this, my wife's in marketing,
Speaker:I've been throwing ideas at her for like two years about like, just
Speaker:why it won't resonate with people.
Speaker:And apart from the cost side of things, I, I do.
Speaker:Where do you think we start?
Speaker:Because I still don't being so see it being solved anytime
Speaker:soon on this conversation.
Speaker:Um, I think we need different platforms other than just Instagram
Speaker:to get this message across.
Speaker:Podcasting a huge one.
Speaker:YouTube massive.
Speaker:I think it's simpler than you think.
Speaker:So I'll give you an example.
Speaker:At a networking group, Tim from Emerald building, he, um, he's changed his
Speaker:slogan, so I can't remember what it used to be, but it's your future built
Speaker:better, which I think is really strong.
Speaker:It's focusing on, you know, building a better future for you and your family.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So he um, he changed his tune recently and he looked at the window and
Speaker:said, you know, 'cause we were at a venue and it was all sort of like
Speaker:condensation and he explained why it shouldn't be like that and how it
Speaker:should be, and gave some like really relatable information with a visual.
Speaker:And then the next meeting, the week later, do you know how many
Speaker:conversations he was having?
Speaker:Everyone's like, oh, my home does that.
Speaker:It shouldn't be doing that.
Speaker:Oh yeah.
Speaker:Can we have a conversation?
Speaker:Like it was just something relatable that everyone could understand.
Speaker:And then he provided the information.
Speaker:Mm. So again, work out who you are talking to.
Speaker:Stop talking to everyone.
Speaker:Like they're in the industry, they know what, you know, X designer
Speaker:is and a blower door test and this and that, and this rating.
Speaker:Like you need to talk to them in ways that's going to evoke, you know, emotions
Speaker:within them and what's important to them.
Speaker:And it's generally their family generally these days.
Speaker:Cost of living.
Speaker:Um, so cost of
Speaker:energy.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The thing is, everyone these days.
Speaker:Need.
Speaker:Like, if you run a business, you're also a content creator.
Speaker:Now, most people don't know how to be a content creator, so you need that.
Speaker:Like, so Hamish, she's an
Speaker:influencer.
Speaker:You need that third party to come in.
Speaker:That doesn't, I mean, pro
Speaker:probably
Speaker:fancy boy,
Speaker:how much do you charge for a brand deal?
Speaker:Um, actually well that's another good one.
Speaker:I've got so many questions.
Speaker:Alright.
Speaker:I can't, can we, can we skip off social media for two seconds?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Because I wanna go to other main, other ways of marketing.
Speaker:Do you wanna like websites, um, SEO Yeah.
Speaker:Uh, digital marketing, all those, like other edms and stuff like that.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So with marketing these days, there's so many different options.
Speaker:Um, what everyone needs is a solid website to start with.
Speaker:That is just basics 1 0 1, and then making sure that you've got
Speaker:your Instagram, your Facebook.
Speaker:Um, I'd say these days, TikTok or YouTube as well, depending on, you
Speaker:know, content that you wanna do and how hard you're wanting to push.
Speaker:But also service based
Speaker:TikTok is probably more like I would say, or product based
Speaker:is more TikTok, is that right?
Speaker:Um, no, I wouldn't say that.
Speaker:I think services as well because you can share who you are, your
Speaker:knowledge, what you're doing.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You know, job updates, like it's, and we work predominantly with service-based.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:We need to get really creative 'cause we've got not a physical
Speaker:like product that we can Yeah.
Speaker:You know, take pretty photos of.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, so.
Speaker:Covering your social media, covering your website, and also these days,
Speaker:you've just gotta remember that your website is still really important, but
Speaker:it's probably not as important as it was five, 10 years ago because we've got AI
Speaker:and it's pulling all of the information from literally everywhere, whether it's
Speaker:an article or a Facebook post, um, or, you know, parts of your website or a
Speaker:review, review where you're mentioned.
Speaker:All of that is coming into someone's search.
Speaker:When they're asking a question, it will spit out all these bits and bobs
Speaker:and you'll see the links as and, and
Speaker:people now search through Gemini.
Speaker:I've started doing it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So
Speaker:I haven't probably told you this over the last year and a bit.
Speaker:All my marketing has been based on being searched through AI means.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:Actually, another another thing just on ai, um, you know, those like, uh, the
Speaker:things where it says, I'm not a robot.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I, from what I understand there, those are probably things that you should not have.
