Well, hello and welcome to the e commerce podcast with me, your host Matt Edmundson.
Speaker:Besides me is the beautiful, talented Sadaf Beynon again, the show's producer,
Speaker:here in our little mini series in August.
Speaker:I'm calling it a little mini series, Sadaf, because I can't think of a better
Speaker:name to call it, if I'm honest with you.
Speaker:It sounds more grandiose maybe than what it actually is.
Speaker:Uh, but we're yeah, we're here in august doing something a little bit different
Speaker:on e commerce podcast uh, we're chatting about some of the Workshops that we've had
Speaker:on e commerce cohort and the lessons that we have learned as a result of them If
Speaker:you're new to the e commerce podcast then e commerce cohort is basically the The
Speaker:thing that sponsors the e commerce podcast wants for better at the thing the thing
Speaker:that sponsors I need a better Better intro than that Um, but yeah e commerce cohort
Speaker:is part of what we do here It's like a monthly mastermind group with coaching
Speaker:and and all kinds of good stuff in it.
Speaker:And so that's what we Have every month we have an expert workshop and throughout
Speaker:August, we thought we'd do some shorter, smaller episodes where we just pick off
Speaker:some of the lessons that we've learned in cohorts, talk about those, gives you
Speaker:an insight into what cohort is, helps you understand it a little bit more,
Speaker:um, and also gets to profile some of the lessons that we've learned ourselves.
Speaker:In cohort, which is great and I just love talking about Ecom and also it means the
Speaker:episodes a little bit shorter Which is good during August as we're all probably
Speaker:doing other things in August on where we all sort of take August a little Bit more
Speaker:of a chill seat some of you listening to this because I know people listen to this
Speaker:around the world We're going no Matt.
Speaker:We don't we work really hard in August.
Speaker:Can you stop with this?
Speaker:We're taking August off nonsense I'm sorry That's you, but I,
Speaker:for one, I'm taking August off.
Speaker:So it's, um, it's good to be doing these.
Speaker:So yes, let's carry on.
Speaker:Sadaf, how are we doing by the way?
Speaker:Uh, cause we've not actually talked that much.
Speaker:We've just got on the call and said, right, let's start.
Speaker:We just hit the record button.
Speaker:Uh, and you got up late this morning.
Speaker:That's as much as I know.
Speaker:Just a little bit late.
Speaker:And, um.
Speaker:I've got my, I've got my coffee.
Speaker:So I've got my caffeine fix and we're good to go.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:In case you've not heard any of the other August episodes, by the way, Sadaf,
Speaker:who is the show's producer, normally works here in Liverpool, but is in.
Speaker:Canada at the moment visiting family and so you're working from Canada, hence the
Speaker:reason we look like we're miles apart.
Speaker:We're not in the studio and um, you're drinking coffee first thing
Speaker:in the morning and I've just, actually if I, if I, I show you this,
Speaker:I've just finished some ice cream.
Speaker:That was, that was on my desk.
Speaker:You're keeping that quiet?
Speaker:Yeah, well, you know.
Speaker:I don't like to brag.
Speaker:So yes, I had a bit of the old ice cream going on there.
Speaker:So, um, so yes.
Speaker:So cohorts, let's talk about a workshop from Cohort.
Speaker:Which one should we talk about today, Miss Producer?
Speaker:So, um, so today we are going to dive into the world of marketing
Speaker:personas, um, which we had a workshop that was done by Neil Hoyt.
Speaker:And, um,
Speaker:well, technically the workshop was inspired by Neil.
Speaker:Sorry, inspired.
Speaker:Yeah, I have to get, we have to get it right because it's
Speaker:going in the public sphere.
Speaker:Uh, it was a workshop inspired by Neil.
Speaker:This was a workshop that, um, Neil delivered at Subsummit and I was in
Speaker:the audience taking lots of notes.
Speaker:He was talking about marketing personas and I thought this is fascinating and
Speaker:I took lots of notes and spent a lot of time thinking about how it works for our
Speaker:e commerce business, reapplied them and that was a workshop that we delivered.
Speaker:So, uh, big thanks, big shout out to Neil, who is coming on
Speaker:the e commerce podcast actually.
Speaker:Uh, he's coming on the show.
Speaker:You're sorting that out, aren't you?
Speaker:I sure am.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:So he's uh, he's coming on, which is gonna be great.
