They want to use things as they want to use them.
Speaker:They wanna stop using them as they don't want to use them.
Speaker:And I always joke, like they wanna live on the beach one month,
Speaker:and then like three months later they wanna go live in the city.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So they're renting more.
Speaker:They don't necessarily, they don't buy cars, they lease cars.
Speaker:Look at all the streaming services.
Speaker:Use them as you want.
Speaker:Cancel 'em as you don't want to use them.
Speaker:Everything has moved to this model because subscriptions provide convenience.
Speaker:And that's what our next generation's about.
Speaker:Welcome to the e-Commerce podcast with me, your host, Matt Edmundson.
Speaker:The E-Commerce podcast is all about helping you deliver e-commerce wow.
Speaker:And to help us do just that, I am chatting with today's guest, uh, Chris George
Speaker:from the subsummit.com, and also from the Subscription Trade Association about how
Speaker:subscriptions improve customer experience.
Speaker:Yes, we're gonna get into all subscription stuff, uh, but before
Speaker:Chris and I dive into our conversation, uh, let me share with you, uh, my
Speaker:previous podcast pick, the three Ps.
Speaker:Oh yes.
Speaker:The previous episode that I think you're gonna enjoy.
Speaker:Based on today's topic, check out how to increase your customer retention.
Speaker:The ultimate guide, uh, and everything you need to know to take over with
Speaker:subscription e-Commerce, with Evan Padgett, uh, it's just gonna add to
Speaker:the conversation, uh, and you can access my podcast pick, uh, it's just
Speaker:not easy to say, is it, uh, on our, and our entire podcast for free on
Speaker:our website, eCommerce podcast.net.
Speaker:Plus, if you are there, sign up to the newsletter and we'll send you our links
Speaker:to our podcast Picks, the notes from today's conversation with Chris, the
Speaker:links, everything just gets delivered straight to your inbox, all at no cost
Speaker:to you, which I think is pretty amazing.
Speaker:Now, uh, Chris, I'm sure you've come across a bunch of folks stuck with their
Speaker:e-commerce website, or they've got siloed into working on just one or two areas of
Speaker:their business and miss the big picture.
Speaker:Well enter e-commerce cohort solve this particular problem.
Speaker:It is a membership group which you can join if you are in e-commerce,
Speaker:which is gonna help you cycle through all the key areas of e-commerce.
Speaker:The sole purpose of which is to provide you with clear and actionable jobs to be
Speaker:done so you'll know what to work on and you'll have the support to get it done.
Speaker:So whether you are just starting out an e-commerce or if, like me, you're a bit
Speaker:of an e-commerce dinosaur, uh, then I encourage you to definitely check it out.
Speaker:You can find out more information at ecommercecohort.com, have a look at that
Speaker:because what they're doing is great.
Speaker:I'm a part of it.
Speaker:Uh, love being a part of it.
Speaker:Uh, and in fact we just, we've got some great guests doing
Speaker:some great, uh, workshops and cohorts, so it's gonna be awesome.
Speaker:Anyway.
Speaker:Enough about me.
Speaker:Let's meet Chris, the unstoppable serial entrepreneur who has
Speaker:successfully launched and managed seven businesses and has sold two of them.
Speaker:Uh, he's the mastermind behind the wildly popular gentleman's
Speaker:box and hosts his own podcast.
Speaker:Oh, yes, he does.
Speaker:We're gonna get into what his podcast does, what it's all about.
Speaker:We're gonna get into this, uh, subsummit.com.
Speaker:I'm really excited, Chris, to have you on the show.
Speaker:Welcome man.
Speaker:Great to have you here.
Speaker:How are you doing?
Speaker:I'm very well.
Speaker:Thank you for having me.
Speaker:Oh, no worries.
Speaker:It's great.
Speaker:It's great to have you.
Speaker:So let's just dive.
Speaker:What, tell us about your podcast.
Speaker:Let's start off there.
Speaker:You're a podcaster yourself.
Speaker:Yeah, I can tell actually by the, by the, the gear.
Speaker:Uh, you know, and you have people cuz if you're watching
Speaker:the video, you'll see, right?
Speaker:There are some people that come on with just like AirPods and you kind
Speaker:of think, okay, you've not really done many of these, but not you.
Speaker:No, no, no.
Speaker:You've got a bunch of tech.
Speaker:So, uh, tell us about the podcast and what that's all about.
Speaker:Yeah, it's a subscription podcast.
Speaker:You know, we, my background is in subscriptions and we run
Speaker:the largest event in the world for all consumer subscriptions.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So it was only fitting that we'd have a podcast around subscriptions.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And it's, uh, you know, me and my co-founder Paul, we jump on, we chat
Speaker:about relevant things that are happening.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Twitter, coming out with the Twitter blue and how that's a subscription
Speaker:and you're seeing more and more brands pivoting to the subscription model.
Speaker:So it only makes sense that we'd have some sort of podcast around that.
Speaker:But you know, I always say, I think we think we're funnier
Speaker:than everybody else might think.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:Us watching it is always great, but it's um, It's relevant to
Speaker:what's happening within e-commerce.
Speaker:Yeah, it's everything subscription.
Speaker:More and more brands are pivoting to the subscription model.
Speaker:So we're, you know, we stay at the forefront of that.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And we do that through a large event.
Speaker:We do that through our podcast.
Speaker:We do that through written content, all the above to keep us as a
Speaker:leading voice within the space.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It's interesting, isn't it, that you are, um, The, the, the podcasting.
Speaker:Um, and how actually that does help you become a sort of a leading, like you say,
Speaker:the leading voice, uh, in an industry.
Speaker:And I'm a, I'm a big fan of podcasts for that reason.
Speaker:Uh, but like you, I probably think I'm funnier than I actually am when it
Speaker:comes to, when it comes to the podcast.
Speaker:Uh, so, so yeah, I mean, it's what have you.
Speaker:I appreciate this is a show about e-commerce, but uh, it's always
Speaker:nice to speak to a fellow podcaster.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:What are some of the key things that you've learned from podcasting that you
Speaker:kind of wish you knew when you started?
Speaker:You know what?
Speaker:I think, um, I think a lot of it's the basic stuff, right?
Speaker:Like being consistent, having relevant content, you know, and I, I don't know
Speaker:that it's anything that's special, right?
Speaker:It, it's the consistency, it's the relevant content.
Speaker:It's using clips from the podcast to drive more people to watch it.
Speaker:I think you have to love it, right?
Speaker:Like, don't just podcast because you think you should podcast, right?
Speaker:You hear that all the time.
Speaker:Like someone's like, oh, I'm gonna start a podcast.
Speaker:And then I also think.
Speaker:Everybody probably thinks that they're more entertaining and
Speaker:funnier than they really are.
Speaker:And so I always will joke, like people will be, oh my
Speaker:God, that podcast is amazing.
Speaker:And I'll be like, look, you know me when I hear about like some person that's like
Speaker:in California that doesn't know who Chris is and like thinks it was really good.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Then I'll feel really good about it.
Speaker:Um, but.
Speaker:I think you, you do it because you like it.
Speaker:You don't do it because you think you're supposed to.
Speaker:I think you do it because you like it.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:You know how you can use that within your business or industry
Speaker:and really have purpose behind it.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Some people run podcasts so that they can build relationships with others.
