Welcome to the e-Commerce podcast with
Matt Edmundson:me, your host, Matt Edmundson.
Matt Edmundson:The E-Commerce podcast is all about helping you deliver e-commerce wow.
Matt Edmundson:And to help us do just that, I am chatting with my very special guest
Matt Edmundson:today, Tomar hen from MobCo Media about how to join the Creator economy.
Matt Edmundson:But before we jump into this fascinating conversation, let
Matt Edmundson:me suggest a few other eCommerce podcast episodes to listen to that
Matt Edmundson:I think you will also enjoy, try Katie Wight's conversation with me about content
Matt Edmundson:strategy and why it is my new B F F.
Matt Edmundson:And also have a look at Lauren Schwartz, a creative that drives the click through.
Matt Edmundson:You can find both of these as well as our entire archive of episodes on our
Matt Edmundson:website for free at ecommercepodcast.net.
Matt Edmundson:Now shout out to today show sponsor, uh, e-commerce cohort.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, they e-commerce cohort is all about helping you deliver
Matt Edmundson:e-commerce well to your customers.
Matt Edmundson:I don't know if you've ever done an online course.
Matt Edmundson:I've done a lot of them, but I've spent a small fortune, if I'm honest
Matt Edmundson:with you, in online courses over the years, some of which I've completed.
Matt Edmundson:Some of which I haven't, but ask me, you know, what I've done as
Matt Edmundson:a result of those online courses.
Matt Edmundson:Sometimes I've just sat there and learned and not really done a whole great deal.
Matt Edmundson:Online courses are great, but I find they're a bit overwhelming and I
Matt Edmundson:don't always get the most out of them.
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Matt Edmundson:you've got 11 hours worth of instruction.
Matt Edmundson:No, no, there's, there's no overwhelm.
Matt Edmundson:It's lightweight and it's practical.
Matt Edmundson:It's designed to help you get to, uh, work on your business.
Matt Edmundson:So whether you are just starting out, uh, in e-commerce or like me, you've
Matt Edmundson:been around a fair few years, as they say a well established e-commerce,
Matt Edmundson:uh, then I encourage you to definitely check out eCommercecohort.com.
Matt Edmundson:Ecommercecohort.com.
Matt Edmundson:You can find a whole bunch more information, uh, about this fantastic
Matt Edmundson:tool on the website, or you can email me directly, matt@ecommercepodcast.net.
Matt Edmundson:If you've got any specific questions, I will try my level best to answer them.
Matt Edmundson:Now.
Matt Edmundson:Without further ado, uh, here is my conversation with.
Matt Edmundson:Tomer.
Matt Edmundson:Tomer Hen is a digital marketing expert with over a decade of experience.
Matt Edmundson:He founded the first mobile marketing school in Israel, created
Matt Edmundson:the first Israeli mobile marketing summit, and has spearheaded notable
Matt Edmundson:campaigns with leading Fortune 500.
Matt Edmundson:He is the man now backed by expertise and a growing portfolio.
Matt Edmundson:Tomer was recognized as one of Forbes 30 promising entrepreneurs under
Matt Edmundson:30, so slightly envious the fact he was in Forbes and slightly envious.
Matt Edmundson:Envious that he's still under 30.
Matt Edmundson:So that said, he's the right dude to talk to because in this episode
Matt Edmundson:we are gonna chat about how you can.
Matt Edmundson:The creator economy and start making money doing what you love.
Matt Edmundson:Now, if you are like me, you probably have lots of interests and passions that
Matt Edmundson:actually you could easily turn into a career and would love to do so, but it
Matt Edmundson:can be difficult to know where to start or how to make money doing what you love.
Matt Edmundson:Now, whether you're an artist, A musician, a writer, or just have some great ideas.
Matt Edmundson:Stay tuned for this conversation with Tomer because he is
Matt Edmundson:the experts just for you.
Matt Edmundson:Yes, Yes.
Matt Edmundson:Tamer, welcome to the podcast.
Matt Edmundson:Great to have you here.
Matt Edmundson:How are
Matt Edmundson:you doing?
Tomer Hen:Thank you so much, Matt.
Tomer Hen:It's great being here.
Tomer Hen:That was quite an intro, so thank you for that.
Tomer Hen:. Matt Edmundson: Yeah.
Tomer Hen:Something we all now have to live up to?
Tomer Hen:No, no, no.
Tomer Hen:Where?
Tomer Hen:Whereabouts in the world are you dialing in from?
Tomer Hen:Right now I'm in Tel Aviv and I spend my time, um, in between,
Tomer Hen:uh, La Tel Aviv, Austin, uh, and anywhere that I pretty much desire.
Tomer Hen:Uh, and that's, uh, part of, uh, my, that was part of my goal as an entrepreneur,
Tomer Hen:just living wherever I wanna live.
Tomer Hen:Someone.
Matt Edmundson:Well, I mean, that's awesome in the sense that, um, you
Matt Edmundson:get to travel, uh, all over the place.
Matt Edmundson:And did you.
Matt Edmundson:Did you always have that as something you wanted to do, or is that something
Matt Edmundson:that's kind of formed in the last few years of life as it were?
Tomer Hen:Yeah, that's a, that's a great question.
Tomer Hen:I've always loved travel.
Tomer Hen:I've always been an entrepreneur ever since I can remember.
Tomer Hen:And I always loved travel.
Tomer Hen:I always, you know, I traveled with my parents and I was waiting for
Tomer Hen:our, uh, summer holidays or, uh, just traveling all around the world
Tomer Hen:and growing as an entrepreneur.
Tomer Hen:I just wanted to do this more often.
Tomer Hen:Uh, I never thought that I would, uh, be as free to actually leave.
Tomer Hen:A few months here, a few months there, and just going with, uh, you know,
Tomer Hen:with the win, just, just deciding where I wanna spend the next few months.
Tomer Hen:Uh, also growing my business on that same location or the same city going
Tomer Hen:to meetups, events, conferences.
Tomer Hen:Just building sort of a community in, in cities that I travel to,
Tomer Hen:it's not just about sighting or eating in, in, in local restaurants.
Tomer Hen:It's all about building a community, um, knowing the local entrepreneurs,
Tomer Hen:the local businesses, and that's part of, of the passion that I have.
Tomer Hen:It's not just about going on a vacation because I feel.