Speaker:On your website anymore, say someone's filling out a form.
Speaker:'cause people are gonna generate robots that are gonna go and fill forms out.
Speaker:Um, so ticking I'm not a robot is probably something you should potentially remove.
Speaker:I don't know if I've got that.
Speaker:I don't think I have it either.
Speaker:So anyone Yeah.
Speaker:But getting found on a
Speaker:website now, I, and like, so I've done a ton of work over
Speaker:the last five years on SEOs.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Um, through our backend.
Speaker:I think it just, I, I felt there was a, uh, in the building industry,
Speaker:like from a builder that people would make the website and leave it, but
Speaker:for a certain amount of generation.
Speaker:And still, I think to these days, the, I think people still still search website.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That's what I'm saying.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:We're seen a massive uptick in the
Speaker:website since we've started playing around with seo.
Speaker:The last few.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:These people just get naive and they're like, nah, everyone just uses
Speaker:Facebook or they just use Instagram.
Speaker:And I'm like.
Speaker:No, they don't like stop pigeonholing yourself.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You need to just 'cause everyone else is
Speaker:doing it and it looks sexy.
Speaker:'cause that's what everyone else is doing.
Speaker:Doesn't mean you that that might, yeah.
Speaker:Does that work for your specific business
Speaker:and the people you are trying to engage and educate?
Speaker:So here's,
Speaker:here's, here's a question for you.
Speaker:What are some of the key things that you would tell every
Speaker:builder to have on their website?
Speaker:Well,
Speaker:architect as well and anyone
Speaker:really just what are some of the things that you would be putting on your website?
Speaker:Oh, just your basics.
Speaker:Like have an about page that actually showcases your team.
Speaker:You've gotta humanize your brand.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:Have clear outline of your services in like normal, like understandable
Speaker:terms that is not full of jargon.
Speaker:Um, also outline your process and how people work together.
Speaker:And this is something that Emerald have worked really hard on recently,
Speaker:is actually a really smooth process of the flow from start to finish.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Everything that they can help with.
Speaker:Um, something that they need to have on every single page is call to action.
Speaker:An inquiry button, something like you need to have at least one of those
Speaker:per page, um, high quality imagery, high quality video content as well.
Speaker:Question on that.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Doesn't now social media prioritize phone, like your phone over
Speaker:a curated piece of content?
Speaker:Um, I wouldn't say social media prioritizes it.
Speaker:I think us as consumers associate more high quality content with a paid dad.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So we are more likely to go stop selling me stuff, even though we
Speaker:haven't even like read anything.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So it's just you.
Speaker:What about, what about blogs and newsletters?
Speaker:I think blogs and newsletters are fantastic and I think if you're
Speaker:not doing that, like it's Yeah.
Speaker:You're missing out.
Speaker:Something we should do.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:As well.
Speaker:Newsletter on.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Collecting that database.
Speaker:Like be smart.
Speaker:Like if you've got, you know, a thousand contacts, do something with, with it.
Speaker:We
Speaker:actually have three, three newsletters that are rolling out over Christmas.
Speaker:So we're starting in December, uh, actually maybe we're starting next month,
Speaker:so we're starting to roll out newsletters.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Because the best thing that you can do, 'cause especially with
Speaker:builders and architects, like your price point is quite high.
Speaker:You're not selling like a thousand dollars something or a, you know, 50 buck candle.
Speaker:You need to really provide value.
Speaker:Well, Amy a Amy has a candle business
Speaker:on the side.
Speaker:She really, no, it's really, it's really nurturing that client
Speaker:through that whole process.
Speaker:Hundred percent.
Speaker:So at the end of it, they're happy to spend one, two, $3 million and a half.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:They want
Speaker:information.
Speaker:And as well, especially with the building industry, it has a bad rap,
Speaker:um, the last couple of years because builders have gone under, there's
Speaker:so many dodgy builders out there.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Just a quick side note, have you guys seen that building
Speaker:inspector that goes through a Yeah.
Speaker:Oh, okay.
Speaker:We won't mention that.
Speaker:We'll, couple.
Speaker:No, no, no, no.
Speaker:I just, I,
Speaker:I personally like what he's doing, but don't like what he's doing.
Speaker:I think the issue I have with it is also champion the good stuff.