Speaker:They build podcasts as lead gen, right?
Speaker:There's gotta be some sort of purpose, uh, And drive around why you're doing it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:What's the end goal?
Speaker:It's not always just viewers, it's not always listeners.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And I think people get caught up on that.
Speaker:So, you know, I think for me it would've been, I wish I did it five years ago.
Speaker:Right, okay.
Speaker:Instead of doing it out.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So we were so focused on so many other things, and I think that.
Speaker:We're seeing consumer's attention is, is all on the phone, and being
Speaker:able to put clips together that drive them to a larger format podcast
Speaker:longform video, use the short form to drive them to longform as mm-hmm.
Speaker:A recipe they should be doing.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Because one one hour podcast, you might pull 30 clips from it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You can pull a lot from one episode.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:No, we do exactly the same thing.
Speaker:You just, you pull a lot of the clips out of it, which is just wonderful.
Speaker:So why, why subscriptions?
Speaker:So you've got this event Sub Summit, which is the largest, uh,
Speaker:event to do with subscriptions.
Speaker:We'll talk about that.
Speaker:You've got your podcast, the subscription podcast.
Speaker:I'm spotting a theme with the word subscription.
Speaker:I'm not gonna lie, Chris.
Speaker:Um, so why subscriptions?
Speaker:How did you get into that?
Speaker:Was that by accident or was it by design?
Speaker:Well, I'll say why subscriptions because every e-commerce brand
Speaker:should have a subscription model.
Speaker:But I got into it because I was originally the co-founder and CEO of the Gentleman's
Speaker:Box, which was a subscription box for men.
Speaker:We sent you ties, dress socks, tie clips, all delivered to your door monthly.
Speaker:This was 2014 when subscription boxes were still relatively new.
Speaker:Yeah, we had a partnership with GQ Magazine very early on, and you
Speaker:know, I sort of identified that consumers were looking for value.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:It's easier to retain a customer than to acquire a new one every single month.
Speaker:And if I can consistently build a relationship with a customer with
Speaker:my subscription, that was the way I was going to be able to compete with
Speaker:the amazon.com and the walmart.com.
Speaker:Cause I'm gonna provide them with an experience that you
Speaker:can't get on a retail level.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:That worked well, that got accord in 2020, but in that time, we
Speaker:identified nobody was cultivating this community within subscriptions.
Speaker:And that's when we started Sub Summit.
Speaker:And I think that becomes very important because, Gentleman's box was.
Speaker:Was like the launchpad for what?
Speaker:Us having a product within an industry to us then leading the whole industry.
Speaker:And now you're seeing every brand nearly from Mercedes-Benz
Speaker:to Porsche to Microsoft office.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:You know, five, seven years ago you paid $500 for that program, or maybe you lied
Speaker:and said you were a student and got it for 150 bucks, but now you pay a monthly fee.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I, and the big reason for that, This next generation of consumers
Speaker:are about usership over ownership.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:They want to use things as they want to use them.
Speaker:They wanna stop using them as they don't want to use them.
Speaker:And I always joke, like they wanna live on the beach one month,
Speaker:and then like three months later they wanna go live in the city.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So they're renting more.
Speaker:They don't necessarily, they don't buy cars, they lease cars.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Look at all the streaming services.
Speaker:Use them as you want.
Speaker:Cancel 'em as you don't want to use them.
Speaker:Everything has moved to this model because subscriptions provide convenience.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And that's what our next generation's about.
Speaker:They don't, I joke, but Gen Zs don't have to work hard for anything.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:You want food, you just DoorDash and it's at your door.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:You wanna drive somewhere, you jump in an Uber.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:10 years ago you couldn't do that.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And so subscriptions are a big reason why that works.
Speaker:That's why I'm a big proponent of it.
Speaker:And, and like I said, you're seeing more and more brands
Speaker:that are pivoting to the model.
Speaker:So this is really interesting.
Speaker:So when you started out, the gentleman, uh, the gentleman's
Speaker:box, uh, and the subscription model was definitely back in 2014.
Speaker:Was, like you say, it was around, but it was not properly around.
Speaker:Um, at that point I saw a few things like the beauty box and, you know,
Speaker:those kind of sort of things start to come out and people were like,
Speaker:I, yeah, this, you know, I, I could see how people found it attractive.
Speaker:It seemed relatively cheap and relatively convenient to, to sort of get it.
Speaker:And so you are, you are, you've got the business and you kind of think,
Speaker:oh, we could do this around the gentleman's box, what was, and then
Speaker:you did it to 2020, is that right?
Speaker:So you did that for sort of over six years.
Speaker:Let's jump into the nitty gritty a little bit.
Speaker:Um, uh, Chris, if you don't mind, so what if I'm an e-commerce business and
Speaker:I don't have subscription uh, as part of my arsenal, what are some of the,
Speaker:sort of the key lessons that you've learned that I should really think about?
Speaker:Um, when I, when I do start?
Speaker:When you do start a subscription or when you go start an e-commerce brand?
Speaker:When you start a subscription yeah.
Speaker:I mean any, I mean, if you,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:I mean, look, if I'm an e-commerce business that I'm already selling
Speaker:products and I wanna say, well, how can I build a subscription model around it?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:I think it becomes what is something that I can provide the consumer monthly,
Speaker:or quarterly, or bimonthly, whatever that cadence might be, that's going to
Speaker:provide the consumer value that's going to keep them engaged with my brand.
Speaker:Yeah, I think it becomes very important.
Speaker:Nobody, I don't care who you are, you start, you have an e-commerce
Speaker:company, you're never going to sell something cheaper than Amazon will.
Speaker:You're never going to ship it to the consumer faster.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:But the way you're gonna separate yourself from them is by having
Speaker:an exclusive product, something you can't get anywhere else.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Or you build a relationship with a consumer, so they don't
Speaker:wanna buy it from anywhere else.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Amazon sells candles.
Speaker:But if I provide a really unique candle subscription, I might
Speaker:be able to differentiate my, differentiate myself from Amazon.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Look at like what Chewy did.
Speaker:chewy.com sold for 2.5, 3.5 billion.
Speaker:They were selling dog food and dog treats.
Speaker:There was nothing special.
Speaker:I mean, so did Amazon.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:But they built that experience with the consumer.
Speaker:That they couldn't get anywhere else.
Speaker:Yeah, and that's what separated themselves from Amazon.
Speaker:That's what allowed them to get acquired by peco.
Speaker:That's what subscriptions do, is it builds a relationship with the consumer, and
Speaker:that's something that Amazon won't do.
Speaker:Walmart won't do.
Speaker:Target won't do.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And, and so what I'm doing, if I'm an e-commerce brand and
Speaker:I'm thinking, well, what's the product or service I can provide?
Speaker:How can I consistently use that to engage the customer?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:What's the value to that customer?
Speaker:And then the value to the business is already proven.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Subscriptions businesses have way higher valuations than typical e-commerce brands.
Speaker:You've got predictable income.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And so that changes everything.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And the predictable income is quite a big deal, isn't it?
Speaker:I mean, this is part of the reason why subscription models are more valuable.