Tomer Hen:I don't have to, I, I've built my, my routine or my life in a way that
Tomer Hen:I don't have to go on a vacation and just unplug for a few months
Tomer Hen:just to, to reset or recover.
Tomer Hen:Um, I could recover on that same day, just, you know, work for an hour or I
Tomer Hen:could recover for a week or a month.
Tomer Hen:Um, but I really love what I'm doing and when it's not.
Tomer Hen:I just give up on that project or that task or even that business.
Tomer Hen:So fun is basically what leads my.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, I was gonna say
Matt Edmundson:that's quite an interesting metric, isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:Fun?
Matt Edmundson:Uh, because everybody's wrapped up with metrics like ROI and average order value
Matt Edmundson:and, and all these sorts of things.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, I quite like that.
Matt Edmundson:What's the fun level, uh, in what we are doing?
Matt Edmundson:How fun is it?
Matt Edmundson:So you, you mentioned that your, um, you traveled with your parents.
Matt Edmundson:Were your parents entrepreneurial?
Matt Edmundson:Is that where you picked it up?
Tomer Hen:Um, to be honest, no.
Tomer Hen:I mean, my mom, um, uh, she works for a big software company and my dad has been
Tomer Hen:a self-employed accountant, so they always had to, when they went on a vacation,
Tomer Hen:they had to go on a vacation, so they were not location free by any sense.
Tomer Hen:I guess that's.
Tomer Hen:Where I figured out that when I grow up, I wanna travel and be location free so I can
Tomer Hen:just, you know, travel as much as I want.
Tomer Hen:Just like, just like a kid that wants to eat as much candy as
Tomer Hen:they want when they move out.
Tomer Hen:Um, this is basically what, what, what led me into saying I only do business.
Tomer Hen:That, uh, that gets, gets me that goal of being location free and traveling all.
Tomer Hen:Um, I still don't have kids, so I guess that's easier and that might change,
Tomer Hen:uh, when, when I have my own family, but for now I'm just, uh, seizing the
Tomer Hen:moment.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, well do it, Do it, do it, do it.
Matt Edmundson:It's funny actually because, um, my kids, I have three kids and my
Matt Edmundson:kids are, uh, two of them, uh, this year are gonna be in university and
Matt Edmundson:one of them is, is sort of 15 16.
Matt Edmundson:And so I'm, I'm kind of coming outta that phase where you have to be around all
Matt Edmundson:the time, uh, to get the kids to school and all that sort of stuff, you know, And
Matt Edmundson:it's, we're sort of coming, coming out the other side and I'm, I'm quite looking
Matt Edmundson:forward to that, if I'm honest with you.
Matt Edmundson:So I look, I enjoyed it pre-kids.
Matt Edmundson:I've enjoyed having kids immensely and I'm enjoying the sort of, the
Matt Edmundson:idea of the empty nest syndrome, as we call it here in the uk.
Matt Edmundson:Um, so you get to travel, right?
Matt Edmundson:You get to do this whole entrepreneurial thing.
Matt Edmundson:The fun fact is a big deal for you doing stuff that doesn't
Matt Edmundson:tie you down to one space.
Matt Edmundson:Um, it sounds very, um, four hour work week, you know, the kind of Tim Ferris
Matt Edmundson:kind of, uh, idea, uh, in that book.
Matt Edmundson:Have you ever read that book?
Matt Edmundson:Is this where the idea sort of came from or is this something that
Matt Edmundson:you've kind of figured out along
Matt Edmundson:the.
Tomer Hen:Yeah, that's, that's a great point.
Tomer Hen:So, uh, four Hour Work Week was one of the first books that I ever read.
Tomer Hen:I think it was done, Done, Get Me Up.
Tomer Hen:I think it was like 10 years ago.
Tomer Hen:May no more than 10 years, or like 15 years ago, probably.
Tomer Hen:Mm-hmm.
Tomer Hen:. Um, and I think that it's not that they got the idea from the book, but.
Tomer Hen:I love the book so much because I could really resonate with what Tim
Tomer Hen:Ferris has put together with what I believe in and what I wanted as a kid.
Tomer Hen:You know, even as a 13 year old kid, this is what I wanted and I think
Tomer Hen:that before I work with is kind of the newer version of Reach Dad, Poor dad.
Tomer Hen:But I think that today, Um, today you have a new version of the four hour
Tomer Hen:work week where you could see all of your work as non-work or what I like
Tomer Hen:to call, um, uh, effortless effort.
Tomer Hen:So I don't think that you should divide between, uh,
Tomer Hen:your work and again, your fun.
Tomer Hen:I think that you could really combine combined it together and people
Tomer Hen:tend to think that they should work.
Tomer Hen:In whatever that makes the money up until the point where it
Tomer Hen:allows them to do whatever is fun for them or exciting for them.
Tomer Hen:But I think that if you flip that around and you do the thing that is
Tomer Hen:fun for you and that excites you, you will make money so you don't have
Tomer Hen:to get all the way in trying to make as much as much money as possible.
Tomer Hen:And then, Go out and figuring out, you know what I, I think that chapter on the
Tomer Hen:four hour work is called Filling the Void.
Tomer Hen:So you don't have to wait and try to fill the void, but you can say, Hey,
Tomer Hen:what do I wanna feel my life with?
Tomer Hen:And nowadays you can create a business around any interest, any hobby,
Tomer Hen:any, anything that excites you.
Tomer Hen:You can just go and TikTok and, you know, create a huge business around it.
Tomer Hen:And you have so many evidence.
Tomer Hen:So, uh, I think that's kind of the newer version of before I will work with,
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, it's interesting, isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:Because now for the first time that I can remember, uh, and you know, I'm,
Matt Edmundson:I'm talking, I've got a few years of memory here, uh, for the first time that
Matt Edmundson:I can remember now, kids are coming out of school with a very definite plan of,
Matt Edmundson:um, being some kind of content creator.
Matt Edmundson:Like that's a career choice now.
Matt Edmundson:Which, I mean, when I was at school, I did nothing like that ever existed
Matt Edmundson:unless you wanted to write books, in which case she went to academia.
Matt Edmundson:But, um, but it seems to be now a very real career path.
Matt Edmundson:A very real career choice that people take is I, I want to get into this
Matt Edmundson:whole content creation type thing.