Speaker:I think that like I get what it's selling and stuff.
Speaker:I love that you say that when we spoke about negative hooks, 'cause that was
Speaker:actually an idea for a client is to like, pretend that we're doing like the negative
Speaker:but like point out all the positives.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I, I also, I wish I hadn't just destroyed my pen then I also write in the, I also
Speaker:have, um, I be very careful what I say.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:when have you been careful with No, no, no.
Speaker:I was actually get canceled.
Speaker:But like No, no.
Speaker:But
Speaker:like there's a lot of claims that have been made that are
Speaker:not true and legally not true.
Speaker:And there's court issues.
Speaker:I also have, yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:And I, I, I just so much wanna say that I'm not gonna, I'm not gonna, are we,
Speaker:are we talking specifically about this?
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker:I, yeah.
Speaker:I can't, I don't wanna say it 'cause
Speaker:it's like legally I could get in trouble.
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:Back story.
Speaker:Um, but yeah, so I think like, I, I love what he's doing in the
Speaker:industry to make aware of what's happening using those methods.
Speaker:I don't believe everything you see as well.
Speaker:I think, do you know what, I think that
Speaker:the positives out of it, it's actually making people more aware Yes.
Speaker:Of, yes.
Speaker:Of what a fault looks like.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And where to, because people aren't gonna get up on their
Speaker:roof and look at a box gutter.
Speaker:Oh.
Speaker:If I was a client every single project I'd have it, I'd get an independent inspector.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Straight out.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Like what?
Speaker:Like it's not to like, and hey, work with the builder,
Speaker:don't work against each other.
Speaker:Like, let them know working with them.
Speaker:Um, it's something we've thought about implementing, is actually
Speaker:including one in our build costs, but just building so expensive.
Speaker:Um, anyway, back to marketing.
Speaker:Um, what was my question?
Speaker:I, I wanna go back to the, the, the high performance thing Yeah.
Speaker:And the passive house stuff for a second.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So give us a couple of tips, maybe just a couple of little, little ideas
Speaker:that kind of gonna get some juices flowing around, some kind of content
Speaker:that's not spreadsheets, that's not number, that's not blow door results.
Speaker:Like mm-hmm.
Speaker:Sell it to who?
Speaker:Who are we selling it to?
Speaker:Dave.
Speaker:Dave and Angela.
Speaker:Dave and Angela.
Speaker:Why Dave and Angela?
Speaker:Um, no idea.
Speaker:It just came to my mind.
Speaker:Angela's my mom's name.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But perfect.
Speaker:Sold to herself to, I like to humanize it because.
Speaker:This becomes less of like this random thing that you are, you know,
Speaker:putting in an office and like you're creating it in an office and it's
Speaker:just going out on the interwebs.
Speaker:Like, it really, the inters creates a connection.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker:Um, so it gives,
Speaker:it actually focuses your attention on, on, on what you're doing.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Well, what's Angela looking for?
Speaker:Exactly.
Speaker:What's Dave looking for?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Angela's a, you know, mom of four.
Speaker:She's, you know,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:Tell us.
Speaker:In fact, tell us about Angela.
Speaker:Let, tell us about Angela.
Speaker:She's single.
Speaker:No,
Speaker:no, I didn't mean as your
Speaker:mom.
Speaker:I meant it as like the appetite.
Speaker:Angela.
Speaker:Oh no.
Speaker:Sorry, I'm not asking.
Speaker:Fuck.
Speaker:I didn't mean it.
Speaker:I didn't mean it that way.
Speaker:Is they single?
Speaker:Like, uh, I was like, I swear you mentioned a wife, but Oh,
Speaker:no, didn't mean, so Angela, so, so I want to, I want, like, if someone's
Speaker:creating an avatar, like tell me some of the things that they should be doing.
Speaker:So Angela, mom of four.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So she staying home?
Speaker:Uh, no.
Speaker:Or she had a working, working part-time.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So what's income, occupation?
Speaker:Uh, education.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:What her needs are.
Speaker:What her wants are.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So what does she actually need?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And then what would she really like?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And then what is she doing as well?
Speaker:How do you know what,
Speaker:what they need?
Speaker:Because I think that's where the barrier is.
Speaker:You should be talking so much to your consumer that you know what they need.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Like, I know exactly what my clients need.
Speaker:You.
