Speaker:

Wow.

Speaker:

Hello, my name is Matt Edmundson and you are listening to the eCommerce Podcast.

Speaker:

Yes, you are.

Speaker:

Now.

Speaker:

I've been an eCommerce-er since 2002, and these days I partner with

Speaker:

eCommerce brands to help them grow, scale and exit their business.

Speaker:

And if you'd like to know more about how that works and whether

Speaker:

or not we could work together, just head over to the website.

Speaker:

ecommerce-podcast.net.

Speaker:

You'll find all kinds of amazing information there about

Speaker:

what I do about this podcast.

Speaker:

All the past episodes, all the information on guests like today's

Speaker:

guest, it's all gonna be on there.

Speaker:

The show notes, everything.

Speaker:

Go to the website ecommerce-podcast.net.

Speaker:

Now, today I am Jo.

Speaker:

Joined, joined, get my words right.

Speaker:

I am joined by the legendary Luke Yarnton.

Speaker:

And we are gonna get into a conversation.

Speaker:

But before I do that, let me give a quick shout out to, uh, feed Spot.

Speaker:

They sent me an email.

Speaker:

The other day, uh, Luke, you, you may or may not know this, uh, they

Speaker:

sent, well, you won't know 'cause why would you get access to my email?

Speaker:

Uh, they sent me an email with a list of the top 100 eCommerce podcasts.

Speaker:

Uh, and this podcast is now number nine.

Speaker:

So, uh, just wanted to say a big shout out.

Speaker:

Big thank you to everyone that's got us, uh, to that place.

Speaker:

Hope you get something out of it.

Speaker:

And if you're new to the show, make sure you like, subscribe, and do

Speaker:

all of that sort of good stuff.

Speaker:

Because number nine's nice.

Speaker:

But honestly, I need to be number one just saying, and I can

Speaker:

only get there with your help.

Speaker:

So, uh, do, do all that good stuff.

Speaker:

But look, listen man, you uh, have a company called Brave.

Speaker:

You do everything to do with influencers.

Speaker:

And before we hit the record button you were talking about.

Speaker:

Something which is, well, how did you phrase it?

Speaker:

It is the most ridiculous idea that is currently out there

Speaker:

where influencers are concerned.

Speaker:

We all wanna know what it is.

Speaker:

Let's jump into that.

Speaker:

Welcome to the show.

Speaker:

What's this ridiculous idea

Speaker:

Yeah, look, this is something that I'm, I'm quite passionate about, and you've

Speaker:

seen probably if you're paying attention to LinkedIn and, and those who are

Speaker:

commenting about, uh, e-commerce on x slash Twitter, um, there seems to be this

Speaker:

massive rise of people using AI agents to act as influencers to promote their brand.

Speaker:

Um, so the idea is you've got this non-real person that's gonna be

Speaker:

reading a script, uh, promoting the features of your product in the hope

Speaker:

that you'll be able to trick some potential customers into believing

Speaker:

that this is an authentic review.

Speaker:

And this is someone who genuinely.

Speaker:

Loves your brand.

Speaker:

Look, I think that's the stupidest thing you can do as a brand.

Speaker:

I think that's such a, such a, an insulting thing to do to your potential

Speaker:

customers to try and, um, sort of false stage, some influencer activity that I,

Speaker:

I just think it's, these are the sort of things that customers will remember.

Speaker:

Um, and you build trust one post at a time.

Speaker:

And to go about it in this particular manner, I think is.

Speaker:

Is very shortsighted and a little bit insulting to people who I'm

Speaker:

sure there are people out there who do know and love these brands,

Speaker:

who would be willing advocates of them and to, to use a non-real

Speaker:

human, I think is, uh, pretty silly.

Speaker:

It's an interesting one, isn't it?

Speaker:

'cause I'm listening to you talk and I'm like, I, I don't

Speaker:

UI clear, clear off the bat.

Speaker:

I do not use an AI agent for my LinkedIn or for my content.

Speaker:

Um, uh, but I do use AI to help me create content.

Speaker:

Uh, I am very, very involved in the content that we create.

Speaker:

Because I feel like I have to be, but I do use AI to help me craft and

Speaker:

edit and critique content, you know?

Speaker:

And even to do some of the research.

Speaker:

What's interesting to me is I see people doing this and I, I have to question

Speaker:

why I. So is it because they want to create content but they don't have time?

Speaker:

Is it because they feel like they can shortcut the system and just do it easier?

Speaker:

Um, uh, because they just wanna do it easier?

Speaker:

I don't know.

Speaker:

Um, but I, I agree with you.

Speaker:

I think the fundamental thing about content is it has to be from you, right?

Speaker:

I mean, it's, why would it not be?

Speaker:

I mean, we can all go and read AI stuff.

Speaker:

Why, why?

Speaker:

So, I think it's how you're gonna differentiate yourself perhaps.

Speaker:

Exactly.

Speaker:

And look, I think they're sort of trying to tap into this market of social

Speaker:

currency where you get people talking about your brand and, and the whole idea

Speaker:

of social currency is that it has some currency, it has some perceived value.

Speaker:

Um, and by, by taking away the human element of it, you're just sort

Speaker:

of like completely devaluing the currency that is social currency.

Speaker:

And like to your earlier point, um, there are a bunch of really, really good tools

Speaker:

out there that are new tools that will.

Speaker:

Help you with the efficiency and help you with the execution of, uh, the content

Speaker:

you wanna get out there, whether that's video content, um, there's some tools

Speaker:

that help you chop up video content into some postal that is based on real human,

Speaker:

uh, UGC that you might have in the mix.

Speaker:

Or there's tools that help you write scripts and tools that help you schedule.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

But to take away the actual sort of endorsement element of that, that comes

Speaker:

from someone who has held your product in their hands or taken the supplement,

Speaker:

um, I think destroys the entire idea of, of, of what's going on here, which

Speaker:

sort of can sort of maybe lead us into this potentially, um, concerning future

Speaker:

where, and we've seen this already, right?

Speaker:

Where.

Speaker:

The level of trust that a customer's gonna have in an advertisement or the level

Speaker:

of trust they even have in these bigger sort of macro influences is continually

Speaker:

decreasing year after year after year.

Speaker:

And you're left with a little bit of trust remaining at these lower level,

Speaker:

authentic, genuine influences that have a huge amount of respect for their

Speaker:

audience and will only post and endorse things that they truly believe in.

Speaker:

Um, so I think this is just gonna further exacerbate that destruction of trust.