Matt Edmundson:And, um, it fascinates me in some respects I'm doing it.
Matt Edmundson:You know, we do this podcast, uh, you know, with, it's a
Matt Edmundson:form of content creation.
Matt Edmundson:We do, um, you know, we have our own online course or cohorts we're gonna
Matt Edmundson:be, uh, calling it, uh, instead of the, and so there are these things
Matt Edmundson:which we do, which years ago we.
Matt Edmundson:No, it never entered to anyone's sort of consciousness that this was actually
Matt Edmundson:a possibility that I could, that I could create some kind of content
Matt Edmundson:that people would be willing to buy.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, and yeah, so you're right.
Matt Edmundson:I mean, kids coming outta school now going, I'm just gonna be, you
Matt Edmundson:know, make my money outta TikTok.
Matt Edmundson:And all their parents are sitting there going, How?
Matt Edmundson:How, No, I don't, How does that work?
Matt Edmundson:Right?
Matt Edmundson:, did you again?
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Even Siri wasn't sure.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, but it's kind like how does that work?
Matt Edmundson:How does that even compute?
Matt Edmundson:You know?
Matt Edmundson:Um, so it's a real interesting shift, isn't it, that this has now become
Matt Edmundson:a sort of a bigger and bigger deal.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, it, And so is this where you, where you do part of your journey is
Matt Edmundson:in, in what we call now the content economy, You know, this sort of, uh,
Matt Edmundson:is this where you run part of your.
Tomer Hen:Right.
Tomer Hen:That's, that's, you know, that's a really good point.
Tomer Hen:And when I analyze this backwards and when you think about it, Kids always
Tomer Hen:wanted to express themself and become the famous actors, singers, they wanted,
Tomer Hen:you know, girls wanted to be Beyonce or, you know, you, you wanted to be, you
Tomer Hen:wanted to be that famous guy you saw on MTV before you, you had, even before you
Tomer Hen:had Instagram and, and Facebook, and you basically want, a lot of kids wanted that.
Tomer Hen:I, I think it's not as superficial as, as Jess or Shallow as just being famous.
Tomer Hen:It's.
Tomer Hen:Self expression.
Tomer Hen:Mm-hmm.
Tomer Hen:. And then there was this period when, you know, you had Mark Zuckerberg and
Tomer Hen:apps and people became billionaires by, by selling software, which
Tomer Hen:was kind of novel at that time.
Tomer Hen:And all those kids wanted to become entrepreneurs and and coders.
Tomer Hen:And nowadays I think that's kind of a mix where, Where you get and, and
Tomer Hen:you know, and the parents always told you, you know, you can't be an actor.
Tomer Hen:You wanna have any money, you wanna make any money, you can't
Tomer Hen:be a singer because there are only just a few who would make it.
Tomer Hen:Um, and now you have this, this interesting combination between
Tomer Hen:self-expression and anyone can express themselves in any topic.
Tomer Hen:It doesn't have to be mainstream and go on MTV in order for it to be successful.
Tomer Hen:Um, and you.
Tomer Hen:You don't have to have a, a very, a hard skill like coding in order
Tomer Hen:to become super wealthy or super successful, or super, uh, influential.
Tomer Hen:And you have this interesting mix between, um, between the tech and internet and
Tomer Hen:utilizing internet and technology and self-expression where you can just,
Tomer Hen:you don't have to learn anything.
Tomer Hen:You don't have, you just have to be your.
Tomer Hen:And the world is becoming more and more authentic.
Tomer Hen:People are looking for that authenticity and not necessarily, uh, building a
Tomer Hen:very, uh, uh, uh, polished figure or a singer, or an actor or a content
Tomer Hen:creator, which is basically the same, you know, content creator or being,
Tomer Hen:being a very famous singer where people would pay for your performance
Tomer Hen:or buying your songs or your albums.
Tomer Hen:People would now pay for you to reels for them or creating TikTok videos for them?
Tomer Hen:It's basically the same.
Tomer Hen:It's just that the opportunities are just for anyone out there.
Matt Edmundson:Fascinating,
Matt Edmundson:isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:Abs and there's a word there that you use that I just want to draw on and,
Matt Edmundson:and, and, and ask, like if I'm gonna get into this sort of creator economy.
Matt Edmundson:Um, is, uh, self-expression is authentic.
Matt Edmundson:Auth, I can't even say the word.
Matt Edmundson:Authenticity.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, is authenticity and self-expression.
Matt Edmundson:Some of the keys to doing this well, to unlocking, um, maybe the, the, the
Matt Edmundson:power of, uh, this sort of new economy.
Tomer Hen:I, I think so.
Tomer Hen:Uh, I, I know what it is not, it is not about making money.
Tomer Hen:If you go onto this, In 2022, trying to just make money or basically just
Tomer Hen:extract more money from the marketplace.
Tomer Hen:I will try to get those budgets from those businesses, or I will
Tomer Hen:try to get the attention of users.
Tomer Hen:People are very, very sensitive for your, uh, for your why and why you're
Tomer Hen:doing what you're doing, and if you're doing it, even if you have, you know,
Tomer Hen:you're, you're posting daily and you.
Tomer Hen:25 followers.
Tomer Hen:People can sense it, people can, and, and people can sense that you're doing
Tomer Hen:it not in order to become famous, but if you try to be whatever people want you
Tomer Hen:to be and not being your authentic self.
Tomer Hen:I know this could be, you know, it, it could sound very spiritual, but
Tomer Hen:at the end of the day you can see the data and you can see that the
Tomer Hen:more successful people out there, um, they were just being themselves.
Tomer Hen:And if you do.
Tomer Hen:It comes down to being consistent because if you try to create content in order
Tomer Hen:to force an outcome in order to get the followers, and it's, it takes time.
Tomer Hen:It takes time and effort, you would probably break down because
Tomer Hen:you can't fake yourself as much.
Tomer Hen:As you need to in order to build up those followers, build up this,
Tomer Hen:uh, uh, trust within the audience.
Tomer Hen:But if you do what you love, if you're just being yourself, you're
Tomer Hen:just talking to a friend and, and you know, even if you, if you, even
Tomer Hen:if you recommend products, right?