Speaker:You could, so one of the things that we've done recently is gone back and
Speaker:looked at the age, occupation, number of kids, uh, area that I've bought.
Speaker:We've done some research on price, house pricing, pricing in the area.
Speaker:But all those stats is great, but the, the best thing is the conversation.
Speaker:Like, pick up the phone and be like, Angela.
Speaker:Angela,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:Angela.
Speaker:Like, what, what do you need?
Speaker:Like, do you, are you all good with this side of things in terms of education?
Speaker:Do you need a, you know, closer step through on like,
Speaker:the process in how we do this?
Speaker:Like, you need to work out
Speaker:to your current, but we're trying to hit clients that aren't ours yet.
Speaker:Yeah, so this is why content pillars and actually showcasing a little bit
Speaker:of like the actual service, a little bit of the process, a little bit
Speaker:of like a project update, a little bit of a, you know, a motive client
Speaker:testimonial, um, an education piece.
Speaker:And you're building this, you are almost like building a puzzle.
Speaker:And each, um, puzzle piece is a different content pillar that you
Speaker:are doing to sort of give them an overview of the entire business.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Making it frictionless.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:I like that.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:so in terms of content ideas, I do have a couple that I was working on earlier.
Speaker:Health is a big thing.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Especially for families.
Speaker:So talking about mold, asthma, um, and if you bring it to kids or pets, like
Speaker:I literally have a whole Grand Designs episode on this.
Speaker:Like, the thing is like, that's what a, B, C obviously saw value in.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That like, they just didn't want another passive house.
Speaker:The whole conversation is on health.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:People like,
Speaker:yeah, exactly.
Speaker:Um, another one is like comfort.
Speaker:So a lot of people live in, you know, they're wearing puffer
Speaker:jackets inside because it's so cold and it's too expensive to put.
Speaker:You know, the heater on or it's just stinking hot and you've gotta like pull
Speaker:out the fans from the garage every summer.
Speaker:So comfort is a big thing.
Speaker:Um, another one is obviously cost of living and running costs.
Speaker:Um, everything's getting more and more expensive, so
Speaker:actually breaking things down.
Speaker:Um, and a real life example is, so we work with a heat pump manufacturer.
Speaker:Um, who's that?
Speaker:Eco Nova.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:I know
Speaker:Econ Nova.
Speaker:Econ Nova.
Speaker:Um, so,
Speaker:um, by gas use.
Speaker:So my grandparents, they're down in Rosebud and everything,
Speaker:they're on gas for a lot.
Speaker:And my nan has started the conversation with my grandpa saying, I think we
Speaker:should, you know, get on the rebates and, you know, switch over to electric.
Speaker:And he's like, nah, I've heard horror stories.
Speaker:We're gonna be out without, we won't be able to have a warm shower for six months.
Speaker:And I'm like, PA, I could book you in in like three days time.
Speaker:Like.
Speaker:I, it, it's small, small plug, small plugs.
Speaker:Anyone, anyone wanting to, uh, electrify their home, goodbye gas.
Speaker:Goodbye gas.
Speaker:But,
Speaker:so this is going back to the face.
Speaker:This is probably a little bit of a loop back.
Speaker:One step forward, two steps, uh, one step back, two steps forward
Speaker:that you have the issue with people listening to those negative comments
Speaker:in the Facebook groups around, oh yeah, I'll be out with without power.
Speaker:Or, those things don't work, but there's no verification behind the comments
Speaker:that come and we just can't sit there.
Speaker:And
Speaker:No, but that's why social media is important because you have to be active.
Speaker:You need to be posting at least two, three times a week, otherwise you post
Speaker:are own gonna plummet to the bottom.
Speaker:You just gotta own it.
Speaker:Like I've,
Speaker:it's a constant feat of information
Speaker:I've been playing around with that.
Speaker:I actually sort of slowed down my commenting and, and replying in
Speaker:stories and stuff and reached up like hundred K, like just bang, like still.
Speaker:And like it was fluctuating.
Speaker:Yeah, yours is really high for, I was sitting around 1.2, 1.3 per month and
Speaker:it just, like, I wanted to see if I didn't do something, what would happen
Speaker:and Yeah, you drop down to like 500 K.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So, so, so getting back to what I was saying before about, um, like,
Speaker:certainly reels are something that we see our engagement, you know, go up.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It's when you drop them off.