Speaker:So Neil, if you don't know, is the chief measurement strategist.
Speaker:I think that's his title from Google.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:. So he's all things data, basically.
Speaker:He's a really clever dude, really nice guy.
Speaker:Give a really engaging talk as well as sub summit.
Speaker:I bet.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Top I
Speaker:top.
Speaker:So, um, Matt, maybe you can talk about what could possibly go wrong.
Speaker:If the marketing persona isn't constructed well
Speaker:This is interesting because what neil talked about the show you see when
Speaker:we comes to marketing and we talk about personas everybody Instantly
Speaker:thinks about my customer persona.
Speaker:Don't know they're like right we have eileen and eileen's
Speaker:in her mid 30s and she has 2.
Speaker:4 kids, drives around in a Volvo and lives in a semi detached house.
Speaker:And she reads Country House Magazine and she does this and she, and we
Speaker:start to build up this profile of our customers and we call them customer
Speaker:personas, helps us with the marketing.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:What Neil talked about, which I thought was really fascinating was not the
Speaker:personas of your end customer, but the persona of your marketing team.
Speaker:So the, the marketeers in your marketing team, which I appreciate
Speaker:for many business is the same person who runs the business and owns it.
Speaker:Um, but if you're like me and you're, you know, you're, you're privileged enough to
Speaker:have a marketing team, then the marketing team can fall into or marketing team
Speaker:members can fall into one of, uh, I think it was five personas that he talked about.
Speaker:Um, and I was, I have to be honest with you, when he was talking about
Speaker:them, I was, I was properly engaged because I, I saw myself in every
Speaker:single persona, uh, that he went through and I thought, Oh, that's me.
Speaker:Oh, that's me.
Speaker:Oh, that's me.
Speaker:I need to be aware of that.
Speaker:And so yes, he, um.
Speaker:He talked about these sort of five different personas,
Speaker:uh, and I just loved it.
Speaker:And the first persona was the one that just absolutely tickled me.
Speaker:And this is, the analogy that Neil used, which I thought was a great
Speaker:analogy, was This guy is The guy that goes into a bar on a Friday night, no
Speaker:one knows him, no one's ever seen him.
Speaker:No one even cares about him in a lot of ways.
Speaker:Just goes into the bar on a Friday night and literally goes
Speaker:around every single lady in that bar and says, will you marry me?
Speaker:Will you marry me?
Speaker:Will you marry me?
Speaker:And for that guy, it's, it's not about courtship.
Speaker:It's about.
Speaker:Um, getting the whole complete transaction done in one easy go.
Speaker:And so many times as marketers we do that.
Speaker:We market to people in such a way that we're literally asking them to marry us.
Speaker:It's like we've gone from zero to a hundred miles an hour, uh, instantly.
Speaker:And I thought it was a great analogy.
Speaker:Um, and you know, the obvious thing there is actually, do we just need to step back
Speaker:a little bit, engage in a little bit of courtship, uh, as they say, and start to
Speaker:woo potential customers rather than just going in and saying, Hey, listen, buy.
Speaker:buy.
Speaker:buy.
Speaker:Uh, and so yeah, it kind of went on from there really.
Speaker:So that's, I'm not going to lie.
Speaker:Uh, so yeah, really, really interesting conversation around that.
Speaker:Cool.
Speaker:So, um, I guess, uh, what we're saying is that, that if our personas aren't
Speaker:aligned properly, marketing personas.
Speaker:aren't aligned, aligned properly, then that's going to also misdirect
Speaker:the, the direction of the business.
Speaker:Is that right?
Speaker:Is that what we're
Speaker:saying?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:In essence, what he was saying is there are these ways that
Speaker:we can screw up marketing.
Speaker:And he used this concept of personas, um, like the guy who's in the bar.
Speaker:Um, he used another one that Uh, you know, another persona that always had the belief
Speaker:that they could make everything right.
Speaker:Um, that we could win, given enough time and enough energy, we could win
Speaker:everybody, which is not true in marketing.
Speaker:But one of the things that we find very hard to do in marketing is to,
Speaker:um, ignore some people on our email list for the benefit of others.
Speaker:In other words, we give everybody equal time, um, rather than prioritizing time.
Speaker:Towards those more valuable customers and giving them more time,
Speaker:giving them more attention, giving them more reason to buy from us.