Tomer Hen:That's what you do for, that's what you love, you love, uh, uh, food, or
Tomer Hen:you'll have supplements, or you'll have restaurants or you'll love
Tomer Hen:whatever, and you just do this for fun because this is what you love and you.
Tomer Hen:Um, you, you would have the consistency and you have the commitment to do
Tomer Hen:this daily because again, coming back to the fun fact, or you just do
Tomer Hen:this for fun and it'll just build up.
Tomer Hen:But if you try to force it, if you try to say, Hey, this is a trend on TikTok.
Tomer Hen:Let's post daily, you will probably break up before you get this traction and
Tomer Hen:you get this exponential growth that is needed in order to actually make a living.
Tomer Hen:So it's not just about.
Tomer Hen:You know, the saying those nice words about a b be
Tomer Hen:authentic and you'll make money.
Tomer Hen:I think that actually backs up with the data and it backs up with our
Tomer Hen:human, um, uh, the, the way we are built as human beings, where we need
Tomer Hen:to have a purpose and we need to, to have, well, basically we need to
Tomer Hen:have fun in order to be consistent.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:I love that.
Matt Edmundson:I mean, one of the things that you said there about being sensitive,
Matt Edmundson:you know, the, the viewer, the people responding to your content
Matt Edmundson:are very sensitive to your why.
Matt Edmundson:Um, I, I've got down here a quote from you, uh, Tomer that, uh, you mentioned
Matt Edmundson:previously said, what, when you realize it's all about who you serve and not
Matt Edmundson:what you sell, then that's the main advantage for every brand, which I
Matt Edmundson:thought was a phenomenal thing to say.
Matt Edmundson:Um, understanding who you serve.
Matt Edmundson:And being authentic to you and to that community seems to be, for me,
Matt Edmundson:mixed with this idea of consistency, um, the way to win in this arena.
Matt Edmundson:I guess my other observation is having now done this podcast for two
Matt Edmundson:years, uh, it's not a quick thing.
Matt Edmundson:I mean, there are people that rise through the ranks very quickly, it seems, but
Matt Edmundson:on the whole, the majority of people.
Matt Edmundson:Um, you, it's not like you start today and tomorrow it, it's all working fine.
Matt Edmundson:Right?
Matt Edmundson:I mean, we're, we're two years in.
Matt Edmundson:We're still, I think we're getting better at understanding the journey and,
Matt Edmundson:and what we're doing with the podcast.
Matt Edmundson:Um, but we never started it out to make money.
Matt Edmundson:We just started out, Cause we like talking about e-commerce.
Matt Edmundson:We've met some amazing people along the way and now he is
Matt Edmundson:actually helping us to make money.
Matt Edmundson:But it took a little while.
Matt Edmundson:I don't know if, if, if that's just me or if that's a general, a general.
Tomer Hen:I, I think, I think that's a general truth because nowadays you
Tomer Hen:have, so the days of just putting a product out there, and a product
Tomer Hen:could be an Amazon listing, it could be a Shopify store, it could be a
Tomer Hen:Facebook ad, it could be a podcast, it could be an email that you send out.
Tomer Hen:Mm-hmm.
Tomer Hen:. The days of just putting this product out there in the world and
Tomer Hen:expecting to just make money and get the attention are probably.
Tomer Hen:Um, so you need, you have a lot of competition, even if the upcoming
Tomer Hen:platforms like TikTok where you.
Tomer Hen:Uh, uh, uh, you know, comparably, you have less competition, but you
Tomer Hen:still have that competition of the attention of the budgets, of the, uh,
Tomer Hen:of, of the audience being resonating with whatever you have to say or sell.
Tomer Hen:So you have to be mindful and, and know that it would take time either way.
Tomer Hen:It would take time whether you do whatever you wanna do, and it would
Tomer Hen:take time if you wanna do whatever you think people want you to do.
Tomer Hen:So if you can keep up with creating content.
Tomer Hen:Every day or every week for month or years, um, you will probably win because
Tomer Hen:if you could resonate with even 50 people who would listen to your podcast
Tomer Hen:or read your posts, but it would be very, very, it would speak directly to
Tomer Hen:their hearts, It would speak directly to whatever they want to feel, and they
Tomer Hen:believe you and they believe in your why.
Tomer Hen:That is way more powerful than having 5,000.
Tomer Hen:You know, randomly, uh, uh, seeing your video on the TikTok algorithm because you
Tomer Hen:knew how to hack the, you know, the, the, the last hack of how to hack, you know,
Tomer Hen:the Instagram or the TikTok algorithm, because those people will follow you.
Tomer Hen:They believe you.
Tomer Hen:They will send this to your friend.
Tomer Hen:They will think about it after they watch your video or your content,
Tomer Hen:or listen to your podcast, and then they would also buy your product.
Tomer Hen:Mm-hmm.
Tomer Hen:. But people sometimes try.
Tomer Hen:Just sell a product.
Tomer Hen:They try to get to the end of it.
Tomer Hen:They, they think that if they learn the different, um, components
Tomer Hen:of the Amazon algorithms, they will build a successful brand.
Tomer Hen:But there is a huge difference, a huge difference between selling
Tomer Hen:a product and building a brand.
Tomer Hen:And when I say this, I don't just mean physical products.
Tomer Hen:I think that it has huge difference between putting a
Tomer Hen:very viral video on TikTok.
Tomer Hen:Or building a brand on TikTok or a podcast or whatever it is, because a brand is
Tomer Hen:someone or something that you choose to go after you choose to buy because
Tomer Hen:they believe in what you believe in.
Tomer Hen:Um, they, you know the reason, you know that they serve you.
Tomer Hen:And basically if you can get to a point where that, where,
Tomer Hen:where, where that person.
Tomer Hen:Feels and believe that you are the only person or the only brand
Tomer Hen:to help them with their journey.
Tomer Hen:That's where you win a customer or a fan for life.
Tomer Hen:That's what I believe in.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:And so true.
Matt Edmundson:And uh, and it's a fascinating one, isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:Because I mean, this applies, like you say, for selling hard
Matt Edmundson:products, um, physical products, digital products, whatever it
Matt Edmundson:is, the, the, the basic premises.
Matt Edmundson:And, and I get asked all the time, you know, one of the big questions is why
Matt Edmundson:would I set up an e-commerce website?
Matt Edmundson:I can't compete with.
Matt Edmundson:Right.