Speaker:

If you do use these, uh, funny AI based influences that you'll

Speaker:

feed an AI script into, um, for some sort of pretend endorsement.

Speaker:

I don't even know the way to like

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

No, it's, it's, it's a, it is a fair point and I, I, I totally agree.

Speaker:

We, we've, we've been quite clear, I think as a company on what we will and won't use

Speaker:

AI and automation, AI and AI agents for some of it's, you know, some of the stuff

Speaker:

coming out is really clever, like you say.

Speaker:

And I, I mean, you mentioned tools, and I'll come back to that because I'm

Speaker:

curious to know what you would recommend.

Speaker:

Um, but it's interesting you circle around to this idea of trust.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

And how trust is the one thing that we need, but it's the one

Speaker:

thing which feels like it's getting harder and harder to get.

Speaker:

Um, and so I watch, you know, brands use, um, big influencers

Speaker:

to promote a product or a brand.

Speaker:

You just, you, you know, full well, there is no way in God's green

Speaker:

earth they're using that product.

Speaker:

Right?

Speaker:

They're just, they're just not, it just, it doesn't make any kind of sense to me.

Speaker:

There's no authenticity.

Speaker:

You just got a famous person to, and yes, that might work in traditional

Speaker:

advertisement and good on you.

Speaker:

Um, but you are right about this element of trust, which is why I'm

Speaker:

guessing, Luke, I mean, we've, we, we've talked about this a bit on the

Speaker:

show over the, over the years, but, which is why I'm guessing the, the nano

Speaker:

influencers, the micro influencers.

Speaker:

People are saying these are better for your brand because actually these, these

Speaker:

have a better trust relationship with the, the people that they're connected to.

Speaker:

And as long as they genuinely like what you do,

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

um, and they are connected to the brand, like I'm seeing more and more

Speaker:

people actually work with influencers who actually buy their product.

Speaker:

Um, rather than just giving free product out to a bunch of influencers

Speaker:

and then hoping that they do a good, you know, better UGC, um.

Speaker:

It seems that's that's a good way to sort of build and maintain trust.

Speaker:

Yeah, exactly.

Speaker:

Look, I think people, people are smartening up to the way

Speaker:

the influencer world works.

Speaker:

Um, in that the days, or at least just the, the, the original strategy

Speaker:

was as a brand, I'm gonna find the biggest possible influencer.

Speaker:

Who I can pay an appropriate amount of money to, to post about me on their

Speaker:

Instagram, just one photo of them drinking my drink or taking my supplement

Speaker:

or working out in my workout gear.

Speaker:

That'll be enough.

Speaker:

Um, and it'll be a pay for post and you'll pay $5,000 and there'll be no

Speaker:

performance aspect to that at all.

Speaker:

And it'll be a one and done.

Speaker:

Um, and purely based on existing.

Speaker:

In their halo.

Speaker:

Um, I too will be a great brand that, that seems to be on the out now where

Speaker:

people are looking for a more of an always on consistent, maybe slightly

Speaker:

more performance led approach where they are tapping into more of these

Speaker:

sort of lower level influences and, and creators, um, that have a stronger

Speaker:

connection with their audience.

Speaker:

Um, that will.

Speaker:

Provides sort of more of a genuine connection and you are hitting

Speaker:

that, that right audience group.

Speaker:

I think an important point to add here is that like before we were doing what

Speaker:

we're doing now as a company, um, we built out a fully, um, fleshed out

Speaker:

affiliate platform where we would help brands get links, referral links in the

Speaker:

hands of these 1 million to 2 million follow account, um, influencers, as

Speaker:

well as these micro influencers, nano influencers that have sort of closer to

Speaker:

that 5,000 to 15,000, uh, follow account.

Speaker:

Um, like even the best influencer that had more than, uh, 1 million,

Speaker:

2 million followers would never outperform the median nano influencer.

Speaker:

That's

Speaker:

Um, so they consistently flopped.

Speaker:

They, they don't have that ability to, uh, to generate genuine transaction

Speaker:

and purchases off the back of their suggestion the majority of the time.

Speaker:

I'm sure there are some exceptions to that.

Speaker:

Um, but the level of trust that these nano influencers

Speaker:

hold is significantly stronger.

Speaker:

So that's sort of what's pulled us into what we're doing now is

Speaker:

because of that previous experience with the affiliate platform.

Speaker:

We know that if a brand can get an influencer with 5,000 followers posting

Speaker:

about them organically, um, that's a pretty cool outcome for a brand.

Speaker:

So how do we get to an influencer that organically loves this brand, posting

Speaker:

about them more quickly, uh, in an organic sort of serendipitous way.

Speaker:

That's a pretty cool unlock.

Speaker:

Um, so that's kind of how we've got to the, the route that we're on now and

Speaker:

we're unlocking a bunch of value for the brands that we are working with here.

Speaker:

That's really fascinating.

Speaker:

Um, I, and so you're, you've got the data to prove what

Speaker:

everybody else knows is true.

Speaker:

Is that actually the, yes.

Speaker:

The, the large influencers have access to, so you've got one person who has

Speaker:

access to a big audience, but if you've got a bunch of smaller influencers and

Speaker:

collectively have that, they have the same size audience, the smaller influencers

Speaker:

are gonna outperform the larger ones just.

Speaker:

Significantly.

Speaker:

By massive numbers.

Speaker:

It's like I, I was consistently time and time again surprised by just

Speaker:

how inefficient and how disconnected audiences are to these bigger macro, 1

Speaker:

million follower count plus influencers.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

No, that's fair enough.

Speaker:

I guess that's why they're all starting their own brands, aren't they?

Speaker:

Exactly.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And look, what they are still good for is some top of funnel awareness,

Speaker:

and for some potentially you'll get some branding benefits from

Speaker:

Mm.

Speaker:

to them.

Speaker:

Um, but if in, in this day and age, the brands tend to be, most, most brands tend

Speaker:

to be slightly more performance focused.

Speaker:

Um, so if you want genuine transactions, um, and genuine

Speaker:

transactions relatively quickly, um.

Speaker:

That's not the route you want to be going down.

Speaker:

You want this sort of ambassador army of these medium sized to lower, um,

Speaker:

sized influences, uh, that, that just advocate for you, um, all the time.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

No, that's, that's, that's brilliant.

Speaker:

That's brilliant.

Speaker:

Hey, listen, if you are listening to this, uh, and you are in fact an

Speaker:

e-commerce yourself, you run your own e-commerce business, uh, let me tell

Speaker:

you a little bit about Cohort Now.