Speaker:But, but, um, what, what I'm, what I want to say to you is like, having 1.3 million
Speaker:means fuck all views means nothing.
Speaker:If people aren't ringing, you could, yeah.
Speaker:This was what I was wanting to say before.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Little light bulb moment.
Speaker:But people get so wrapped up in like, just like this, lots and
Speaker:followers.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Don't be hit.
Speaker:Like, don't
Speaker:be vain.
Speaker:Don't let like your ego take control.
Speaker:Like if you get a hundred views, think about this room with a hundred people.
Speaker:You would be like stoked that they're hearing what you are saying.
Speaker:So if it's the right a hundred people Exactly.
Speaker:And then 10 people come up and have a conversation after, and then
Speaker:two people, you know, engage you.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:That's a massive win.
Speaker:Yeah, totally.
Speaker:Do people just get wrapped up in this number and I'm like, you need
Speaker:to realize, like, those funny, like social media trends, they work for
Speaker:exposure and just more awareness.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:They're not all gonna be your ideal clientele.
Speaker:Well, this is exactly the point I was making earlier on about Yeah.
Speaker:We, do we still do a reel?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:'cause I know that it increases engagement.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I know that it puts us up the top of people's algorithms.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But, and that's, you know, tens of thousands of views
Speaker:versus a few thousand views.
Speaker:But I know which ones they, they, these people here are
Speaker:the ones I wanna be nurturing.
Speaker:Mm. The smaller audience.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Because they're actually engaging in things that I believe in.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:The things that I wanna sell as a business.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So, and also put something out on your stories where you can ask like,
Speaker:do you enjoy this type of content?
Speaker:Do you enjoy this type?
Speaker:And constantly reassess, like minimum, do it quarterly and
Speaker:actually review your stats.
Speaker:Look at what's working, what's performing, who your audience is.
Speaker:Is it who you actually wanna be attracting?
Speaker:Because if you're wanting to attract 40 to 55-year-old females on the
Speaker:Mornington Peninsula, but you've currently got 25 to 30 5-year-old
Speaker:males that are, you know, city way.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:There's a major disconnect and your content's not actually appealing
Speaker:and engaging the bright audience.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And
Speaker:like I look at it like if you have a hundred views and you get one
Speaker:person that signs up and I have 1 million views, I don't get anyone.
Speaker:I'd rather be the a hundred.
Speaker:Like what's the, what's the saying here?
Speaker:Having a hundred percent of the peas better than having 1% of the watermelon.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:But this, this was, I guess the question I was asking before,
Speaker:like should we do a spread?
Speaker:All of all of it?
Speaker:Like should, is there a strategy around, um, getting followers and engagement
Speaker:and does that then potentially feed back into opening up, uh, I guess your
Speaker:real fo your real, um, target audience?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:There isn't a clear cut formula.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:And I think social media, like we don't have complete control.
Speaker:It's the platforms and the algorithms, but then like we obviously can
Speaker:share what we choose to share.
Speaker:I think diversity is the best.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And then constantly checking in with like, what's your best performing post?
Speaker:Is it engaging the right audience and constantly checking in and tweaking
Speaker:it, but you don't need to overkill it.
Speaker:Like you can have a strategy and stick it through for three months and then
Speaker:check in and see what's happening.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Obviously if like it's completely plateauing and it's not.
Speaker:You know, having an uptick do something about it.
Speaker:But it's like each social media page is so unique.
Speaker:What works for you might not work for me.
Speaker:And play
Speaker:with ideas.
Speaker:Yeah, try something new.
Speaker:Like just do something fun.
Speaker:The other thing I fucking hate is like, we've been copied heaps and that's okay.
Speaker:That means we producing good quality content.
Speaker:The thing is like, don't be afraid to try.
Speaker:Try something that hasn't been done before.
Speaker:It might not work.
Speaker:I do it all the time and sometimes like, well that was a flop.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But sometimes you're like, oh, okay, I've got something.
Speaker:You can build on that idea.
Speaker:And it's often for social media, like the ideas that you really didn't
Speaker:spend much time thinking about.
Speaker:I a hundred
Speaker:percent those work, you've got the best idea and you're like, you
Speaker:curate it and it's like, perfect.
Speaker:Oh my god, this one's gonna go off.
Speaker:And no one likes some.
Speaker:Some of my best posts have just been an idea that came into my head when
Speaker:I'm working around the get house.