Matt Edmundson:It's that how do I compete with Amazon?
Matt Edmundson:And Amazon is great at being a commodity based website.
Matt Edmundson:You go on there, you search it, you find it, you buy it.
Matt Edmundson:I don't really know who I've bought it from.
Matt Edmundson:I've just gone bought this product.
Matt Edmundson:But more and more the consumer is going, No, no, Hang on a minute.
Matt Edmundson:I wanna know a little bit more about this product.
Matt Edmundson:I wanna know where it's come from.
Matt Edmundson:I wanna know why you've made it.
Matt Edmundson:I Do.
Matt Edmundson:You know what I mean?
Matt Edmundson:Like clothing.
Matt Edmundson:We are moving away from fast fashion to people buying more sustainable clothing.
Matt Edmundson:You see these trends, which are.
Matt Edmundson:You can't do that on Amazon.
Matt Edmundson:And so the way I think you compete with Amazon is you create a brand
Matt Edmundson:voice and you tell that story and you connect with a customer in a way
Matt Edmundson:that Amazon can't and never could do because they're a big supermarket.
Matt Edmundson:They just sell commodities.
Matt Edmundson:Whereas you are selling something, you're invested in.
Matt Edmundson:Right.
Matt Edmundson:You care deeply about these products and how they're gonna help people.
Matt Edmundson:And I think that's the way you win, right?
Matt Edmundson:Against people like Amazon.
Matt Edmundson:So I'm living this, I'm living this whole, um, you know, you've gotta
Matt Edmundson:develop again, that being sensitive to your why, your purpose, why are
Matt Edmundson:you here and telling that story.
Matt Edmundson:Super, super well, I mean is is incredible.
Matt Edmundson:So let's talk a little bit more about the creator economy and.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, I mean, you've mentioned TikTok, you've mentioned Instagram,
Matt Edmundson:but what are, what are some of the ways that we maybe should be
Matt Edmundson:thinking about this creating economy?
Matt Edmundson:What does it encompass?
Matt Edmundson:What does it involve, Um, beyond just TikTok and Instagram.
Tomer Hen:Yeah.
Tomer Hen:Yeah.
Tomer Hen:That's, that's a great, that's a great question and a topic
Tomer Hen:that I love talking about.
Tomer Hen:Um, You know, there, according to the data, there, there are about 50 million
Tomer Hen:content creator with a certain certain threshold, and only about four of them,
Tomer Hen:uh, said that they, they're able to make living out of the content that they
Tomer Hen:make and for, for different reasons.
Tomer Hen:Some of them, we, we actually mentioned here on our conversation
Tomer Hen:and the today, the most common way for creators to monetize their content.
Tomer Hen:Uh, collaborating with another brand or, uh, getting sponsorships from other
Tomer Hen:brands or having some affiliate deals with other brands and promote them.
Tomer Hen:But I think that nowadays, and you know, We go into a recession, a
Tomer Hen:lot of creators say that, uh, they feel too dependent on those brands.
Tomer Hen:They feel that they are bind, they are bind to the regulations,
Tomer Hen:those brands put up on them, what they can say, what they can't say,
Tomer Hen:how they can present the product.
Tomer Hen:And eventually there is this conflict between they need to serve the brand,
Tomer Hen:but they also need to make money and they also need to serve their
Tomer Hen:audience and be authentic to themselves as of what, what we just said.
Tomer Hen:I think that although it's pretty easy to hook up with another brand or just
Tomer Hen:get, you know, X amount of dollars or, or a percentage of a sale with another
Tomer Hen:brand, I think if a creator really wants to level up their game, both
Tomer Hen:personally, financially, professionally, is to build their own brand.
Tomer Hen:You know, I, I, I know how to build consumer brand.
Tomer Hen:So it could be any type of brand, it could be an, uh, a digital product brand,
Tomer Hen:it could be a physical product brand.
Tomer Hen:Um, but creators who are starting to build, and we see this more
Tomer Hen:and more in the creator economy where, um, creators say, Hey, I
Tomer Hen:don't want to work for that brand.
Tomer Hen:I wanna say whatever I wanna say, and my content is my product, and
Tomer Hen:I could attach a physical product.
Tomer Hen:To my content and my audience and share whatever I believe
Tomer Hen:in, not just for my content, but also through physical product.
Tomer Hen:It could be a makeup brand, it could be a supplement brand, it
Tomer Hen:could be a food brand, it could be, um, you know, uh, a car organizer.
Tomer Hen:It could be.
Tomer Hen:All sorts of brands that relate to the audience that you serve.
Tomer Hen:Not necessarily just your following, but the person, again, coming
Tomer Hen:back to that person who follows you, who is your biggest fan?
Tomer Hen:What can you produce to him?
Tomer Hen:What can you bring to the world that would serve them as a person?
Tomer Hen:Um, that would.
Tomer Hen:That would probably be way more successful by all means than any brand that you
Tomer Hen:could collaborate with just because you can get as specific to saying whatever
Tomer Hen:it is that you specifically want to say and you want to bring to the world.
Tomer Hen:And as a creator, you have, you know, you have a very specific voice
Tomer Hen:and this is the reason why you.
Tomer Hen:So many views than your competitors.
Tomer Hen:You then you get, you know, the attention of other followers.
Tomer Hen:Once you find that voice and you realize who is that person, why they are special,
Tomer Hen:and why they follow you, what they believe in, what's the journey that they go with.
Tomer Hen:Um, it's very easy to build a physical product brand around that person.
Tomer Hen:And because you have, you already have the attention and you have the cred.
Tomer Hen:It, it would be pretty easy for you.
Tomer Hen:Um, well, I would say it's pretty simple.
Tomer Hen:It's not always easy to build a physical product brand around, around that person.
Tomer Hen:So I'm, I'm really fascinated by all those creators, uh, at different
Tomer Hen:stages where they said, I don't wanna work for those bigger brands.
Tomer Hen:I don't wanna work, I don't want to promote something that I don't believe in.
Tomer Hen:Um, they, they do, um, they do state a very bold statement and decision
Tomer Hen:where they know they might give up.