Speaker:

Cohort is a free monthly group that you can join.

Speaker:

Uh, and we have them in different parts of the world.

Speaker:

Um, so, you know, hopefully won't fit your time zone.

Speaker:

Uh, but you can come and join us on Cohort.

Speaker:

Basically, it's just a bunch of us involved in e-commerce.

Speaker:

We got on calls.

Speaker:

How's it going?

Speaker:

Share stories.

Speaker:

Share what's working, share.

Speaker:

You know, I. Throw some thoughts into the ring and we connect

Speaker:

with like-minded people.

Speaker:

Uh, we do it on Zoom.

Speaker:

It's all free, and it's all very, very fantastic.

Speaker:

So if you would like to know more about that, just check it out.

Speaker:

ecommerce-podcast.net.

Speaker:

You know the website by now, ecommerce-podcast.net.

Speaker:

Uh, but yeah, go check it out there, especially if

Speaker:

you're involved in eCommerce.

Speaker:

We'd love to meet you in those groups.

Speaker:

Now, let's get into this then, Luke, because one of the things, um.

Speaker:

You've mentioned then is, well, it's better to go get the

Speaker:

smaller, you know, accounts.

Speaker:

How do I do that?

Speaker:

How do I do what you call build an unstoppable ambassador army?

Speaker:

Excellent.

Speaker:

So this is something I'm, I'm very passionate about and very excited

Speaker:

to be talking about here, Matt.

Speaker:

Um, and it's something that you'll see a lot of brands, uh, are shifting towards

Speaker:

now, is that they want this always on army of advocates and ambassadors around

Speaker:

them who love their brand, um, who will be posting about it consistently, but it

Speaker:

can be managed in a way where you don't have to hire a headcount purely to be this

Speaker:

community manager or something like that.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

So I think what a lot of brands overlook is the power, um, and the

Speaker:

reach of their existing customers.

Speaker:

There are people who buy from you every day, who have the ability to

Speaker:

share with their friends, family, and followers, um, in a meaningful way.

Speaker:

Like we, we do this analysis a couple of times a week on brands that typically have

Speaker:

between sort of 500,000 to 1.5 million.

Speaker:

Uh.

Speaker:

Email lists, uh, folks in there.

Speaker:

Um, and, and typically what we'll see is that the average brand will have somewhere

Speaker:

between, uh, 200 and 250 influencers.

Speaker:

And I, I, when I say influencer, I mean someone with more than 2,500

Speaker:

followers on a common platform, um, per 10,000, uh, emails.

Speaker:

So that's 250 per 10,000 emails.

Speaker:

Um, and that's completely being overlooked.

Speaker:

Um, so.

Speaker:

Brands tend, and I guess it was originally done in the, in the world of e-commerce.

Speaker:

'cause you had no way of finding out who actually exists within

Speaker:

your, your customer list.

Speaker:

But now we live in a world where there's a bunch of these really complex influencer

Speaker:

platforms that have rich information about every, uh, creator that's in the world.

Speaker:

Like our, our platform has access to over 15 million

Speaker:

creator and influencer profiles.

Speaker:

Um, so we can see in real time who's shopping and what their,

Speaker:

what their follow account is.

Speaker:

So.

Speaker:

No longer are you, are you viewing your existing customers as sort of

Speaker:

this passive group of people, um, that are just enjoying my product?

Speaker:

Whereas now you're saying, look, these are actually our best marketing asset.

Speaker:

These are the folks, um, that we can sort of co-create with and we can collaborate

Speaker:

with to get some really interesting outcomes that are a affordable, um, and

Speaker:

be super authentic and brand accretive.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

So our approach is let's find out everyone within your audience that has

Speaker:

a meaningful social media following.

Speaker:

Um, and once we've done that, let's do some pretty basic, um, outreach.

Speaker:

We don't wanna be like too much of a pest.

Speaker:

These are people who bought your product organically.

Speaker:

They love you, they've spent their own hard earned cash.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

Let, let's make a soft offer to them to see if they're interested in

Speaker:

becoming an ambassador or an advocate for you and speaking for the brand.

Speaker:

Um, so that, that, that changes in a, in a bunch of different ways.

Speaker:

Um, it looks different for different brands depending on the average

Speaker:

age of the audience or, or the type of product that you're selling.

Speaker:

Like one of our strongest, um, one of our strongest.

Speaker:

Uh, brands we are working with is a, is a ticketing site in the

Speaker:

US They massive ticketing site.

Speaker:

They sort of do north of $500 million worth of ticket sales a year.

Speaker:

Um, our ability to reach out to their customer base and say, um, do you wanna

Speaker:

be an always on advocate for us, is, is limited because it's based around a

Speaker:

specific purchase of an event and they need to be hit right at that perfect time

Speaker:

where they can say, Hey, here's something I'm going to, y'all should come along to.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

Whereas if it's a, a supplement brand, that's so much easier just

Speaker:

to say, Hey, look, I know this per this, this person who is an

Speaker:

influencer who is purchasing from me every single month, um, has a reach.

Speaker:

There's some really fun ways that I can do some surprise and delight in that

Speaker:

regular outreach, whether that's the merch or whether that's the upsize or,

Speaker:

or even just something as simple as a handwritten note, uh, acknowledging their

Speaker:

purchase goes so far with these sort of.

Speaker:

Nano influencers and micro creators who, who might not be used to being

Speaker:

acknowledged and used to being sort of singled out, um, that belly

Speaker:

scratch, uh, makes them feel special.

Speaker:

And, and is, is sometimes enough to, to get them from being a passive person who's

Speaker:

enjoying it, to someone who's posting.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

That's really good.

Speaker:

I, I, and again, I mean, that's just a general human thing, isn't it?

Speaker:

So many people go unnoticed that actually if you just notice somebody and

Speaker:

say thank you in a unique way, people just genuinely fall in love with you.

Speaker:

And, and it's, you know,

Speaker:

Yeah,

Speaker:

people love that.

Speaker:

Um, so we're looking in our existing customers for people who have got over

Speaker:

two and a half thousand followers.

Speaker:

exactly.

Speaker:

um, how do I do that?

Speaker:

Is it because we've been having this conversation?

Speaker:

Ironically, actually, it's perfect timing for us in many ways.

Speaker:

We were having this conversation the other day in the office, like, do

Speaker:

we just email every single customer and say, listen, we're thinking of

Speaker:

setting up a, an influencer program.