Speaker:Uh, and that kind of action, that kind of behavior, which he described as
Speaker:these sort of these five personas, but it's behaviors, it's things that we do
Speaker:as marketeers, which sabotage sabotage is a better way to say that, isn't it?
Speaker:Sabotage, uh, marketing efforts.
Speaker:So, yeah, he, in essence, yes, it's that sort of thing that we do.
Speaker:That stops us performing.
Speaker:Well, in our marketing, um, and he, he used data from Google.
Speaker:Obviously they, they have a lot of data at Google and it's like,
Speaker:these are the, the, the key things that we see people fall in foul of.
Speaker:Um, and that was really, really interesting.
Speaker:Um, and so, yeah, that, that one, like I said about, you know, the person
Speaker:that believes that they can market to everybody, given enough time and energy,
Speaker:they can win everybody, which is not true.
Speaker:Um, but it is a belief that we have, that is a mistaken.
Speaker:belief, if that makes sense.
Speaker:Yeah, it does.
Speaker:Thanks for that.
Speaker:Um, I think he also introduced us to the concept of attribution.
Speaker:Could you talk about that too?
Speaker:This was hysterical.
Speaker:This was when, uh, you know, you, there's a conversation, Oliver raised
Speaker:it in his workshop, you know, we talked about Oliver and last week.
Speaker:Talking about metrics, right?
Speaker:And so how do you measure stuff in e commerce?
Speaker:And attribution is one of those things.
Speaker:It's one of those big things that people are really struggling to get right.
Speaker:Like how do we, you know, there's always a discrepancy between For example,
Speaker:if you do advertising with the Meta platform, whenever you go into Meta,
Speaker:it will tell you that it's generated this many sales, but you look on Google
Speaker:and Google tells you, no, no, no, no, they've generated that many sales.
Speaker:And then you look at your own platform and your own platform says, no, no,
Speaker:no, no, both of those are wrong.
Speaker:This is how many sales have been generated.
Speaker:And you're like, well, which one's right?
Speaker:Like how do we attribute a sale to a source?
Speaker:Because if we want to understand how well our.
Speaker:Google ads are doing or how well our meta ads are doing, then if we
Speaker:can correctly assign sales to those sources, we can then effectively
Speaker:measure our return on investment.
Speaker:This is becoming harder and harder to do, um, and something that
Speaker:Oliver touched on actually in the workshop in terms of attribution.
Speaker:But Neil also touched on this, uh, and this was a hysterical one.
Speaker:He gave an example, um, of a lady who bought a pair of shoes.
Speaker:Which, on the surface, sounds very trivial.
Speaker:Sounds very basic.
Speaker:Surely this lady just saw an ad, went on to the shop, bought the shoes.
Speaker:No, no, no, no.
Speaker:So, I think there was like two hundred...
Speaker:I can't remember the exact number, so I'm going to get it wrong.
Speaker:But in essence, there was like 260 different interactions this
Speaker:woman had with that company.
Speaker:From their emails, their social media, their website, their paid media, going
Speaker:around all these different channels.
Speaker:216 over a period, I think of it as like, yeah, over a period of like one
Speaker:to two weeks before she bought anything.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:And it's hysterical, right?
Speaker:Two hundred and for a pair of shoes!
Speaker:I've no I and I I I still struggle with this, but maybe that's what I do, I
Speaker:don't and maybe I just don't realize it.
Speaker:Um, ironically, I sent a pair of shoes back this morning, and I
Speaker:went on the website to have a look at some more shoes to replace the
Speaker:ones I sent back, and again...
Speaker:There was, I've purchased from them before, I've been on their website.
Speaker:They're now showing me those shoes, obviously on social media,
Speaker:because I've been on their website.
Speaker:I haven't yet purchased.
Speaker:They've got emails.
Speaker:Where do they attribute that sale?
Speaker:So even me, it's maybe not going to do 216 different, uh, you know, interactions.
Speaker:Maybe I'm just doing 30.
Speaker:I don't know, but it's a lot.
Speaker:And so Neil's question was, how do you attribute?
Speaker:How do you take a complex journey of 260 odd interactions and
Speaker:interacting with everything?
Speaker:At what point was the buying decision made?
Speaker:So how do we attribute the point where that lady bought the shoes?
Speaker:And the answer is you really.
Speaker:really cannot And so you just can't you just don't because it's all it's all
Speaker:connected it's all one big Ecosystem that's all sort of working together.