Tomer Hen:Immediate income, but for the sake of being truly independent with the
Tomer Hen:messaging that they, they convey to their audience, uh, the amount of money
Tomer Hen:they can make and the product that they wanna promote on their channels.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, I
Matt Edmundson:mean that's, that's really fascinating that, and we've talked about this
Matt Edmundson:before on the show, um, when it comes to influences and, and using influences and,
Matt Edmundson:uh, Why brands, why the brand themselves, you know, do they wanna use influence?
Matt Edmundson:Because actually now the power is starting to, with the influences
Matt Edmundson:going, actually I'm not quite sure I wanna work with that brand anymore.
Matt Edmundson:And like, and like you said, I think it's quite fascinating the turn
Matt Edmundson:of events now and the technology.
Matt Edmundson:Like we had, uh, the get car on the show, uh, David from Get Car and he was talking
Matt Edmundson:about this, you know, and about how you can um, you can now start to leverage
Matt Edmundson:technology to build out platforms.
Matt Edmundson:That enable you to create your own website, you're, you're an influencer.
Matt Edmundson:You've got the content out there where you can now sell, uh, product
Matt Edmundson:directly off the back of that.
Matt Edmundson:So if you were, um, Toma, if you were launching an e-commerce business
Matt Edmundson:today, Is this how you would start?
Matt Edmundson:Would you go right, I'm, I'm gonna, I have a product.
Matt Edmundson:Um, uh, and I know you've got a supplement brand, haven't you?
Matt Edmundson:So I've got this product here.
Matt Edmundson:I'm gonna go and find a community that that product connects with and I'm gonna
Matt Edmundson:go, uh, connect with that community.
Matt Edmundson:I'm gonna speak to that community.
Matt Edmundson:I'm be consistent in my content creation.
Matt Edmundson:That reaches out to that community, and that's how I'm gonna grow my brand.
Matt Edmundson:I'm gonna be authentic.
Matt Edmundson:I'm gonna be consistent.
Matt Edmundson:It might not make money today, but ultimately I know I'm gonna
Matt Edmundson:win if I'm in there every day.
Matt Edmundson:Is that how you would do it?
Tomer Hen:Yes.
Tomer Hen:I, I would even, I would even go.
Tomer Hen:Deeper and and perhaps do whatev what you said, but I would even flip
Tomer Hen:that around and say, I want to find that community that I want to serve.
Tomer Hen:And then I would build a brand around them.
Tomer Hen:And what most people do is trying to develop product, or they already develop
Tomer Hen:and produce the product and then say, Okay, now let's find who wants to.
Tomer Hen:Or let's find influencers or the communities or the groups that
Tomer Hen:would be interested in my product rather than just going and say,
Tomer Hen:Hey, there's a community here.
Tomer Hen:They are very loyal to that journey.
Tomer Hen:They are very, um, they are very, uh, uh, excited about these kind of
Tomer Hen:products or they have these very urgent problems and I could really resonate.
Tomer Hen:Person with that journey, with that problem.
Tomer Hen:Now let's find the solutions that we could create in order to help them.
Tomer Hen:And those solutions could turn into content.
Tomer Hen:They could turn into physical product, they can tell into a book,
Tomer Hen:a digital product, and it could turn into a brand that consists all
Tomer Hen:of these aspects together, right?
Tomer Hen:You can launch a book that sells a supplement brand.
Tomer Hen:When, uh, uh, as a, as an apps you can, uh, launch, uh, uh, you can
Tomer Hen:work with an influencer to create, uh, uh, an Instagram, uh, uh, uh,
Tomer Hen:uh, content that would, uh, that would serve that, that audience and
Tomer Hen:that would promote your food brand.
Tomer Hen:So, one, but it's the same person, It's the same audience, it's
Tomer Hen:the same community, it's just different form of solutions.
Tomer Hen:And once that person.
Tomer Hen:Have seen your, your content on Instagram and they read your book and they got
Tomer Hen:this email from you, they would probably buy your product because they believe
Tomer Hen:that you are the best person and this is the best brand for them to solve their
Tomer Hen:problem or to progress on their journey.
Tomer Hen:And this is how I see brand building as opposed to just trying to sell products
Tomer Hen:in this highly competitive market.
Matt Edmundson:I, I wish I could just hit listeners.
Matt Edmundson:If you're listening, just hit the rewind button and just listen to that
Matt Edmundson:paragraph again because I think I was writing about this this morning
Matt Edmundson:where, where 99% of e-commerce businesses fail is they will just go
Matt Edmundson:and get any old product and then go.
Matt Edmundson:I now need to figure out how to sell this, right?
Matt Edmundson:Mm-hmm.
Matt Edmundson:, and it's, it's, it's totally backwards.
Matt Edmundson:It's totally the wrong way around.
Matt Edmundson:Um, and the classic bond, you know, was with the drop shipping for years.
Matt Edmundson:We've talked about this before in the show.
Matt Edmundson:Again, it's, you know, the, the, you go to Alibaba or wherever,
Matt Edmundson:you know Ali Express, and you find some sunglasses, which are like $2.
Matt Edmundson:And you think I can sell those for 20.
Matt Edmundson:So I'm gonna make 18 bucks for a pair of sun glasses.
Matt Edmundson:And you've just gone and grabbed any old nonsense.
Matt Edmundson:The triple is 30,000.
Matt Edmundson:Other websites are selling that same pair of sunglasses, right?
Matt Edmundson:How have you differentiated yourself?
Matt Edmundson:You just haven't your beige or vanilla, right?
Matt Edmundson:You're just blending in.
Matt Edmundson:Um, but I, I just, I, this is why I love it, because actually no, no, no.
Matt Edmundson:The other way around is like, Understand who the community
Matt Edmundson:is that you are gonna serve.
Matt Edmundson:What's it, what do they need?
Matt Edmundson:How can I help them?
Matt Edmundson:How can I best serve them?
Matt Edmundson:Much, much better way.
Matt Edmundson:Because then you're finding products that actually people want to really buy
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:You know, and it's, and it, and it's that kind of, that, that
Matt Edmundson:to me just makes a lot of sense.
Matt Edmundson:An awful lot of sense.
Matt Edmundson:I, I, I'm, I'm, I'm sat here listening to the podcast, right?
Matt Edmundson:I've, let's assume I've already got an e-commerce business up and running.
Matt Edmundson:Um, I've already got a, so I've got a small community.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, I'm, I'm selling a, a product.
Matt Edmundson:I, I'm just looking around my desk for what it is.