Speaker:

I. It's not quite how I'd phrase it, but in essence is we're

Speaker:

setting up an influencer program.

Speaker:

Um, would you like to get involved or is there a, is there a better way to do,

Speaker:

I, I, I kind of know how you can answer this because I know this is where your

Speaker:

company does some help, so, um, quick plug for what you guys do and tell us how you

Speaker:

would help someone like me not to do that.

Speaker:

Or maybe that, maybe that is the best practice.

Speaker:

I dunno, I'm making an assumption here.

Speaker:

Hey, look, look, I'll, I'll, I'll take you through the whole process here.

Speaker:

I'll tell you how we would do it as a company that specializes in this.

Speaker:

Um, but it's not to say that if you don't work with us, you can't do it.

Speaker:

I can, I'll, I'll speak quickly to if I didn't have any budget at all, do this,

Speaker:

and I still wanted to see this outcome.

Speaker:

How would I do it without budget?

Speaker:

Um, so, so for us, what we do is, is we integrate into the email

Speaker:

platform that these brands work with.

Speaker:

The most common one is, is Klaviyo.

Speaker:

So Klaviyo is what's gonna send out the post-purchase order emails.

Speaker:

Um, and how that works with us is the moment a, a transaction takes place, um,

Speaker:

a customer profiles created in Klaviyo, um, which has a a bunch of details,

Speaker:

name, email, address, some order details.

Speaker:

We use that to create a profile that we match against.

Speaker:

15 million, uh, influencer profiles that exist in the world.

Speaker:

Um, and once we do find that we have a successful match, then we trigger a

Speaker:

flow that goes out to, uh, all of these creators, uh, that says, Hey, just

Speaker:

notice you made a purchase from us.

Speaker:

Looks like you might be a good fit for our creator team.

Speaker:

Uh, if you are, click this button and we'll automatically add

Speaker:

you to our creator community.

Speaker:

Something as simple as that.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

If, but we'll do some conditional flows where it's, if it's between 3,500 and

Speaker:

100,000, they get email A. If it's between 100,000 and 300,000 for example,

Speaker:

it'll be email B, which will be a little bit softer saying, Hey, love what?

Speaker:

You just, uh, love that you purchased from us.

Speaker:

Love your content.

Speaker:

Um, would you like us to send you some more free stuff?

Speaker:

Something like that, or our, our founder would love to chat to you

Speaker:

about a potential collaboration.

Speaker:

Here's a meeting link.

Speaker:

Let me know if you're interested in chatting.

Speaker:

Um, and then the third flow is if they've got more than 300,000, uh, we

Speaker:

just send a notification into their Slack channel saying, Hey, by the

Speaker:

way, this person just made a purchase.

Speaker:

If you wanna reach out to them, reach out to them.

Speaker:

If you don't wanna reach out to 'em, don't worry about it.

Speaker:

Uh, we're mindful there still is some value in having those.

Speaker:

Brand partnerships with the massive creators and automating

Speaker:

communication with them probably isn't the right way to go about, um,

Speaker:

For the same reasons.

Speaker:

We don't do AI agents in our, in our contact.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Same reason.

Speaker:

and then we parallel that with a, we've just got our hands

Speaker:

on a really cool new one.

Speaker:

One of these AI agents startups, which is, um.

Speaker:

Allowing us to automate dms out to the creators via Instagram, which

Speaker:

is a very similar message, which is, Hey, not sure if you saw our

Speaker:

email, saw your purchase from us.

Speaker:

Love your content.

Speaker:

Reply if you're interested in a collaboration.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Okay.

Speaker:

Um, so those are being fired out one day after that initial email goes out.

Speaker:

Um, the idea being that now you've at least made the ask, um, simply

Speaker:

asking if they're interested.

Speaker:

You've identified them, they have a potential, uh, to be a, a really

Speaker:

good collaborator for your business.

Speaker:

You've hinted it, there's some upside for them.

Speaker:

And then you've built this community and the idea is you'll end up

Speaker:

building 500 odd people who are inside, uh, this created team.

Speaker:

Um, some, some brands manage it in like a Slack channel or a Discord or a Instagram

Speaker:

broadcast channel where they have the founder constantly posting sort of once a

Speaker:

week saying, what color do you guys reckon we should have for next season's drop or.

Speaker:

Are you also facing this problem?

Speaker:

Depending on the brand, you sort of activate them and work with

Speaker:

them and, and make them feel involved and loved by the brand.

Speaker:

Um, give them some early access.

Speaker:

There needs to be some benefit to them beyond just a simple referral link.

Speaker:

Um, and then you're just, every single month, your brand is top of

Speaker:

mind for them because you're talking to them, you're maintaining that

Speaker:

relationship and they love your brand because they paid with their own

Speaker:

hard earned cash to make a purchase.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

By opting in.

Speaker:

That's their way of saying, Hey, look, let's let, let's make

Speaker:

something of this together in a way that's mutually beneficial.

Speaker:

Um,

Speaker:

that's really cool.

Speaker:

and if I didn't have any budget, the way you do that is an email

Speaker:

that goes out post-purchase.

Speaker:

Perhaps the same time you're sending out that review email saying, Hey, by the

Speaker:

way, we are building an ambassador army.

Speaker:

Um, there are a bunch here.

Speaker:

Here's a list of the, the benefits that everyone can get.

Speaker:

Um, you don't, what you have to be careful is you don't want

Speaker:

to be seen to be excluding.

Speaker:

Everyday customers from being an ambassador because they don't

Speaker:

have enough followers, because that's sort of like a, a, a pretty

Speaker:

disappointing outcome for them.

Speaker:

Everyone gets in, but, but as part of that, you'll ask them to sort

Speaker:

of submit their Instagram handle or some sort of handle as they, they

Speaker:

go through the, the process and you can sort of manually sort who's.

Speaker:

The, the big fish, uh, and who's not, and you can sort of manage that

Speaker:

organically, um, throughout that process and just do the exact same thing.

Speaker:

Yeah, that's super smart.

Speaker:

Is it?

Speaker:

Um, I, I guess there's a, as I'm listening to you talk, Luke, there's

Speaker:

a, a cutoff in terms of budget.

Speaker:

So if I don't have money, I'm gonna go down the route of setting

Speaker:

up a, a post email sequence.

Speaker:

Okay.

Speaker:

I get that.

Speaker:

I can do that.

Speaker:

That's not a problem.

Speaker:

I. If I've got budget, I'm gonna come to someone like you and

Speaker:

say, listen, um, this is great.

Speaker:

You've got software.