Speaker:And again Oliver touched on this.
Speaker:There are certain things you can measure and you should measure Um,
Speaker:and you should obviously try and attribute as well as you can, but you
Speaker:need to understand attributions not perfect and you need to look at your
Speaker:business as a whole, um, in effect.
Speaker:And so Neil was just basically talking about people that, that spend hours
Speaker:trying to credit sales to a one specific source where possible so
Speaker:they can measure return on investment.
Speaker:And that's just getting harder and harder and harder to do.
Speaker:So it can, um, help us understand our marketing efforts.
Speaker:But it doesn't necessarily Lay it all out for us.
Speaker:It kind of points us in the right direction Is that what attribution
Speaker:does then for a marketer?
Speaker:Yeah, like I say you can attribute stuff You can you can say right from Facebook.
Speaker:We've got had this many sales.
Speaker:I'm from Instagram.
Speaker:We've had this many sales It's not going to be tightly accurate and
Speaker:we can as long as we apply the same measurement techniques every Month,
Speaker:we're getting at least some relative.
Speaker:What Neil was saying and what I think is quite right is you cannot attribute
Speaker:Everything you just can't and so it's not it's not a perfect system And so yes, it's
Speaker:good to look at your ROI from Facebook.
Speaker:Yes, it's good to look at your ROI from Instagram or Pinterest or Google shopping
Speaker:or wherever you do your paid media.
Speaker:Um, but you need to look at your ROI as a company, as a whole, and
Speaker:bring all this together and, and not be so anally retentive about trying
Speaker:to get attribution bang on perfect.
Speaker:Um, and, and crediting the right accounts with the right
Speaker:numbers, if that makes sense.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, that does make sense.
Speaker:So marketing personas are, are, um, quite critical then to the, to a
Speaker:successful marketing strategy as well is what we're, what we're saying.
Speaker:Yes, we are.
Speaker:And that's exactly what Neil Hoyne was saying.
Speaker:I'm just going through his notes here, um, that we've got.
Speaker:Um, but yeah, he talked about.
Speaker:People who are great listeners but poor conversationalists.
Speaker:They capture a lot of data but don't know what to do with it.
Speaker:Um, which he says is deeply frustrating for customers.
Speaker:You've been on websites, I've been on websites where, um, they've asked you
Speaker:for some information and then again at some point in the future they ask
Speaker:you for that same information or that information in a slightly different way.
Speaker:You're like, well I've just given that to you, why do you not know this?
Speaker:Um, so he talked a lot about that.
Speaker:Um, he talked about the rational thinkers, which I thought was funny.
Speaker:That belief that consumers are rational when clearly they are very irrational.
Speaker:Um, and it was the perfectionist persona, the one that wanted to attribute
Speaker:everything, um, and have perfect data, but we don't live in a world where
Speaker:you can actually have perfect data.
Speaker:And so that was, so yeah, just going through.
Speaker:Um, some of his notes here, but he has got a book, Neil.
Speaker:Uh, so the bar persona, this, these were the personas, that's right.
Speaker:So the bar persona, we talked about the hopeless customer, romantic persona.
Speaker:Their optimism is that they can turn anyone into a perfect customer
Speaker:with just enough time, just enough effort, and just enough budget.
Speaker:And they treat everybody the same.
Speaker:Uh, which is just crazy.
Speaker:Um, so yeah, all kinds of stuff like that.
Speaker:But let me find you the, his book, um, because I've ordered it, it's arrived
Speaker:and I'm looking forward to reading it.
Speaker:Um, and the book is converted the data driven way to win
Speaker:customers hearts by Neil Hoyne.
Speaker:Uh, from Google, the chief measurement strategist at Google, and his book's
Speaker:got some great reviews, actually.
Speaker:Um, so I'm looking forward to reading that.
Speaker:Uh, but that was a great one.
Speaker:That really was a great one on, um, uh, on cohort is the word I'm looking for.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Sounds really informative.
Speaker:Is there anything else, Matt, that stuck out to you from his talk?
Speaker:Uh, one of the interesting things about Neil was the talk.
Speaker:As far as I understand, this was all hearsay and conjecture.
Speaker:I've not actually asked Neil about this yet.
Speaker:And I don't think Neil would tell me the answer.