Speaker:Um, and why actually, me, as an e-commerce business owner, I'm kind
Speaker:of, I'm, I'm really predictable income is not something you would've normally
Speaker:associated with e-commerce business, other than the fact if I spent 10 grand
Speaker:over here on paid media, I should in theory, get 20 grand worth of sales.
Speaker:That was as bad as predictable as it got, but, With the, with the subscription
Speaker:model, you do have that predictability.
Speaker:Do you, I guess some of the questions that people have about this, um,
Speaker:Chris, if I can ask them, cause we've got some questions come in.
Speaker:Of course.
Speaker:Do you have, uh, many people who sign up to the subscription and then cancel, like
Speaker:just to get the offer or the benefit, but then there's a high fallout rate?
Speaker:Of course, right?
Speaker:But everything comes onto LTV.
Speaker:There's an average lifetime value of the customer.
Speaker:So you had made a comment, you said you'd spend 20, $10,000 on paid
Speaker:media and you get $20,000 in revenue.
Speaker:That doesn't happen with subscriptions.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:You might spend 10,000 in media and you might get 7,000 in revenue,
Speaker:but that's on first purchase.
Speaker:Now, if I'm a $50 a month subscription, and I know on average.
Speaker:Customers stay on for eight months.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:There's some that cancel right away.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:There's some that stay on for 15 months.
Speaker:My average is eight.
Speaker:Well, my revenue's $400.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Per customer.
Speaker:That theoretically might mean that that $10,000 in ad spend netted me $40,000.
Speaker:It just, it takes time.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:You need the renewals and if you can get your consumer
Speaker:investment back within two months.
Speaker:Huge win.
Speaker:They stay on average for if, if there's a three to one ratio CAC to
Speaker:LTV, you're on pace to build a really successful, healthy subscription model.
Speaker:And that's why you'll find that a lot of brands that are scaling fast
Speaker:are like on a one-to-one ratio.
Speaker:Like, I don't know how familiar you are with like acquisition
Speaker:costs on subscription models, but they can be very high.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Like for example, you might find that Netflix is a $20 a month
Speaker:service and they're spending $130 to acquire a customer.
Speaker:And you're gonna say, well, gosh, those unit economics don't make sense.
Speaker:But then they look back and they say, well, on average our
Speaker:customers stay on for 24 months.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So we're making $480.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:And those customers over the lifetime of the, of the customer, so they
Speaker:can spend $120 to acquire one.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And Netflix has got a different disadvantage or a different advantage.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:I'm sure they're not spending that much.
Speaker:But you could look at that for brands like Dollar Shave Club or HelloFresh.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Brands like HelloFresh have a huge, they're probably, their first
Speaker:month churn is probably like 80%.
Speaker:That's really high.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It is.
Speaker:The reason for their success is HelloFresh is looking to build
Speaker:a habit within their consumer.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:You're either gonna like the idea of cooking it or you're not, and if you like
Speaker:it and it becomes part of your lifestyle, you might be on for three, four years.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And the ones that try it and after two weeks you're like, well,
Speaker:like, I don't really wanna cook.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Just looked like it was fun, but it's not for me.
Speaker:They're gonna cancel fast.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:No, that's, that's fascinating.
Speaker:So I, I.
Speaker:The three to one, um, CAC to LTV ratio, um, for those, I mean, you have mentioned
Speaker:it, but I just wanna be super clear for those listening to the show that
Speaker:might not understand what CAC or LTV is.
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:Just, just explain that.
Speaker:Yeah, so LTV is lifetime value of the customer.
Speaker:So how much am I going to make on the customer over the lifetime
Speaker:of them being a customer of mine?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And CAC is the amount of money I paid to acquire the customer.
Speaker:I can give a really easy example if you want me to.
Speaker:That could clarify it for the audience.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You know, this is a simple example.
Speaker:Let's say that I'm a dentist, I have a dental office, uh, in my city.
Speaker:Typically people that go to the dentist, they don't switch their dentist unless
Speaker:they move or some sorts where the dentist really screws their teeth up.
Speaker:But if I spent $10,000 on TV ads and it got me 10 customers, well
Speaker:then I know I spent a thousand dollars to acquire each customer.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:But I know through data that over the span of that patient,
Speaker:between billing, fillings, crowns, Dentures, whatever it might be.
Speaker:I make $10,000 on a, on a new patient every time I get one.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Well then I'm in a 10 to one ratio.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I'm spending a thousand acquirement.
Speaker:I'm gonna make 10 grand on them over the lifetime of the
Speaker:customer being a patient of mine.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Those are great unit economics.
Speaker:If I knew that was the case, I would spend a million dollars on tv ads.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Well, you'd, I suppose the, the question then becomes, when you look at those
Speaker:numbers and you are, and you are calculating this, obviously you've gotta
Speaker:understand your, your lifetime value.
Speaker:You've gotta understand the customer acquisition costs.
Speaker:Um, and I suppose the, the other metric here is how much cash can
Speaker:I sustain before I get it back?
Speaker:So what, what, so you know, if, if Netflix is an example where it's a year
Speaker:before they're profitable, you the, you need to have that year's cash flow Yep.
Speaker:Or the ability to pay cash for that year before you start to see
Speaker:profit at the other end, right?
Speaker:Correct.
Speaker:And you gotta keep the engagement going, right?
Speaker:You might, your data might show that on average they say for 12 months,
Speaker:but if I don't consistently engage the customer or I start to make mistakes,
Speaker:my LTV is gonna start to drop.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:It could go from 12 months to 10 months, or 10 months to 8 months,
Speaker:have one bad month of a product.
Speaker:Let Netflix go down for two days, watch all the customers cancel.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So it doesn't just mean, oh, we, ah, we got the customer there
Speaker:for sure staying for 12 months.
Speaker:We still have to build a product or service we're offering that's
Speaker:going to keep the customer engaged.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So, and, and again, you need to be able to bankroll that, right?
Speaker:So assume Correct.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:So if I, if I'm, um, if I'm building this subscription model,
Speaker:how do I, how do I build that engagement then with the client?
Speaker:So obviously keeping them engaged, keeping them paying, uh, well, I mean, they're
Speaker:not paying every month, but then keeping them from stopping to pay every month
Speaker:is probably a better way of putting it.
Speaker:How do I, how do I keep that engagement going?
Speaker:Uh, being proactive.
Speaker:So you don't wanna be reactive.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:You don't wanna wait to find out why they might be canceling
Speaker:after they've already canceled.
Speaker:So the biggest thing that I'm a proponent of is proactive retention.
Speaker:That means consistently surveying my customers, identifying and making sure
Speaker:that they're happy and satisfied with the service or product that I'm offering.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Which may re may mean that I'm going to send them an email and I'm gonna
Speaker:ask 'em a question very early on.
Speaker:Like, one of the things that I like to do.
Speaker:Is like, have three smiley faces on an email.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:On the left is a smiley face.
Speaker:I'm happy.
Speaker:And the middle is like the meh face.
Speaker:Like I'm like, I'm medium, I'm okay.
Speaker:It's a sad face.
Speaker:So how happy are you with my product or service?
Speaker:If they click the happy face, well lemme start here.
Speaker:If they click the sad face or the medium face, immediate
Speaker:trigger to customer service.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Versus not happy.