Speaker:You know, the garden.
Speaker:You know, if I sit down and try and think about it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I can't think of anything.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But I'll just be like, oh, that's a good idea.
Speaker:I would, in fact, as as we were talking now, I've had an idea
Speaker:of a post that I'm gonna do.
Speaker:What is it?
Speaker:I'm not gonna say,
Speaker:I'll tell you, I'll tell you after this.
Speaker:So I, I wanna ask, what do you think the trends are gonna be in marketing in 2026?
Speaker:I think more authenticity, given how rampant AI is.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I think more human connection and actually hearing people speak.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And deliver valuable information.
Speaker:And also like the fuck ups.
Speaker:I hope you don't mind me swearing.
Speaker:No, no.
Speaker:But the fuck ups, like if it's like you're gonna have to edit that out.
Speaker:Episode's fucked down.
Speaker:Fuck.
Speaker:But like, people love seeing, like if you're doing like an and sign and then
Speaker:the next sentence you write and like, it almost the things that we used to
Speaker:criticize 10 years ago, grammatically is almost more attractive because you're
Speaker:like, oh, a real person wrote this.
Speaker:Like it's speaking to me and it feels more personal.
Speaker:So I think the personal, more authentic route is definitely where we're going for.
Speaker:So this is 26.
Speaker:This is where I also,
Speaker:I know we've spoken about automation of our processes.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I've kind of gone back to old school,
Speaker:so, so this is, so you get, I'm probably digress on.
Speaker:Yeah, I know.
Speaker:So I do have, I do have a kind of theory on that too.
Speaker:I think automation is really important and I think AI is a
Speaker:really amazingly powerful tool.
Speaker:100%. But
Speaker:you absolutely need to have personal touches.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So one of the things that Anne's working on is a series
Speaker:of surveys from our QBE stage.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:All the way through to our handover stage.
Speaker:And there's little checkpoints along the way.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Where we are encouraging.
Speaker:Uh, so a person is emailing, please fill out this survey.
Speaker:Give us your feedback.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And we'll respond.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And also phone calls, like just giving them a call and seeing how they're going.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The best ways that I have exited the wrong people in my business is calling
Speaker:up and actually like, really checking in with clients to see are they feeling the
Speaker:love, are we, you know, over-delivering.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:If it's anything short of that and like, I can't train up the
Speaker:person, then I will exit them.
Speaker:Ruthless.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I love it.
Speaker:Um, it's gotta be
Speaker:done.
Speaker:What else?
Speaker:What else do you think that, like, do you see like,
Speaker:um, can, can I have a question?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:A question.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So video.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So I do a lot of reels where I've, I'm, I'm talking
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And I'm usually doing it in one take.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And I'm showing people some, you know, uh, stuff.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And generally they're getting anywhere between 20 to 40, 50,000 views.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:You wanna know how to increase that?
Speaker:Well.
Speaker:I mean, yes and no.
Speaker:Do I care?
Speaker:Maybe, I don't know.
Speaker:Is there a bit of an ego thing there?
Speaker:Yeah, it'd be nice.
Speaker:Yeah, it'd be nice.
Speaker:But what it, so putting my face there, is that making any difference?
Speaker:Do people wanna see a person?
Speaker:Yeah, 100%.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Yeah, so, so
Speaker:the thing with filming social media content is you've got your visual hook.
Speaker:So that's what it looks like and what you're doing.
Speaker:Are you jumping into frame is, are you like, you know, putting the mic
Speaker:on the end of a banana or a hammer or something funny and talking.
Speaker:Then there's the audio hook.
Speaker:So this again is like, you know, you wouldn't believe what
Speaker:I found on site this morning.
Speaker:And then in terms of like keeping stuff entertaining, you're meant to
Speaker:change the frame every two seconds.
Speaker:Oh wow.
Speaker:The edits app is the best for this.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:See, so the other thing is, and with the edit app, it's the Instagram app, or you
Speaker:can just go through, you don't know how many videos you've got on your phone.
Speaker:Oh, you've got hundreds thou, thousands, you can go past and
Speaker:just edit and add 'em all together.
Speaker:And then you got new content and all you do is do the voiceover.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:A lot of my content is the same shit.
Speaker:I just change the videos.
Speaker:Do you
Speaker:know how much you can actually maximize from certain pieces of content?