Matt Edmundson:Um, I have, uh, , I dunno if I should show you this.
Matt Edmundson:I have here, uh, my Lego Indiana Jones.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, I'm a, I'm a bit of a fan of Lego Indiana Jones for reasons
Matt Edmundson:which I won't bore you with, but I, I do like my, my little indie,
Matt Edmundson:uh, Indiana Jones Lego there.
Matt Edmundson:So let's say I'm selling, you know, sort of unique Lego.
Matt Edmundson:Sort of things.
Matt Edmundson:And I've got, I've got my community going on and, and, you know, people
Matt Edmundson:are buying from me and what are sort of some of the things that I should
Matt Edmundson:be thinking about from a content creation here, um, that's gonna help
Matt Edmundson:me from an e-commerce point of view.
Tomer Hen:Right.
Tomer Hen:Yeah, that's, that's a great, uh, case study.
Tomer Hen:So let's say that you already have your, your Indiana John, Lego store and you
Tomer Hen:just solve it because you could find it, you're passionate about it or whatever.
Tomer Hen:It's, So I would do two things.
Tomer Hen:I would first, the first step that I would do is I would find
Tomer Hen:out who are your best customers?
Tomer Hen:And I would speak to them.
Tomer Hen:I would have phone calls with them.
Tomer Hen:I would send questionnaires.
Tomer Hen:I would counter their house, whatever you can.
Tomer Hen:To find out who is that person and by saying who is that person?
Tomer Hen:Sometimes brand owners or store owners mistake by saying, Okay,
Tomer Hen:my audience is a 20 to 55 year old male from the United States
Tomer Hen:Right.
Tomer Hen:That's not a person.
Tomer Hen:, that's,
Matt Edmundson:Sorry, I'm laughing cause I'm agreeing with you.
Matt Edmundson:Sorry.
Tomer Hen:That's no, I mean that's, that's really not a person and you don't
Tomer Hen:have someone who is between 20 to 55.
Tomer Hen:You have a person.
Tomer Hen:At a certain age with a certain interest and certain reasons.
Tomer Hen:That's the main thing and that's the main thing that you need to find out.
Tomer Hen:What is the reason they're buying your products?
Tomer Hen:Because there is a reason.
Tomer Hen:They are buying this product.
Tomer Hen:It's not just because it's not random choices.
Tomer Hen:There's a reason why they wanted to exchange or hard earn, hard earned dollars
Tomer Hen:for that product from us specifically.
Tomer Hen:And you need to find out why is that Once you find out why they buy your product
Tomer Hen:and what problem does it solve for them or what, how does it improve their life?
Tomer Hen:This is where you, the next step would be is to find out where they hang out.
Tomer Hen:Content do they consume?
Tomer Hen:What TV shows do they watch?
Tomer Hen:What podcast do they listen to?
Tomer Hen:What Instagram pages do they follow and what communities do they hang out?
Tomer Hen:Right?
Tomer Hen:If you have a product, a fitness product, and you realize that your best customers,
Tomer Hen:the ones that always buy your product are, uh, CrossFit trainers, right?
Tomer Hen:You can find out where do they hang out?
Tomer Hen:Do they hang out at their CrossFit gyms?
Tomer Hen:Do they hang out in.
Tomer Hen:Three groups on Facebook and go to these communities and find out
Tomer Hen:how you can better serve people who are like them, people who are
Tomer Hen:from that same, um, uh, profile or the same persona as your audience.
Tomer Hen:And.
Tomer Hen:Talk about why you do what you do.
Tomer Hen:Talk about why your product is the best product for these people.
Tomer Hen:And you have this data.
Tomer Hen:If you, if you have this data because you already interviewed your best customers,
Tomer Hen:the ones that always come back and buy again and again and again, they don't
Tomer Hen:buy because you, your product costs $5 less than the cheapest one on Amazon.
Tomer Hen:Otherwise only the cheapest product on Amazon or in the internet would sell.
Tomer Hen:But that's the case.
Tomer Hen:There's a reason why people buy a certain item.
Tomer Hen:Even if it's a higher price.
Tomer Hen:So, or even if it's not the first result on the Amazon search result, right?
Tomer Hen:So once you know this information and you get to understand it, just go in these
Tomer Hen:communities, go talk to these creators.
Tomer Hen:Go talk to these influencers or those community leaders and find out how
Tomer Hen:you can serve them and the community that they manage if you don't have
Tomer Hen:your own community, but, If you wanna build your own community, that's
Tomer Hen:also something that you can do by understanding how you can serve them.
Tomer Hen:So, for example, if they, um, bought your product because they want to spend
Tomer Hen:more quality time with their children, find out how else you could help them
Tomer Hen:spend more quality time with their children regardless of your product.
Tomer Hen:Just because, you know, we all know that people don't buy.
Tomer Hen:Your product, they buy what your product makes them feel.
Tomer Hen:Mm-hmm.
Tomer Hen:once figure out what it makes them feel, or at least what they want
Tomer Hen:this product to make them feel.
Tomer Hen:Just find out how you can make them feel that in, regardless of your products.
Tomer Hen:If so, if you were able as a brand or as a person to make them feel a
Tomer Hen:certain way, they will always remember.
Tomer Hen:That feeling and they would connect your brand to that feeling, and
Tomer Hen:then the decision making would be so much easier and clear to them
Tomer Hen:that they would not even look for any other cheaper product in Amazon.
Tomer Hen:They would go on Amazon and look for your brand and if your brand would not
Tomer Hen:be there, they will go and look for it in Google and go to your website and buy it.
Tomer Hen:Because whenever someone goes on Amazon and not looking for your
Tomer Hen:brand, but is looking for Indiana.
Tomer Hen:You know, Lego is a brand, but let's say that they want a Indiana Jones, uh,
Tomer Hen:uh, figure or uh, a doll or whatever it is, they are Amazon's customer.
Tomer Hen:If your product would not be there, they will buy for someone else
Tomer Hen:that Amazon Choses to promote, But.
Tomer Hen:If, uh, uh, but as long as they go on Amazon and not looking specifically
Tomer Hen:for your brand, and even if they bought directly from you and Amazon,
Tomer Hen:they, they are still Amazon customers.
Tomer Hen:The day you want to be on Amazon, they will buy for someone else.