Speaker:We find out why, but it's an immediate trigger to customer service, and now our
Speaker:customer service team is getting ahead.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:They're reaching out to that customer for their thinking about canceling.
Speaker:If they click the happy face, then I'm sending 'em to one of the social
Speaker:channels with like a pre-made post.
Speaker:It's like, Hey, let everybody know how happy you are with our product or service.
Speaker:That's a big part of it.
Speaker:It's also being very intelligent about who you are targeting.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:If you acquire a thousand customers, but 90% of 'em are the wrong customer,
Speaker:then they're gonna be unhappy when they get their product or service.
Speaker:They're gonna cancel quickly and then staying engaged with them is
Speaker:consistently communicating with them through all channels, making it easy
Speaker:to have them be able to contact you, making sure that you're staying on
Speaker:top of social, responding to comments, being a, having a chat feature on
Speaker:your website, making the customer feel like as easy as it was for them to
Speaker:sign up, it's just as easy to cancel.
Speaker:And that you're providing a product or service that's going to keep them engaged.
Speaker:I think one of the things that's really important to understand is, let's say
Speaker:that I have a s a beauty subscription.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Two, three years ago, my competition was other beauty
Speaker:subscriptions, but now it's not.
Speaker:Now you're competing against every other subscription service because
Speaker:you're competing for share of wallet.
Speaker:I had a, are you familiar with Truebill, the app and manages your subscriptions?
Speaker:No, it's called Rocket Money now.
Speaker:Really large brand.
Speaker:It got acquired for a billion dollars.
Speaker:Me and the CEO did a keynote together, and one of the data
Speaker:points that he had identified was that in years past, customers were
Speaker:adding two or three subscriptions.
Speaker:If they added two or three subscriptions, they would cancel one.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:But now those charts have crossed, meaning if a customer adds a
Speaker:subscription, they're going to cancel one.
Speaker:That means every subscription is competing for share of wallet.
Speaker:That means Netflix is competing with HelloFresh because the consumer is
Speaker:thinking about, well, if I'm gonna, if I'm gonna add a $25 a month subscription,
Speaker:I need to cancel one of them.
Speaker:And you don't wanna be the one that gets canceled.
Speaker:That's really interesting.
Speaker:So actually as an e-commerce business and the beauty subscription, the,
Speaker:you are competing with Netflix, um, you're competing with HelloFresh.
Speaker:So does that mean, and I, and I'm, I'm li I, I fully appreciate what
Speaker:you're saying, Chris, and I'm going Well, that makes a lot of sense.
Speaker:Cause I'm thinking back through me, right?
Speaker:I'm like, well, I canceled that subscription to that and I've canceled
Speaker:that and I've taken that one on there.
Speaker:And I, um, especially with cost of Living crisis, and you can see.
Speaker:This sort of having a big effect on things certainly here in the uk I dunno
Speaker:what it's like in the states as much, but here in the UK it's unbelievable.
Speaker:Um, and so I, I get that.
Speaker:So I, I, I'm then sitting here thinking, well, if I was starting
Speaker:out either an e-commerce or I was already established an e-commerce and
Speaker:thinking about starting a subscription business, I'm now, uh, as we would
Speaker:say in the uk, quietly cacking myself.
Speaker:Um, cacking, pooping is, is the, uh, translation, not cost of acquisition.
Speaker:It's a bit of a slang term, uh, but works well here because I'm thinking, well,
Speaker:not only if I wanna start a subscription service in a beauty business, not only
Speaker:am I now competing with Beauty Box, what Chris is telling me is actually
Speaker:I'm now competing with Netflix.
Speaker:How in the hell am I gonna do this in a way that's gonna work, right?
Speaker:Hey, you're gonna, yeah.
Speaker:How you're gonna do it is by targeting the right customers and
Speaker:making sure that you're getting the attention of the ones that'll want
Speaker:your product or service, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:I think that one of the biggest mistake marketers make is that they
Speaker:target a large, large audience.
Speaker:They don't really get into the nitty gritty and understand the customer
Speaker:profile, the ones that really, really like their product, and then look at that data
Speaker:in the future to make better marketing decisions on your product or service.
Speaker:Everybody has needs and wants.
Speaker:And so for example, if you've got a beauty subscription, you're more than
Speaker:likely targeting the female demographic.
Speaker:Well mm-hmm.
Speaker:The female demographic's not gonna stop with the beauty.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So make sure that if, when they're going to select one that they need,
Speaker:that you're the one that they select.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And you shouldn't be surprised if they would wanna cancel their Netflix
Speaker:subscription for your beauty subscription.
Speaker:You're, you're offering two different products or services.
Speaker:You know?
Speaker:Yeah, I do.
Speaker:And actually I think it's quite a sobering thing, isn't it?
Speaker:In some respects, but in other, in other respects, it's forcing you to
Speaker:think about, Your product offering, cuz before in 2015, 2016, I could just put
Speaker:anything out on a subscription model.
Speaker:And people go, that's kind of cool, that's kind of new niche.
Speaker:Cool, I'll take that.
Speaker:Now I can't do that because they're deciding whether or not my
Speaker:product is, is worth keeping over keeping their Netflix subscription.
Speaker:So that's gonna, that's an opportunity in a lot of ways, but it's gonna
Speaker:force you to think outside the box and it's gonna force you to, to offer
Speaker:something of value to your well chosen target audience, I'm guessing, right?
Speaker:You can absolutely provide more value than Netflix.
Speaker:That should be the title of this this week's show.
Speaker:You can you provide more value than Netflix?
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Uh, it, it's, it's interesting.
Speaker:Is it?
Speaker:So why, why do you say that?
Speaker:So, um, uh, if I can put it this way, so carefree, so, so assured.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:I say that so assured because we all have things that we truly are passionate about.
Speaker:For example, like I've got a dog, right?
Speaker:I love my dog to death.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:If you ask me to pick between BarkBox and Netflix, I'm picking BarkBox.
Speaker:Okay?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:We've all got passions and things that we want and need.
Speaker:And you know what?
Speaker:Netflix has got a lot of competition when it comes down to just like the
Speaker:consumer entertainment and consumer attention, there's more eyeballs glued
Speaker:on TikTok than they are on Netflix.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And you know, I can watch a lot of things on YouTube.
Speaker:I can watch Disney Plus.
Speaker:I mean, I personally only watch Net.
Speaker:I used to only watch Netflix for Stranger Things in Ozark.
Speaker:I just, they're just lucky that I'm one of the customers that doesn't cancel
Speaker:when I'm not, I'm not using Netflix, so I just keep paying the bill every month.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:But yeah, if I had to choose, if, if I was, if I had to start watching
Speaker:what I was purchasing Netflix.
Speaker:Netflix is near the top of the list of getting cancelled.
Speaker:It might be at the top right now.
Speaker:I don't even, I don't know the last time I turned it on.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Like I really haven't turned it on in a minute, so, so, mm-hmm.
Speaker:I think that you, I think that just, it, it, it may seem like
Speaker:it's a big competition cuz of what the name is, but what's the true
Speaker:product and service it's offering?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:The only way Netflix wins is by its original series.
Speaker:Netflix will never win unless it comes out with content that
Speaker:you can only watch on Netflix.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Well, 99% of its content is everywhere else too.