Speaker:Like there is just so much you can do like a big voiceover, you can
Speaker:do a shortened one where it just features this certain section.
Speaker:What are these all
Speaker:the same re they just get changed the Yeah.
Speaker:No, no, I've, I mean
Speaker:I've, I've seen them 'cause I've,
Speaker:yeah, yeah.
Speaker:But you just like, it's like it's making your life easier too, and
Speaker:there's so many tools to actually cut out a lot of the work.
Speaker:It's not that
Speaker:hard.
Speaker:You need a strategy and then you need to actually execute it and
Speaker:Yeah, don't change it after a
Speaker:week.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay, so, so video tick, um, curated videos or.
Speaker:Self filming videos,
Speaker:um, self filming.
Speaker:The only tendency I see in the building industry is people waffle.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I'm like,
Speaker:40 seconds max.
Speaker:Come on.
Speaker:Like, let, let's make it a bit more punchy.
Speaker:I think it's more authentic, but it needs to be a little bit more punchy.
Speaker:You need to know what you're filming.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Um, don't just go, oh crap, I need to film something for social media
Speaker:and just waffle on about They're
Speaker:the ones that always work.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So this is, this is the bit I find challenging, right?
Speaker:'cause I might film something and I, I remember I filmed something a
Speaker:couple of months ago and I'm like, oh fuck, I need to get a reel out.
Speaker:Mm. Because I haven't done one for a week or so.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I just filmed a site update and I had like a hundred thousand views.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I'm like,
Speaker:you've gotta remember there's no simple calculation.
Speaker:And
Speaker:this is kinda what I'm getting at.
Speaker:Like, yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So we had
Speaker:a, we had a video recently.
Speaker:I looked at it this morning for a builder in Ballarat.
Speaker:And the video that's performed 10 times better than all the other content is
Speaker:literally like a sped up as SMR version of this, um, this corner piece of
Speaker:timber being cut out for flooring and a little hack because it was sped up
Speaker:and it was as SMR and it just was like,
Speaker:so, so this is, this is probably interesting 'cause I don't know if you
Speaker:watched the video that Bambi sent us the other day about the YouTube stuff.
Speaker:Um, and, and you might, this might resonate with you and it definitely
Speaker:resonates with me now 'cause I sit down and watch YouTube all the time
Speaker:with my son and it is sped up, like things getting built and we're totally,
Speaker:I dunno, our algorithms like got like log and stone cabins getting
Speaker:built in the middle of the bush.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:But it's sped up and Bambi called them hammer taps, hammer tap content.
Speaker:'cause you can actually hear the hammer tapping and it's like, yeah.
Speaker:You know, it's like tap, tap, tap, tap, tap.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And things going together.
Speaker:And I'm like, there's something.
Speaker:Mesmerizing about, it's
Speaker:the as smr, like
Speaker:what's asmr?
Speaker:Oh.
Speaker:Like, you know, when you like do this, like, and some people like love the
Speaker:sound or like the perfect example.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So it's, you're like chiseling out timber.
Speaker:Like it's the feeling.
Speaker:So it's
Speaker:the ta So it's ta tap, it's the audio.
Speaker:So it's the audio where it's like dead silent and then you just hear like,
Speaker:that's what I, that so, so that's exactly what I'm saying.
Speaker:It's like someone on the portal and you put a camera, a video.
Speaker:Uh, I find something really mesmerizing about, you know, them why using a saw.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And
Speaker:cutting it and the sound of the saw going through.
Speaker:But it's, but it's, uh, or even like
Speaker:the carpet cleaning videos, I don't know if you've seen them, but
Speaker:those filthy rugs getting cleaned.
Speaker:Oh, I love them.
Speaker:Where they just the whole time spit up.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I'm like, I, I don't even know.
Speaker:I've actually, I've got two rugs in our house, but I would
Speaker:never let my rug get that dirty.
Speaker:But two, I'm like, oh my God, this is so fascinating.
Speaker:Or the mower guy.
Speaker:Will they just Oh,
Speaker:I love that.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Will they just
Speaker:fast track mowing?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I've got no
Speaker:interest in mowing.
Speaker:Fucking love it.
Speaker:Uh, I was about to show my ages something and I, um, I can't remember the name.
Speaker:Like
Speaker:retirement home's getting built.
Speaker:You're wrapping yourself up there.