Speaker:

It's gonna make my life a lot easier.

Speaker:

I guess another way to look at this is to say, uh, what number?

Speaker:

Um, so if I've just started out, for example, and I've only got like

Speaker:

a thousand people on my email list,

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

it probably, I, I'm, I'm, does it make sense to use you?

Speaker:

Probably not.

Speaker:

I don't know.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

What, at what number does a a, um, a service like yours actually really

Speaker:

start to impact a business like mine?

Speaker:

Yeah, so look, we like to work with brands that have more than 10,000 emails

Speaker:

in their customer list before that.

Speaker:

Um, the, the volume of sort of influences we discover is, is gonna be difficult

Speaker:

to, to make meaningful changes.

Speaker:

That's not to say that we haven't had great outcomes for smaller businesses.

Speaker:

Um, I'm sure as you've seen, as I've seen all it takes is one good creator, um, to

Speaker:

make a meaningful change for a business like the, the, i I keep wheeling out.

Speaker:

The same example with, with a lot of people that I speak to is with

Speaker:

one of the brands we work with.

Speaker:

They're, they're a, um, a suitcase brand.

Speaker:

Um, they sell inflight suitcases, carry on bags and the like.

Speaker:

Um, we found one YouTuber, 5,000 subscribers, maybe 5,500 now.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

He's generated more than $330,000 worth of transactions, uh, for this brand.

Speaker:

They set him up with a referral link, uh, and asked him for his opinion every

Speaker:

now and then on like what sort of that he, 'cause he, he does suitcase reviews

Speaker:

as his, his, uh, channel on YouTube.

Speaker:

It's very niche, but he felt like he was included.

Speaker:

He felt like he was part of the brand.

Speaker:

Now, he posted a bunch of videos, sort of, he rerecorded a new video every

Speaker:

two months for this particular brand.

Speaker:

With his affiliate link, I think he was getting like 20 bucks per suitcase sale.

Speaker:

Um, and he's generated $330,000 worth of sales.

Speaker:

This is a very meaningful percent of, of that brand's total

Speaker:

revenue for the last 12 months.

Speaker:

Yeah, I, no, I, I, I mean, influences, when you look at the

Speaker:

numbers, it's incredible really when you, when you can track it out.

Speaker:

How do we, um, so I, whether I've emailed them out post-purchase sequence, then, or

Speaker:

I've, I've, I'm using, you know, Ray or.

Speaker:

A service to kind of help me, how do I as a brand, make sure, what do I

Speaker:

need to think about as a brand to, you use the phrase always on, right?

Speaker:

So, um, how do I make sure they don't just sign up and then forget about us?

Speaker:

How do I deliver this value?

Speaker:

How do I keep them engaged?

Speaker:

How do I get them sharing posts regularly?

Speaker:

Exactly, look, so we break it down into three separate stages.

Speaker:

So stage one is getting the right people into the top of the

Speaker:

bucket, um, top of the funnel.

Speaker:

So you've got an opportunity for people to share.

Speaker:

The next stage is you don't start with the idea of this needs to be

Speaker:

a, um, a an always on solution.

Speaker:

What your first goal should always be is how do I get them to talk about

Speaker:

me or post about me or perform some sort of ambassadorial task just once.

Speaker:

I just want one single task out of them.

Speaker:

Um, so getting them to perform that first task should be the number one

Speaker:

objective, and there needs to be, obviously the right timing, uh, the

Speaker:

right task for them to complete.

Speaker:

If you ask every single person who's just made a purchase from you to

Speaker:

create a one minute long Instagram reel and post it, that's a pretty

Speaker:

high level of ask to to get from them, and you'll get pretty low conversion

Speaker:

rate and it's gonna fizzle them out.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

And they're not gonna be interested in being part of your little

Speaker:

army of ambassadors anymore.

Speaker:

So you need to have a really easy goal for them to object, uh, to, um, to, to

Speaker:

get across the line, set off with, with a pretty meaningful carrot at the end of it.

Speaker:

So it might be something as simple as, look, if you post about us

Speaker:

on your Instagram story, um, Instagram story, easy to come by.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

Just purely, you don't even have to tag us.

Speaker:

You don't have to use a referral link.

Speaker:

Just show that you've made a purchase from us, uh, and it's

Speaker:

part of your day-to-day life.

Speaker:

That's enough.

Speaker:

Uh, we'll send you a free hoodie, we'll send you a cap

Speaker:

or we'll send you something.

Speaker:

Um, and that tends to work well.

Speaker:

And once they've performed that, once you've, you've formed a behavior, and

Speaker:

then now that they're in the group, you can say, look, now we're in the

Speaker:

month of, uh, may, month of April, or month of May, whatever it is.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

Here's a list of all of the potential, uh, ambassador rewards

Speaker:

that are going for this month.

Speaker:

And you can just recycle 'em every single month.

Speaker:

So it'll be, if you want to, uh, post a a reel, here's kind of what the

Speaker:

reels we are looking for this month to support the ads that are going out.

Speaker:

Um, this is the reward, um, for, uh, an Instagram story.

Speaker:

Here are some stories that we are looking for this month.

Speaker:

These are the rewards for these types of stories.

Speaker:

And by the way, everyone in the Ambassador Army gets an

Speaker:

affiliate link or a referral link.

Speaker:

Here's how you can generate that and then use an example of like, here's an

Speaker:

example of an influencer just like you who's made $5,000, uh, in the month

Speaker:

of January by clever talking about our brand and using the affiliate

Speaker:

link like an absolute champion.

Speaker:

So the, so you're, you're talking about two things there then, aren't you?

Speaker:

You, are, you I'm giving the influencer two things.

Speaker:

I'm giving them a reward for an action.

Speaker:

Um, but then I'm also giving them a referral link so that they

Speaker:

make a commission on the sale.

Speaker:

Exactly.

Speaker:

Well, so that's an option.

Speaker:

They have the option to have that referral link in affiliate link.

Speaker:

That tends to be the one that most brands go down because they like to see

Speaker:

attributable sales and they like to know where the transactions are coming from

Speaker:

and that this is a high ROI channel.

Speaker:

Um, other brands, and I'm, I'm sure you've seen it in your work

Speaker:

as well, is that they're just super thirsty for any content.

Speaker:

The content drives all paid performance marketing at the moment

Speaker:

and all sort of website optimization.

Speaker:

So maybe they don't actually care about, uh, getting the affiliate links out

Speaker:

there or the referral links out there.