Speaker:But there was this rumor going around at Subsummit that one of the
Speaker:keynote speakers couldn't make it.
Speaker:Uh, and as Neil was going on stage, the organizer's like, could
Speaker:you talk a little bit longer?
Speaker:And he pulled it, he pulled it out of the bag, no questions asked, no problem.
Speaker:No one knew any different and everybody thought you've just
Speaker:done a really engaging talk.
Speaker:So he's a very good communicator, a very good speaker.
Speaker:Um, it's, uh, it's, it's really fascinating how, how well he
Speaker:actually did that, you know.
Speaker:Um, but yeah, great guy, really great stuff that came through.
Speaker:And, um, yeah, we, like I said, we went through it a lot more in
Speaker:detail in cohort, but I think.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:When you listen to his notes and read his book, um, and then go, um,
Speaker:you, the question is, am I doing this in my e commerce business?
Speaker:Am I doing this in our marketing?
Speaker:So for me, they were the questions that we asked, what of these
Speaker:are we doing in our business?
Speaker:Are we like the bar persona guy?
Speaker:Are we like asking everybody to marry us on our first date kind of thing?
Speaker:And Sometimes we were, we were quite aggressive in some of our email campaigns.
Speaker:Um, and they've changed recently.
Speaker:Our email campaigns have changed.
Speaker:There's a lot more content, a lot more wooing.
Speaker:And I was talking to Shel about this this morning.
Speaker:Our email is killing it at the moment.
Speaker:Better than it ever has.
Speaker:Um, and so, so one thing sort of knocks on and leads it to another.
Speaker:So we've been around for years.
Speaker:Don't get me wrong, it's not like we're new to this.
Speaker:Um, but it's just great that you, you do something like this workshop
Speaker:and you hear from someone like Neil and you kind of go, Hey, Yeah,
Speaker:actually I need to think this through.
Speaker:What are the implications of that?
Speaker:And...
Speaker:Um, do we treat every customer the same or do we treat a higher value
Speaker:customer slightly differently?
Speaker:Are we wooing them in better and more efficient ways?
Speaker:And I think we were probably more on the side of the scale, which said,
Speaker:we're treating everybody equally.
Speaker:We're just sending everybody the same email newsletter.
Speaker:We're giving everybody the same offers.
Speaker:So what would happen?
Speaker:We didn't do that totally, but what would happen if we.
Speaker:If we focused maybe more time, more budget, more effort just on these
Speaker:customers over here and again.
Speaker:It's pain for us.
Speaker:So it's, yeah, yeah.
Speaker:It's totally worth doing.
Speaker:So we learned a lot actually from that, that workshop.
Speaker:I really enjoyed that one.
Speaker:It was very good for us.
Speaker:Like I say, just listening to his critique of marketeers, just from a
Speaker:data point of view, um, you know, using data to sort of figure it out and then
Speaker:just, uh, looking at your own business and examine it and thinking about
Speaker:what that means was very, very good.
Speaker:Very helpful.
Speaker:It was a great workshop.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:that's cool.
Speaker:Looking forward to having him on our podcast.
Speaker:Yeah, he's a legend actually.
Speaker:Yeah, really good.
Speaker:I'm looking forward to it.
Speaker:So we've connected, we've been emailing back and forth and I know
Speaker:you've been talking with his guys about getting him on the show.
Speaker:Um, and so yeah, looking forward to doing that.
Speaker:Do we have a date yet?
Speaker:We do not have a
Speaker:date yet.
Speaker:Uh, I can tell you we're going to record sometime soon though, maybe
Speaker:September, October time we're recording.
Speaker:September, September,
Speaker:October.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Looking forward to it.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:So I think we can end it there.
Speaker:That's bite size.
Speaker:End it there.
Speaker:That's bite size.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Is that what you said?
Speaker:That's it.
Speaker:Moving on.
Speaker:We're moving.
Speaker:Well, the show's producer said that's it ladies and gentlemen.
Speaker:So I'll tell you what I'm going to do.
Speaker:You can tell we talked this one through.
Speaker:I'm going to play this.
Speaker:Uh, music and just say thank you so much for joining us this
Speaker:week on the e commerce podcast.
Speaker:I hope you're enjoying your August wherever you are in the world and enjoying
Speaker:hopefully some sunshine and some rest.
Speaker:That's it from me.
Speaker:That's it from Sadaf.
Speaker:We will see you next week.