Speaker:It's not just on Netflix, it's on Amazon, it's on Disney, it's on YouTube there.
Speaker:There's tons of sites that have those same movies for free.
Speaker:Yeah, there's just certain shows you can't get anywhere else but Netflix, which is
Speaker:what keeps people signed up for Netflix.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Very powerful stuff.
Speaker:And I, I, I, I like, I like the way you're saying it actually, and I, I'm
Speaker:thinking to myself, yeah, that's true.
Speaker:I, I only stay subscribed to Netflix.
Speaker:Not cause I watch it, but I know my kids do.
Speaker:Um, and my, you know, I know my, my boys at university wouldn't,
Speaker:they just, they just haven't got the money to pay for Netflix.
Speaker:So I'm kinda like, well, well, dad will pay for it, of
Speaker:course, typically then, right.
Speaker:And I, I, Chris, I don't know if you know the answer this or whether it's in
Speaker:fact a, a stupid question to ask in a lot of ways, but how many subscriptions
Speaker:does a typical consumer have these days?
Speaker:You know, don't quote me on this, but I think it was like 15 or 16.
Speaker:When you really think about, it's funny, uh, everybody sits and
Speaker:thinks I don't have that many.
Speaker:Then you start to think about the apps Yeah.
Speaker:On your phone.
Speaker:And then you start thinking about the streaming services you have and you
Speaker:quickly realize it gets to 10 fast.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:It gets to 10 really fast.
Speaker:I might have like 20, 20.
Speaker:I don't even know.
Speaker:Like I, I, I have so many and you know, what's the beautiful thing about that?
Speaker:They can all be canceled tomorrow.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:That's what's changed the landscape of e-commerce.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:And actually, yeah, you're right.
Speaker:That, uh, you know, and I've seen a lot of the subscription businesses
Speaker:now making it easy to pause and to restart just because they're obviously
Speaker:getting, a lot of people do this.
Speaker:One of the things that I'm listening to you talk, one of the things that I've
Speaker:noticed, for example, with Netflix, um, and, and this, I suppose I'm thinking
Speaker:about my own subscription services that we sell on, on, on our sites,
Speaker:but one of the things that strikes me as you are talking is Netflix have
Speaker:started certainly here in the uk.
Speaker:I imagine it's the same most of the way around the world, they've started to.
Speaker:Um, bundle their subscription with other services.
Speaker:So, uh, we have a, we have a, a subscription service over
Speaker:here called Sky Sports, right?
Speaker:So if you wanna watch sports, you pretty much have to
Speaker:subscribe to the sports Channel.
Speaker:And it's like, the way they do it is you subscribe to Sky Sports,
Speaker:but if you get this bundle, you get Sky Sports, you get Netflix,
Speaker:you get this, you get that, and so.
Speaker:Rather than me feeling like I've, I'm paying for 10 subscriptions, I'm, I'm
Speaker:in effect paying for one slightly more than what I would've paid for the, the
Speaker:one without the 10, if that makes sense.
Speaker:So there's this, I guess there's this psychological factor of
Speaker:sort of boosting up that way.
Speaker:Um, is that a strategy people are using a lot now?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I mean, they, they're doing that as like a defense mechanism
Speaker:to keep the customer, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Because, Netflix was like the first streaming service and now there's 10,
Speaker:20, I don't even know how many, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So they're doing that to compete to provide more value.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So subscriptions provide one of three things, access, value, or convenience.
Speaker:By com by merging different streaming services.
Speaker:You just did two of them.
Speaker:You just nailed two of the three reasons why somebody would sign up for something.
Speaker:There's value and access.
Speaker:And really in some respects, convenience, cuz it's great to your tv.
Speaker:But yeah, I'm saying the true value, like they're saying, we're giving
Speaker:you access to shows and movies that you can't get anywhere else.
Speaker:And by the way, we're giving you value cuz we just teamed up with a
Speaker:couple of their streaming services and put it all together in one bundle.
Speaker:Yeah, no, that's fair play.
Speaker:And so, and, and I like this and I suppose, and I, I'm thinking this
Speaker:through that I, I, I dunno where I'm going with this Chris other than
Speaker:the fact that I'm just thinking it through, uh, as you are chatting.
Speaker:Actually, it becomes harder to cancel Netflix.
Speaker:So I can't, because Netflix is now bundled with my sports channel.
Speaker:Yes, I can't, if I cancel Netflix, I've gotta cancel my sports channel.
Speaker:Or if I cancel my sports channel, I've gotta cancel Netflix.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And so this is where you're talking about value.
Speaker:I've, I've increased value massively.
Speaker:So it makes, makes it harder to cancel that one particular bit over there.
Speaker:You know, I, I don't care with my sports channel, I get the Discovery Channel.
Speaker:I never watch it.
Speaker:I don't care.
Speaker:But, you know, I, I can't cancel that.
Speaker:But it makes no difference, you know?
Speaker:Um, so Chris, I have so many questions, right?
Speaker:Uh, if you, uh, if you, um, if you are starting again the gentleman's box, right?
Speaker:Um, you started that, uh, again here, 2023, and I'm curious,
Speaker:what would you do differently?
Speaker:Uh, how, you know, what, what would that subscription business look like now?
Speaker:If I was starting the Gentleman's box?
Speaker:Oh, I wouldn't start the gentleman's box now, but if I was starting a
Speaker:new subscription, what would I do?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:If I was starting a new subscription right now, what would I do?
Speaker:That's a great question.
Speaker:No one's asked me that in a while.
Speaker:Um, I would probably build a product that was a depleting product, so something that
Speaker:every month or every quarter depleted, meaning they had to get more of it.
Speaker:Um, what industry would I go into?
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:I would either do that or I would do something that was exclusive.
Speaker:Meaning that you couldn't get it anywhere else.
Speaker:There was limited quantity.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So limited supply would sell out.
Speaker:I'd build demand and hype around it.
Speaker:I'd use influencers to build demand and hype around it.
Speaker:I would try to come up with a product or offering that was unique, exclusive
Speaker:in-demand, hard to get waiting list.
Speaker:On a subscription and membership to the point where people were like dying
Speaker:to be one of the members, and I'd make those members feel super exclusive.
Speaker:It'd be almost like VIP, it'd be like, oh, you're part of this subscription
Speaker:and you get this shirt, or whatever it might be, this piece of art.
Speaker:Whatever the case may be.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I think that exclusivity is really a big part of a big thing right now.
Speaker:Exclusivity.
Speaker:Uniqueness.
Speaker:Products that are, that are in demand, right?
Speaker:Like you look at like little things like the prime drink
Speaker:that Logan Paul came out with.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The fact that he sold out and because of who he is, people were
Speaker:selling them like $20 a bottle.
Speaker:Oh, it's crazy.
Speaker:Yeah, it was crazy.
Speaker:What happens now if anybody that knows that drink happens to see one
Speaker:available in a store, they snatch it up.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Why?
Speaker:Cause of the demand.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So I, that's how I would build, I'd build something around that super exclusive,
Speaker:um, hard to get, and I would, I would channel some high end influencers and
Speaker:make sure that they had 'em mm-hmm.
Speaker:And get them to, you know, push that product.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That's really interesting.