Speaker:

And look, certain brands are not well positioned for

Speaker:

referral and affiliate links.

Speaker:

If you're a luxury brand, referral links and affiliate links don't work as well.

Speaker:

If you're a brand that has your average age over over 50, by asking that

Speaker:

customer to sort of understand how referral and affiliate links works, um,

Speaker:

just purely that coaching process can sort of throw a spanner in the work.

Speaker:

So it's purely just talking about the brand and getting the right content

Speaker:

that you can then have flowing through into, uh, the, the, the general

Speaker:

marketing engine is what's key.

Speaker:

I'm not an expert in telling a brand exactly what they want from these creators

Speaker:

and influences that exist in their mix.

Speaker:

That's for them to decide, but.

Speaker:

I can say, look, here are some proven cases of the way that brands we work

Speaker:

with have utilized this army that exists within their customer base

Speaker:

to achieve their business goals.

Speaker:

So this, um, so what have you seen actually work well then?

Speaker:

I mean, you've obviously got these case studies.

Speaker:

I'm curious because I, um,

Speaker:

I would genuinely love to know what is working well at the

Speaker:

moment in terms of motivating.

Speaker:

I. Um, what, what have you seen brands do that you kind of think

Speaker:

that's genius that I can see why you are winning at at life now?

Speaker:

Um, good question.

Speaker:

Um, so the, the brand, one of the brands that is working really well

Speaker:

has a high amount of brand loyalty.

Speaker:

They work in the, uh, sort of fitness and uh, fitness clothing space with

Speaker:

posture correcting, uh, fitness.

Speaker:

Stuff.

Speaker:

So what they're doing is they know that they have a really high level

Speaker:

of, uh, brand advocacy and brand love.

Speaker:

Um, so they're, they're finding, uh, the creators that, that

Speaker:

already love them and, and they're purely getting content for them.

Speaker:

Content is king and they want, uh, top of funnel content.

Speaker:

So for them it's, look, you don't even need to post anything.

Speaker:

Just give us a 15 minute, um.

Speaker:

15 minute, uh, script and a selfie style video, um, talking about why you've bought

Speaker:

this garment and not another garment.

Speaker:

Um, and then they're just using that video to chop it up

Speaker:

and repurpose it all over the

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Um, the, the brand that I was talking to about the, uh, earlier

Speaker:

with the, the suitcases and bags, they're very performance driven.

Speaker:

Um, they only want attributable sales really.

Speaker:

Um, they've got a, a little bit of the softer stuff around making

Speaker:

people feel included in part of the.

Speaker:

Community.

Speaker:

Um, but they have a, if you're gonna take that approach, the size

Speaker:

of the price needs to be there.

Speaker:

You can't cheap out on like 1% commission on referral transactions or 2%, which

Speaker:

we see brands trying to go down and I understand that like you eroding away

Speaker:

margins every now and then, but they have a pretty meaningful, um, reward of, I

Speaker:

think it's like 20 or $30 per transaction.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

That tends to be enough to get most people posting about it.

Speaker:

Um, I think for them it helps as well is that they have

Speaker:

particularly beautiful bags.

Speaker:

Um, so it's an, because it's beautiful and travel has so much

Speaker:

social currency, it's easy to inject that into lifestyle content.

Speaker:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker:

I imagine that is, I imagine.

Speaker:

But I, I like how you, you, you're, what you're showing us

Speaker:

here is different use cases.

Speaker:

So you can use this system just to get creative, which

Speaker:

you can use in your ad content.

Speaker:

So maybe you just want videos, you, which you are gonna chop up from people.

Speaker:

They don't have to post anything.

Speaker:

Maybe you do want them to post stuff.

Speaker:

Um, uh, maybe you also want attributable sales.

Speaker:

The thing is actually quite dynamic, isn't it?

Speaker:

It's quite.

Speaker:

Flexible to how you wanna run as a business.

Speaker:

I guess for most people their default is gonna be, I think, and most people

Speaker:

are gonna think, well, I just, of course I want attributable sales.

Speaker:

Why would, why would I not want attributable sales?

Speaker:

But is that, is that always the, I mean, you've, you've mentioned one company

Speaker:

that doesn't do that, the gym company, but is that, is that always the best

Speaker:

policy or how would I determine what the, the right route to go down is?

Speaker:

I mean, look, it really depends on what stage we're in as a business.

Speaker:

Um, if I was a new business that was just getting started, um,

Speaker:

probably the, the better outcome and the easier outcome might just be.

Speaker:

To get people posting about you, top of funnel awareness, um, driven by getting

Speaker:

authentic influencers who are purely just a post to the Instagram story.

Speaker:

If you can get 'em posting once a month or once every two weeks about you, um,

Speaker:

that's huge validation to their audience that this is, this brand is a real deal.

Speaker:

Um, as soon as you start attaching affiliate links and referral links,

Speaker:

it can cheapen or sort of take some authenticity away from that post.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

So if I want just to get a bunch of creators posting about it, so I

Speaker:

feel like I'm a brand that's being talked about in the world, um, that

Speaker:

can be a really positive outcome.

Speaker:

And then eventually, after three or four months of doing that with the rewards,

Speaker:

going to the people who are posting and, and seeing how that engagement works

Speaker:

and the way they like to talk about your brand, you can take those learnings and

Speaker:

feed them into your advertising engine for some sort of creative content ideas.

Speaker:

And then you can start injecting some, uh.

Speaker:

Some, some referral links or affiliate links into that type as well.

Speaker:

But I, I wouldn't, I wouldn't try and rip those affiliate links right off the bat.

Speaker:

I would just get, let's, let's get our position in the market.

Speaker:

Let's get people talking about us.

Speaker:

Let's make us look like a real tangible brand if we are new

Speaker:

and still early on the journey.

Speaker:

And then hopefully that'll lead to some transaction.

Speaker:

But if you try and jump to that point too early, um, you can sort of sacrifice

Speaker:

some authenticity in that process.

Speaker:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker:

No, I like that.

Speaker:

And you bet it's very top of funnel then, isn't it?

Speaker:

It's all very brand awareness, um, type thing.

Speaker:

How do you.

Speaker:

How do you track it, right?

Speaker:

So if, if I'm gonna do that whole brand awareness thing and it's like,

Speaker:

okay guys, these are the rewards.

Speaker:

If you do whatever, five stories, three reels and a ridge in a pair of

Speaker:

tree, then um, you get this reward.

Speaker:

Um, how do you track that?

Speaker:

Is that something that they need to tell you that they've done?