Speaker:Anyway, we have to start racking this up now.
Speaker:We have a segment on this podcast called The Mindful Moment, sponsored by MEGT,
Speaker:aray leading apprenticeship experts.
Speaker:Both Hamish and I have our, um, three now.
Speaker:Yeah, three.
Speaker:I've got two about to have a third signed up with them.
Speaker:Um, I know we've got some conversations in the background
Speaker:about doing better, uh, things for apprentices and changing the system.
Speaker:But this week my, I've been working on, and one of my team come to me,
Speaker:uh, carpenter recently and said, we've gotta give a guide to apprentices.
Speaker:And we spoke about this on another podcast about how to guide them
Speaker:to become good tradespeople.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:So something we've started to develop as a boss is a plan to get them there.
Speaker:Um, it's a bit ruthless, like you are, they're not good.
Speaker:You exit them.
Speaker:But the whole idea is to provide them a step by step, year by year of their
Speaker:apprenticeship, where they should be at.
Speaker:So a first year, by end of a first year, you've gotta have this toolkit.
Speaker:You've gotta be this far into your apprenticeship by studying,
Speaker:we expect you to do 30 minutes of extracurricular learnings per week.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:30 minutes.
Speaker:30 minutes.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:30 minutes of extra learning.
Speaker:This, this is nothing.
Speaker:It's not, it's like a car ride.
Speaker:It's a podcast.
Speaker:There you go.
Speaker:But we want to get them into the habit in getting better.
Speaker:And then second, you're gonna have these tools.
Speaker:Third year we want you involved.
Speaker:Uh, we want you in, uh, like a cert four fourth year.
Speaker:We just want you completing it and being prepared to be a junior carpenter.
Speaker:So we are creating a pathway with our team to pretty much set a non-negotiables
Speaker:and KPIs for our apprentices to be ready to enter the real world.
Speaker:Um, and it's ruthless.
Speaker:This, it, it's very simple that I said to the kid coming on that if
Speaker:you don't tick all these boxes, you won't have a job after the first year.
Speaker:They're not hard.
Speaker:They're, it's spending a certain, we've got like a certain table in there
Speaker:of how much percentage of your wage.
Speaker:Uh, like, and it might be like 5%, it should be spent on tools
Speaker:and it shows the amount of dollars per e it's like 15 bucks.
Speaker:Mm. Uh, it, it was presented to me by one of my team.
Speaker:Um, and I thought it was an awesome idea.
Speaker:Love it.
Speaker:So we kind of got through that.
Speaker:Anyway, to get onto you Laura, how do we contact you?
Speaker:Um, we're gonna dub you into speak at the passive house conference next
Speaker:year and present on why the passive house market can't market, passive
Speaker:house and just, and just really
Speaker:quickly
Speaker:the
Speaker:services that you offer.
Speaker:Yeah, of course.
Speaker:So, um, I run sort of digital marketing.
Speaker:We are based in South Melbourne, however, we service clients.
Speaker:All over the country and we have for the last nearly eight years,
Speaker:we do social media marketing.
Speaker:So we do management of that and we also do a DIY package to train
Speaker:up your team, um, or your admin team to get that off the ground.
Speaker:We do content creation, so all the raw iPhone, fun content, educational,
Speaker:and then we also do, um, high quality professional content as well.
Speaker:So it's like a wide range of packages that you can have.
Speaker:Yeah, and
Speaker:everything has various options, so it can appeal to any budget, any requirement.
Speaker:Um, we've got paid support for Google Meta, LinkedIn, TikTok.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, email marketing as well, so leveraging those databases.
Speaker:Um, and then we are also doing influencer marketing.
Speaker:And I know some people might, Amy Sheron.
Speaker:Influencer marketing and then PR and events.
Speaker:So really that holistic marketing.
Speaker:And we've got specialized teams in each department.
Speaker:And then I'm sort of the one above trying to manage it, you know, merge everything
Speaker:together and be a part of each project.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:Thank you for coming on.
Speaker:Yeah, thank you so much.
Speaker:You need to reach out to you sorted.com au
Speaker:sorted digital.com au
Speaker:and Instagram
Speaker:um, at under sorted.
Speaker:Perfect.
Speaker:Thank you for coming.
Speaker:I'm sure we'll have you on.
Speaker:Again.
Speaker:Thank you much.