Speaker:And it's sellout.
Speaker:I like the idea of exclusivity.
Speaker:I mean, you're right.
Speaker:I remember being at Costco a few weeks ago.
Speaker:A lady came up to me and she said, listen, I wanna buy two boxes of these drinks.
Speaker:But Costco was limiting it to just one because the demand was so high.
Speaker:Can you buy this for me and I will give you the cash, uh, here and now.
Speaker:And I'm like, of course I don't care.
Speaker:Just put it on the conveyor.
Speaker:It's not a problem.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:But it.
Speaker:I, I dunno how much you know about England, Chris, but we don't do
Speaker:things like that in England because, you know, it's, it's not very
Speaker:British to ask somebody to do stuff.
Speaker:So the fact that she was willing to do that Yeah, kind.
Speaker:I was like, what is this that we're buy, I'm like, is this cocaine?
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:And so, yeah.
Speaker:And so I just found it fascinating and that exclusivity,
Speaker:I, I get the value of that.
Speaker:So let me ask you a question, right?
Speaker:Going back to the beauty website.
Speaker:Someone has a beauty website, they're online, they're
Speaker:selling all kinds of products.
Speaker:Um, and if I go back to the start, you know, your premise at the start was you
Speaker:should have a subscription business.
Speaker:Um, Does the beauty company start a subscription business?
Speaker:Is my first question.
Speaker:And my second question is, if I started a beauty company today,
Speaker:should I be subscription only?
Speaker:I'm curious to un understand how you think the sort of the, the
Speaker:you know, you can buy it normally.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Or you can buy it through a subscription model thing.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You know, is that, is that too weak?
Speaker:I'm, I'm kind of curious as to your thinking on that.
Speaker:It's funny, you know, me as an entrepreneur, I'm like, I'm like the worst
Speaker:guy that you want to tell an idea to.
Speaker:Cuz like, I poke a hole in everything and I'm like, like I
Speaker:have a friend that jokes with me.
Speaker:He's like, I'm not even gonna tell you my idea because you're just
Speaker:gonna like piss on it, you know?
Speaker:But I'm, I'm looking out for you.
Speaker:So one, I'm like, Everything.
Speaker:Like, see, like, you know, this like, ideas are so cheap, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:It's all about like, how are we gonna execute on this product?
Speaker:What's the go-to-market strategy?
Speaker:So I get pitched, I'm gonna get your answer to this question, by the way.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So I get, I get pitched ideas once a week probably, and, um, I'm trying
Speaker:to limit that because it's, it's a big time waster, but, um, everything
Speaker:comes, I care less about the idea and I care more about the strategy of
Speaker:getting the attention of the audience.
Speaker:You could have.
Speaker:A wildly insane idea, but there could be this like niche group of individuals
Speaker:that really love it and like mm-hmm.
Speaker:You can build a real business around it.
Speaker:Like, I, that's, that's great.
Speaker:Like, I wanna know what the strategy's gonna be.
Speaker:How are we gonna go to market?
Speaker:How are we get the attention to consumers?
Speaker:It's not field of dreams.
Speaker:It's not like if you build a baseball field in your backyard, all these people
Speaker:are gonna show up and play baseball.
Speaker:That's not how, how e-commerce works.
Speaker:If I have the right plan, I have the right product.
Speaker:And I'm building a new beauty subscription.
Speaker:I'm absolutely building subscription first, because typically beauty
Speaker:products are depleting, they're gonna need it month over month.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And I don't want them to get their facial cleanser anywhere else or
Speaker:their eyeliner anywhere else, or their lip gloss anywhere else.
Speaker:And if I'm gonna get super aggressive and I'm brand new, I'm gonna say
Speaker:try my product for free potentially.
Speaker:Or samples of it.
Speaker:Or I'm gonna, uh, you know, either my marketing strategy's gotta be that.
Speaker:If you think about beauty products in general, either they've gotta use it
Speaker:or somebody they know or influences them's gotta tell 'em to use it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:There's no other way.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:If I'm selling a t-shirt, I could look at the design and say, oh, I like
Speaker:this, this design, I'm gonna buy it cause I'm gonna like the way it looks.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I don't need to feel it or touch it.
Speaker:With beauty, I need to u the, the, the.
Speaker:Audience needs to use the product to see that it works.
Speaker:So now I'm trying to get the product in their hands, whether that's give it to
Speaker:them for free, let them pay shipping and handling only, and maybe it covers my
Speaker:cost and I'm getting 'em on a subscription so that they know that when it comes the
Speaker:next month, they're going to have it again and that's when they're gonna get billed.
Speaker:And yeah, there might be high churn, but if it's a net zero on
Speaker:the cost, like great, like it's a low cost marketing tool, um,
Speaker:that's probably how I'm doing it.
Speaker:And that, and with beauty, I'm absolutely building a subscription.
Speaker:I, I'm subscription first in nearly everything.
Speaker:I don't know that anybody would convince me to build.
Speaker:I don't think that there's a lot of industries where subscriptions don't work.
Speaker:Maybe in some medical fields, maybe.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So you're subscription, you're subscription first, but does that mean
Speaker:on your new beauty business, you're subscription only or can subscription work
Speaker:alongside traditional typical e-commerce?
Speaker:It work.
Speaker:It can work, but I'm subscription only and I.
Speaker:I mean, may be because I'm biased, but the value of the customer on a subscription
Speaker:is way higher than the one-off purchase.
Speaker:Yeah, that's really fascinating.
Speaker:That's really, there's no, there's no comparison.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So you're building this beauty business subscription only and it's like, add
Speaker:these products to your basket, um, and we're gonna get them out to you every
Speaker:month or whatever the frequency is.
Speaker:Uh, I'm kind of curious actually.
Speaker:Uh, I dunno if anyone's done the study, cuz nothing's springing to my mind.
Speaker:Is, If you took a subscription only model and then added traditional
Speaker:e-commerce to it, whether the total revenue of that site falls, um,
Speaker:yeah, Does it dilute it too much?
Speaker:You know?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I've seen it all the time.
Speaker:I hate one time purchase and brands that add that element are either
Speaker:trying to move old inventory, right.
Speaker:So they, they made some inventory mistakes.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:There's so many better ways to do it than.
Speaker:If you're gonna pay for the customer to come to the site, let's sell them
Speaker:the product that's gonna get us the most conversion, the most value.
Speaker:That's gonna be on a subscription over a one time, every single time.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:No, that's really powerful.
Speaker:There's, and there's a, I, I'm, I'm really tempted actually
Speaker:to do some, I've not done it.
Speaker:Uh, but you, you've inspired me to go away and do some split tests with our ads.
Speaker:So run people to subscription only pages versus running people to just buy pages.
Speaker:Do you know what I mean?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So the same product, one's on subscription, one's on buy now.
Speaker:What are you selling?
Speaker:What's the product?
Speaker:Uh, I would do this with supplements.
Speaker:Um, so we have a supplement business, and this is the one that I'm thinking of.
Speaker:Um, like a vitamin supplement or like a, yeah, yeah.
Speaker:Oh gosh.
Speaker:I don't even, you don't even need to test it.
Speaker:Well, no, I'm, cause I wanna see the results.