Speaker:

Is that something you can track automatically with hashtags?

Speaker:

How, how do I make that process easier?

Speaker:

Yeah, so look, d different brands do it in a different way.

Speaker:

For a lot of the brands we work with, we'll take 100%

Speaker:

ownership of that tracking.

Speaker:

Um, and part of the process will be that, um, we'll either we've got some

Speaker:

clever tools that can make assumptions around the reach of a post or, um,

Speaker:

in some cases we'll just ask the, the creator on the 23rd hour of the, the

Speaker:

story being up, um, shoot us over a screenshot of the reach and we'll just.

Speaker:

Store that against our profile.

Speaker:

So we know that this person consistently gets this reach and it's been posted

Speaker:

and this is what it looks like.

Speaker:

Um, but like a, a, a good brand that's on their toes.

Speaker:

We'll be consistently resharing that content as well in real time.

Speaker:

Um, just to continue the amplification process.

Speaker:

So, uh, we, we, as part of the process, we tend to build out, build out these

Speaker:

pretty comprehensive CRM type tools of these are all the folks on the roster,

Speaker:

this is who's posted, this is the reach.

Speaker:

Um, and, and this is their reward that's been, uh, put back to them.

Speaker:

So.

Speaker:

If you want to, like, obviously we know the space that we operate in, um, and

Speaker:

as much as it's nice to have the warm fuzzies for having someone post about

Speaker:

you, we need to be, be able to be compared to other places that money's going.

Speaker:

So you can see what the CPM is, you can see what, uh, if, if we're doing

Speaker:

that referral or affiliate based approach, you can, you can sort of

Speaker:

throw together a CPC or a even a cost per acquisition on the back of it.

Speaker:

Um, and that'll at least keep us.

Speaker:

Uh, in a position where we can be compared apples with apples, whereas in the past,

Speaker:

and we sort of spoke to that original, uh, influencer marketing approach at

Speaker:

the top of the call, uh, which was like, just throw money at a big influencer.

Speaker:

And maybe it works, maybe it doesn't, there's no real way of telling.

Speaker:

Um, whereas now it should be like, alright, this is how it

Speaker:

compares with our Facebook spend, with our, uh, Google spend.

Speaker:

Uh, and we can see exactly how that compares.

Speaker:

Fantastic.

Speaker:

Fantastic.

Speaker:

Luke, listen, before we get to the saving, the best tool, last section, uh.

Speaker:

The now's the time.

Speaker:

Uh, well before we, we we're gonna get to that.

Speaker:

And if you don't know about the same last, uh, saving the best or last

Speaker:

section, it's a new segment to the show.

Speaker:

Stay tuned 'cause we're gonna save the best to the best.

Speaker:

Now, uh, let me ask you, Luke, this is the time of the show where I

Speaker:

go, what's your question for me?

Speaker:

This is where I take your question.

Speaker:

I will go away and I will answer it on social media, predominantly

Speaker:

LinkedIn, ladies and gentlemen.

Speaker:

Uh, but um, yeah, I'm gonna take your question.

Speaker:

I'm gonna answer on LinkedIn.

Speaker:

So if you don't follow me by the way already on LinkedIn, come

Speaker:

follow me at Matt Edmundson.

Speaker:

You'll see the answer there to this question.

Speaker:

Go look.

Speaker:

So, Matt, you've been in, in e-commerce for a long time, a

Speaker:

very long time, longer than most.

Speaker:

Um, and I'm sure you've lived, uh, through many of these hype cycles of,

Speaker:

there's a specific part of e-commerce marketing that comes through that's

Speaker:

particularly frothy and then dies away.

Speaker:

Um, looking at this moment in time right now, I'd love to know.

Speaker:

Uh, is there any hype that's happening now that you think brands and brand owners

Speaker:

are over investing time and energy into?

Speaker:

And then on the other side of that is where are people not investing enough

Speaker:

time and energy into what's like the low hanging fruit out there that, that you

Speaker:

consistently look at brands and you're saying like, these people are absolute

Speaker:

idiots for not investing a little bit more time and energy into this one simple thing

Speaker:

that can have like really good outcomes.

Speaker:

That is such a phenomenal question.

Speaker:

And now I look, I know before we started recording, you said, oh,

Speaker:

we've got the, we've got the question for the question from that thing.

Speaker:

That's good.

Speaker:

That's great.

Speaker:

You, whoever put that together, genius loving that.

Speaker:

Uh, if you wanna know how I'm gonna answer loose, great question.

Speaker:

Then like I say, follow me on LinkedIn at Edmundson, you'll find

Speaker:

the answer there at some point in.

Speaker:

The future.

Speaker:

No doubt.

Speaker:

Look, listen.

Speaker:

Uh, how do people reach you?

Speaker:

How do they connect with you if they want to do that, what's the best way to find

Speaker:

out about maybe connecting with the rave?

Speaker:

Maybe get their help on board.

Speaker:

I don't know.

Speaker:

What's, what's, what's the low down bro?

Speaker:

Yeah, look, I like to be nice and approachable.

Speaker:

Just email me luke@therave.co.

Speaker:

You can find me on LinkedIn, Luke ya uh, there's not, not

Speaker:

too many Luke Yarnton out there.

Speaker:

Um, otherwise yeah, the rave.co is the website.

Speaker:

There's a bunch of ways that you can, you can book some time with me and we can sit

Speaker:

down and have a chat and talk through, uh, potential strategies for your brand.

Speaker:

Fantastic.

Speaker:

We will of course, link to Luke and all of his stuff, the, the email, the LinkedIn,

Speaker:

all of that sort of stuff will be in the show notes, which if you're just on the

Speaker:

podcast app, just listening, scroll down.

Speaker:

It'll be there in the YouTube description.

Speaker:

Scroll down, it'll be there.

Speaker:

Of course, you can go to the websites.

Speaker:

Uh, ecommerce-podcast.net and it'll be there.

Speaker:

And of course, if you are subscribed to the newsletter, uh,

Speaker:

it will also be in your inbox.

Speaker:

And if you're not subscribed to the newsletter, why not?

Speaker:

What's wrong with you?

Speaker:

It's the best newsletter going out there.

Speaker:

It's unbelievable.

Speaker:

This thing.

Speaker:

Uh, it's actually, we're in a really, uh, we, I've, I've mentioned this

Speaker:

a couple of times on the show.

Speaker:

We've just changed over how we do the newsletters and the new system,

Speaker:

um, that we've, we've got coming up.

Speaker:

It's almost.

Speaker:

Almost launched.

Speaker:

It's a little bit behind.

Speaker:

I'm about two weeks behind, but we're, we're just about to launch

Speaker:

it and the value of the newsletters is just shot through the roof.

Speaker:

So, um, do find out more information about that, of course, at

Speaker:

ecommerce-podcast.net where we'll put in all the strategies and stuff from

Speaker:

Luke about influencer marketing, if that's something you want to get into.

Speaker:

Right, Luke?

Speaker:

In the last few minutes, let's do the saving the best till last.

Speaker:

Uh, this is where I like to just reward everybody that stayed with us throughout

Speaker:

the entire journey on this podcast.

Speaker:

Um, that we, I'm using the word reward and there's no link, there's no

Speaker:

referral link, ladies and gentlemen.

Speaker:

Uh, but if you've stayed with us this long, I'd just like to ask the, I guess,

Speaker:

for their best tip to save the best tool.

Speaker:

Less so.

Speaker:

Luke, what is that from you, my friend?

Speaker:

So this is a little secret that we've just recently learned.

Speaker:

Um, and for us it's been a massive unlock that I think can be applied to

Speaker:

anyone who's trying to do similar things to what we are trying to do, uh, which

Speaker:

is sort of getting an outcome from a customer that loves your brand, um,

Speaker:

that is do them doing something for you.

Speaker:

Right?

Speaker:

Um, so, so that learning is that obviously for us, what we are trying to do is

Speaker:

get people posting about a brand after they've made a purchase in real time.

Speaker:

Ideally, what we've found is that offering.

Speaker:

A slight refund or a fraction of a refund outperforms any other incentive.

Speaker:

Ridiculously.

Speaker:

Um, so by that I mean, for some reason, let, let's say you

Speaker:

made a purchase that's $100.

Speaker:

Um, if I were to say to that person, Hey, look, we'll give you $20 if you post an

Speaker:

Instagram story about our brand or an unboxing video on your Instagram story.

Speaker:

Um, $20.

Speaker:

Response rate for that tends to be sort of like three to 5% pretty low.

Speaker:

If you change that and say, Hey, look, we're gonna give you a 20% refund on

Speaker:

your recent order, uh, for making a post about us that skyrockets for some reason.

Speaker:

There's some, and look, you've been in e-commerce and in marketing

Speaker:

for much longer than I have, Matt.

Speaker:

There's, there's something there around consumer psychology where, uh,

Speaker:

a refund for a, a recent purchase.

Speaker:

Is perceived to be either much more valuable or much less icky, um,

Speaker:

than the corresponding pay for post.

Speaker:

I think may, maybe there's something to do with like loss aversion, but I.

Speaker:

We've found that that offering, that, that small refund, it doesn't have

Speaker:

to be a full, like if you can offer a full refund on a purchase for something

Speaker:

that's gonna send people absolutely nuts.

Speaker:

Um, but just a small refund for, for some sort of outcome goes so well, I.

Speaker:

And look, that often can go out to any customer.

Speaker:

It doesn't have to be an influencer that's, uh, in your, in your audience.

Speaker:

If you wanted to ask every single person who made a purchase from you to post

Speaker:

about their product, your, your product, um, after they've made a purchase and

Speaker:

offer them like a 25% refund on their order or something with a maximum of,

Speaker:

you can set a max limit on that as well.

Speaker:

You'll get significantly more people posting about you.

Speaker:

That's incredible.

Speaker:

That's, and I'm, this is, I'm smiling because actually we do a lot of research.

Speaker:

After we do the podcast, um, based on our conversation, we go away

Speaker:

and we do some research, right.

Speaker:

And we look at some of the latest stats and stuff.

Speaker:

And so when we write the blog posts and when we do the newsletters

Speaker:

that I've mentioned, we want to add extra value, right?

Speaker:

We just, we we're starting to put a lot more stuff in these, in these,

Speaker:

uh, blog posts and case studies, uh, blog posts and newsletters.

Speaker:

That one stat alone is gonna send the research nuts.

Speaker:

'cause we, I now need to understand why that is the case.

Speaker:

I've got some theories I think.

Speaker:

I wonder what it comes back with.

Speaker:

My gut feel would be actually getting a refund is really easy

Speaker:

'cause you're gonna refund, you've already got my credit card details.

Speaker:

If you're gonna pay me 20 bucks, I've gotta set up an account,

Speaker:

I've gotta give you my email.

Speaker:

Does that mean I have to declare it on a tax return?

Speaker:

There's all kinds of problems associated with that, which you

Speaker:

know, are synonymous with it now.

Speaker:

Whereas a refund is an easy, easy win, isn't it?

Speaker:

It's just like, oh, great, just put the 20 bucks back in my account

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Look, I, I think to your original point, it, perception of work I'm doing changes

Speaker:

If it's I'm getting something back versus I'm getting something new, um, and it

Speaker:

changes at that point of transaction, it changes the value proposition around like

Speaker:

what I've just purchased and actually I'm getting something for cheaper than I

Speaker:

thought it was for doing something that I might have might have done anyway.

Speaker:

Um, so.

Speaker:

That's brilliant.

Speaker:

I have to say, Luke, I, I've not been tracking actually, uh, since we've been

Speaker:

doing it, the saving the best or less.

Speaker:

But, uh, if I was, I dare say if.

Speaker:

That's probably the best answer we've had on the saving the best or last.

Speaker:

So, uh, I, I have to, I have to do this.

Speaker:

I have to applaud you.

Speaker:

Yes.

Speaker:

Very good.

Speaker:

Well done.

Speaker:

Uh, yeah.

Speaker:

Nailed that.

Speaker:

Fantastic.

Speaker:

Luke, listen man, really appreciate you, appreciate you coming on the podcast.

Speaker:

It's been great to meet you and talk to you all the way, uh, on

Speaker:

the other side of the Atlantic.

Speaker:

Um, love what you guys are doing and of course, if you are in the

Speaker:

market for some help with influencer marketing, then do connect with Luke.

Speaker:

But Luke.

Speaker:

Appreciate it, man.

Speaker:

You're a legend.

Speaker:

Thanks for coming on the show.

Speaker:

Cheers.

Speaker:

Thanks for your time, Matt.

Speaker:

No problem.

Speaker:

Now that's it from me.

Speaker:

That's it from Luke.

Speaker:

Thank you so much for joining us.

Speaker:

Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world, and of

Speaker:

course, I will see you next time.

Speaker:

That's it from me.

Speaker:

Bye for now.