Speaker:You'd think that I'm joking with you, but Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:No, there's, there's like, no, there's like, there is not a doubt in my mind
Speaker:like, email me in three months and I'll, there's not a doubt in my mind
Speaker:you are gonna see way higher value on the, on the subscription side.
Speaker:It's, it's depleting.
Speaker:I need the supplements quarterly and monthly.
Speaker:Like, there is not a doubt in my mind that the, yeah, one
Speaker:time purchase should be gone.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:And you know what?
Speaker:You should, you should be at Sub Summit this year.
Speaker:You'll even see more about that.
Speaker:Well, let's talk about that actually.
Speaker:Um, uh, because I, I, I, when you were saying, I mean, subsummit's in
Speaker:Dallas, and I'm, I'm actually thinking to myself, I'm tempted to go here.
Speaker:I've got some good friends in Dallas.
Speaker:I'm gonna go stay with them and, and, and, uh, and come over.
Speaker:Um, let's talk about subsummit then, because, um, we'll just tell the folks
Speaker:what it, what it actually is, and then I've got some questions about it.
Speaker:Yeah, so it's the largest event in the world for all consumer subscriptions.
Speaker:We bring together brands like Netflix and HelloFresh and BarkBox to your
Speaker:mid-level Hunt a killer, FabFitFun, battle box to your startup and growth phase.
Speaker:It's three days long.
Speaker:There's a huge expo hall with solution providers.
Speaker:There's multiple track rooms.
Speaker:We've got speakers from the NBA, uh, Harry's Razor, Time Magazine.
Speaker:There's like a panel I think with time, uh, New York Times and Wall
Speaker:Street Journal talking about how to start up and grow your subscription.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:There's three, there's three tracks.
Speaker:So there's like a startup track, there's a mid growth track, and
Speaker:there's an enterprise track.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:We, we, we built this event to help.
Speaker:Entrepreneurs and subscription-based businesses build better
Speaker:subscription-based companies.
Speaker:Tons of networking.
Speaker:There's a huge award ceremony on day two with a red carpet.
Speaker:It's tons of fun, fake paparazzi screaming people's names.
Speaker:It's it's 15th category, um, huge exhibit hall with all your solution
Speaker:providers from fulfillment to payment, processing the CRMs to Shopify plugins
Speaker:to three, three days of packed tracks with leaders within subscriptions.
Speaker:How to grow and build it, how to retain customers, how to go international.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:How do you consistently engage with the consumer and 2000 attendees.
Speaker:It's, it's a lot of fun and if you're in e-commerce, you should be at subsummit.
Speaker:If you're in subscriptions, you should be at subunit.
Speaker:Yeah, totally.
Speaker:So, uh, just to circle back on something that you said there,
Speaker:there are three different tracks.
Speaker:So if I'm just new in e-commerce, go to subsummit, there's
Speaker:gonna be something of value.
Speaker:If I'm Netflix, go to subsummit because there's gonna be something of value
Speaker:and then everyone in between you cover.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:100%.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:So how long has this, uh, event been going?
Speaker:We had our first event in 2016.
Speaker:We had like 200 attendees.
Speaker:I always joke, uh, Matt, it felt like the first event felt like I was in high
Speaker:school and I was throwing a party and I didn't know if anybody'd show up.
Speaker:I kinda nervous energy.
Speaker:No, totally.
Speaker:You're sitting there like waiting by registration.
Speaker:Like one person got off and then like two more got off the elevator.
Speaker:Oh my gosh.
Speaker:And then it was like 200 people and, um, It, it was, it worked well.
Speaker:Like we couldn't believe it.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And then fast forward, three years later, we're in New Orleans with 1100 attendees.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:And then Covid hit, right.
Speaker:So we, we stalled for two years, but this past May, we were in Orlando, 1300
Speaker:attendees, DoorDash, Netflix, battle Box, Hunt a Killer, like they're all there.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And now we're gonna be in Dallas this year, 2000 attendees more than likely,
Speaker:The best speaker lineup we've ever had.
Speaker:It's like you can check out the speakers on subsummit.com, but
Speaker:you know, Quotery is speaking.
Speaker:FabFitFun is speaking.
Speaker:Harry's Razors is speaking, the NBA is speaking.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:It's wild.
Speaker:We've never had this kind of lineup ever.
Speaker:Okay, well I'm excited for it.
Speaker:I'm excited.
Speaker:So, uh, do join, uh, is it sub Sumit?
Speaker:I'll be there.
Speaker:Come and say hi.
Speaker:You know, we maybe do a little, uh, EP hookup.
Speaker:Um, we have a little podcast stage there too, Matt, so maybe we can
Speaker:do a little podcast at the event.
Speaker:That would be awesome.
Speaker:That would be really quite fun.
Speaker:Do you know what would be cool is like, you and I could potentially do something
Speaker:live, but you might be able to grab some other attendees, entrepreneurs
Speaker:and pull 'em on stage with you.
Speaker:We can talk about that after, but there's something cool.
Speaker:Ah, sounds great.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:No, that sounds awesome.
Speaker:I'm up for something like that.
Speaker:Uh, where do people go?
Speaker:Um, I, I know the URLs on the screen, uh, Chris, but most
Speaker:people listen on the audio.
Speaker:Just tell everybody how to find out more information about Sub Summit.
Speaker:Yeah, just go to subsummit.com and right on there is everything about the event.
Speaker:Yeah, it's really easy.
Speaker:It, you know, there's, there's all this information about the venue,
Speaker:the different tracks, the agenda, the speakers, the sponsors, it's all on there.
Speaker:And if you are a brand that does more than $500,000 a year in
Speaker:revenue, we actually have what's called the hosted buyer program.
Speaker:Where you can come to the event for free and get travel reimbursement.
Speaker:You have to take, you have to take six, 10 minute one-on-one
Speaker:meetings with solution providers.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:But we did that.
Speaker:It's a really good way for brands to get to the event that are on a budget.
Speaker:It's a great way for solution providers, so like if you're in
Speaker:fulfillment or payment processing or marketing for you to meet those brands.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:We're gonna cultivate more than 1500 one-on-one meetings
Speaker:at the event this year now.
Speaker:Fantastic.
Speaker:I like that.
Speaker:That's a really clever, I'm not gonna, I, I don't wanna blow smoke
Speaker:here, Chris, but I like that.
Speaker:I like that.
Speaker:You know, if you, uh, as an idea.
Speaker:Um, very clever.
Speaker:Very clever.
Speaker:Especially if they play, uh, first class from the uk.
Speaker:I'm there.
Speaker:No,
Speaker:only 750 you get, you know, but
Speaker:that's really funny.
Speaker:So listen, um, Chris, let me ask you my final question.
Speaker:Uh, yeah, I'm, I'm starting to ask everybody now, and it's, it's a bit
Speaker:off topic, uh, from the subscription.
Speaker:Um, but as you know, this show's sponsored by, uh, cohort, right?
Speaker:E-commerce cohort, which is kinda like, it's a training, mentorship
Speaker:program, learning kind of program.
Speaker:It's awesome.
Speaker:Um, it's actually a membership, funnily enough.
Speaker:Uh, and in fact, um, let me ask you this question cuz I'm kind of curious.
Speaker:Cohort's a membership and I was listening to, I dunno if you've
Speaker:come across the guy's name, Stu McLaren, who is like big into.
Speaker:Online memberships, you know, in terms of if you wanna do like an online membership,
Speaker:like a mastermind, he's a guy that you would listen to a mentor in that space.
Speaker:And I saw a, a post on him on, uh, on Instagram the other day saying
Speaker:The best way to sell a membership is off the back of a course.
Speaker:So he's like, you sell your course.
Speaker:And then off the back of that, you have your membership because the
Speaker:course delivers insane value and it gives a reason for people to join.
Speaker:And he said, when you do it this way, you get a, a better outcome.
Speaker:I thought that was really interesting.
Speaker:Uh, off the back of that membership.
Speaker:Anyway, um, cohort is this kind of membership group,
Speaker:so I wanna imagine, right?
Speaker:Uh, it's not in Dallas, it's probably in London.
Speaker:We've got a room full of cohorts.
Speaker:Uh, you've just delivered your keynote speech on, on subscriptions and told
Speaker:everybody all the secrets they need to know to, to do it super well.
Speaker:At the end of it, as they're giving you your sort of standing ovation, um, crazy,
Speaker:uh, I'm curious who you sort of, you stand up and you say, well, I'm here and
Speaker:I'd just like to thank dot, dot, dot.
Speaker:Um, who's had a big influence on you?
Speaker:Who do you thank?
Speaker:Uh, and, and, why?
Speaker:Who do I thank for helping me get to where I am now?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, my two business partners, Paul and John, Paul Chambers
Speaker:and John Hodge for sure.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:It's a shame your name's not Ringo, I'm not gonna lie.
Speaker:Paul John and Ringo.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Anyway, a different, a different group of people.
Speaker:You know.
Speaker:Yeah, probably them.
Speaker:I never really had mentors growing up.
Speaker:Um, I listened to a lot of, like, I get influenced by other entrepreneurs, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And that's where I get my inspiration.
Speaker:But those two guys for sure, you know.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That's cool.
Speaker:That's cool.
Speaker:That's awesome.
Speaker:It's good that actually you've had a partnership that's worked,
Speaker:you know, cuz that's actually quite an unusual thing these days.
Speaker:And so, uh, long may that continue.
Speaker:Um, Chris, listen, it's been a blast.
Speaker:If people want to get in touch with you, I mean we've, we've talked about
Speaker:subsumit, but if they wanna get ahold of you, Uh, what's the best way to do that?
Speaker:How do people connect?
Speaker:Yeah, real easy.
Speaker:Actually.
Speaker:Either connect with me on LinkedIn or just send me an email.
Speaker:Chris@subsummit.com.
Speaker:I'll get that email.
Speaker:I'm in, I'm inbox zero, so Oh wow.
Speaker:I'm doing harder.
Speaker:It's getting harder and harder.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, but, um, you know, 48 hours, I'll more than likely reply.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:I always throw a funny, man, you'll love this.
Speaker:If there's more than like four sentences in the email, the likelihood of me
Speaker:reading it right away is like slim to zero, and it might be a month.
Speaker:So I like, I, I have a short attention span.
Speaker:Like, it's funny, like a long paragraph email will come in and like my mind
Speaker:will be like, Chris, I'm gonna read it.
Speaker:Don't worry.
Speaker:Like I'm not reading that long email.
Speaker:We don't have enough time in the day, but, um, make it short and
Speaker:sweet and you'll get my attention.
Speaker:Yeah, less than four sentences.
Speaker:And I, I'm with you.
Speaker:And I've te I mean we've tested this with marketing emails.
Speaker:You know, the, the shorter the email usually the better it pulls because,
Speaker:but the shorter the email, you have to focus on selling the click.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:In e-commerce, we talk about sell the click, not the product.
Speaker:Um, and um, I think it's true in any kind of, uh, outreach email.
Speaker:So, and I'm with you, I'm with, I just, I don't read anything that's long.
Speaker:I just, I just, I can't.
Speaker:I just don't care.
Speaker:Just put it into chat gpt and say, just tell me what it is that they want.
Speaker:Yes, so LinkedIn or email, we'll of course link to Chris' info in
Speaker:the show notes as well, which you can get along for free with the
Speaker:transcript at ecommercepodcast.net.
Speaker:Or it will be winging its way to your inbox if you've
Speaker:signed up to our newsletter.
Speaker:Chris, listen.
Speaker:Uh, honestly man, real treat, really appreciated, um, your insight and energy
Speaker:today and love what you guys are doing.
Speaker:Uh, yeah, and hopefully we get to meet at Sub Summit.
Speaker:Looking forward to it.
Speaker:And, um, thank you.
Speaker:Thank you so much for joining us.
Speaker:Of course.
Speaker:Thank you for having me.
Speaker:Uh, really grateful to be on.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:So there you have it.
Speaker:What a great conversation.
Speaker:Huge thanks again to Chris for joining me today.
Speaker:Also, a huge shout out to today's show sponsor the ecommerce cohort.
Speaker:Remember to check out their, uh, check out their membership ecommercecohort.com.
Speaker:They've also got a free training at ecommercecycles.com.
Speaker:You might want to check out.
Speaker:Uh, be sure to follow the e-commerce podcast wherever you get your podcast
Speaker:from because we've got yet more great conversations lined up and I
Speaker:don't want you to miss any of them.
Speaker:Uh, and so yes, before I wrap up today's episode, let me just take
Speaker:a, a wee moment here, uh, dear listener, and ask you if you want to
Speaker:be part of the e-commerce podcast.
Speaker:If you're an e-commerce entrepreneur or expert, like
Speaker:to share your insights with us.
Speaker:Uh, and then what we'd love to hear from you.
Speaker:Or if you know someone who would make a great guest, please send them our way.
Speaker:Just head over to the website, ecommercepodcast.net, uh,
Speaker:and get in touch with us.
Speaker:I can't promise we will, uh, get everybody on the show.
Speaker:We have a, we do have a big waiting list, but we would love to hear from you.
Speaker:Uh, so do get in touch.
Speaker:We are always looking for fresh perspectives and new ideas.
Speaker:So don't be shy.
Speaker:Whether you're just starting out and have year or you have years of experience
Speaker:under your belt, uh, do get in touch.
Speaker:Look forward to hearing from you.
Speaker:Yes, we do.
Speaker:And in case no one has told you yet today, you are awesome.
Speaker:Yes, you are.
Speaker:Created awesome.
Speaker:It's just a burden you have to bear.
Speaker:Chris has to bear it.
Speaker:I have to bear it.
Speaker:You've gotta bear it as well.
Speaker:Created awesome.
Speaker:Uh, the e-Commerce podcast is produced by Aurion Media.
Speaker:You can find our entire archive of episodes on your favorite podcast
Speaker:app and the team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon, Josh
Speaker:Catchpole, Estella Robin and Tim Johnson.
Speaker:Our theme song was written by Josh Edmundson, and as I mentioned,
Speaker:if you would like to read the transcript or show notes, head over to
Speaker:ecommercepodcast.net where as I said you can also sign up for the newsletter.
Speaker:That's it from me.
Speaker:That's it from Chris.
Speaker:Thank you so much for joining us.
Speaker:Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world.
Speaker:I'll see you next time.