Tomer Hen:So if you created a brand that, that made them feel a certain way, that is
Tomer Hen:way stronger than, you know, any amount of money, uh, up to a certain point
Tomer Hen:that, uh, they can find on Amazon.
Tomer Hen:And if you made them feel.
Tomer Hen:You know, a stronger feeling, they would be happy to pay
Tomer Hen:more just to get that feeling.
Tomer Hen:And a brand is basically a symbol for them to feel something they wanna, mm-hmm.
Tomer Hen:feel a part of a certain community.
Tomer Hen:They wanna, they want the brand to say something about them.
Tomer Hen:And that is the reason why we see, you know, clothing brands.
Tomer Hen:Could sell the same T-shirt, but just with the tiniest logo or even, not
Tomer Hen:even something that you can see on the outside, but someone who bought it
Tomer Hen:knows that when they buy this specific closing brand, even if they can buy the
Tomer Hen:same shirt with a different store at half the price or quarter the price,
Tomer Hen:they know and they feel something, something about themselves when they buy.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, that's, Are there any brands that sort of
Matt Edmundson:come to mind that do this for you?
Matt Edmundson:As in, you know, it could be any brand, uh, , but where you think they've,
Matt Edmundson:they've done that story really well and they've just sort of captured
Matt Edmundson:you and, and you've bought into it?
Tomer Hen:Um, I could say, I could say something about
Tomer Hen:Starbucks, you know, you could buy probably better.
Tomer Hen:Cheaper coffee in many other locations, many other places.
Tomer Hen:But something about the consistency, something about the fact that he created
Tomer Hen:sort of a community or a place for you to be anywhere you go out in the
Tomer Hen:world and you'll be able to go and get the same experience and get a sense
Tomer Hen:of, um, I would say staying at home, but something that is familiar to you.
Tomer Hen:I think that made it way better than any other coffee chain out there, although.
Tomer Hen:Could agree that you could get probably better coffee in so
Tomer Hen:many other, so many other places.
Tomer Hen:. Mm-hmm.
Tomer Hen:. Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:I'm sure you can.
Matt Edmundson:I mean, I, I don't drink coffee, but I, I'm sure you can.
Matt Edmundson:It's, um, it's interesting that you mentioned Starbucks.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, there I wasn't expecting you to come up with Starbucks.
Matt Edmundson:I'm not gonna like, so I, That's, that's, that's interesting.
Matt Edmundson:Um.
Matt Edmundson:So I've called my customer, right?
Matt Edmundson:I've researched them.
Matt Edmundson:I've, uh, I've had lots of conversations with various different people, and I'm
Matt Edmundson:starting to understand what's going on and how I can serve, uh, my community.
Matt Edmundson:Is there anything else I need to, um, because we've not really talked about the
Matt Edmundson:tactics, which I'm quite pleased about.
Matt Edmundson:I do this on Instagram because, No, no.
Matt Edmundson:No matter what we talk about in six weeks time, you'll be outta date anyway.
Matt Edmundson:Right?
Matt Edmundson:Because the, the, the whole thing just moves on a, at, at a rapid pace.
Matt Edmundson:But the principles stay the same.
Matt Edmundson:The tactics change, but the principles stay the same.
Matt Edmundson:And I like the fact you've, you've talked about the principles.
Matt Edmundson:Um, what are some of the other, the, the, the key principles
Matt Edmundson:that I need to be aware of?
Tomer Hen:Right.
Tomer Hen:Um, yeah.
Tomer Hen:I, I, I like talking about principles because, because I think you could just
Tomer Hen:implement it across different channels.
Tomer Hen:It's.
Tomer Hen:Probably timeless.
Tomer Hen:And you know, whether if, if we go back to, to being creators, so whether you are
Tomer Hen:a creator in TikTok, whether you have an email list, whether you have a Facebook
Tomer Hen:group, whether you just run, um, you know, your, your neighborhood community meetups.
Tomer Hen:It's the same principle where once you find out that, Person needs
Tomer Hen:and you are able to fulfill it.
Tomer Hen:Then you have a business that's like something that was never changed, but
Tomer Hen:it's so basic and that people sometime overlook this very basic principle that
Tomer Hen:could make everything else so much easier.
Tomer Hen:Once you realize that, because then.
Tomer Hen:Your hesitation around, um, uh, what product should they sell?
Tomer Hen:What should be my headline?
Tomer Hen:What kind of colors should I use?
Tomer Hen:They all go by because you know that the, the decor of your business is that need.
Tomer Hen:So I think that if you go back to being a creator, I think
Tomer Hen:that, uh, having the audience.
Tomer Hen:A part of your brand journey is something that we've seen across multiple
Tomer Hen:brands that rally people together, and instead of you just launching a
Tomer Hen:brand saying, Hey, I've just worked on it for seven months, and here is
Tomer Hen:my makeup brand, please buy this now.
Tomer Hen:They have no idea why you created this brand.
Tomer Hen:It just seemed like very transactional content or very
Tomer Hen:transactional relationship.
Tomer Hen:And, and I, I've not done this enough, but the one thing that I would do, um,
Tomer Hen:launching my, my supplement brand for entrepreneurs would be to, uh, document
Tomer Hen:my journey, share it with an audience.
Tomer Hen:And if I, if any creator that, that I consult to where I work with, I always
Tomer Hen:tell them, Whenever you came up with this idea, this, this initial thought
Tomer Hen:of launching the brand, share it.
Tomer Hen:Share it because.
Tomer Hen:People who would follow you, even if these are just five people who would resonate
Tomer Hen:with it or remember what you just said.
Tomer Hen:Even if it's just a glimpse, it will build up and you create this, uh, curiosity,
Tomer Hen:You create this sense of why you tell people about the entire process of, you
Tomer Hen:know, hey, this is, this has been taking me 7, 8, 9 month of my life working on it
Tomer Hen:since I just came up with, you know, the inception of the idea until you can see.
Tomer Hen:In your hands and, and people have followed you.
Tomer Hen:People know the struggles.
Tomer Hen:People know how much thought you've put onto it.
Tomer Hen:So sharing your journey, whether it would be through your content, your
Tomer Hen:emails, uh, just talking with a lot of people in your, in your community or
Tomer Hen:your friends, your colleagues, whoever.
Tomer Hen:You can just talk about your brand.
Tomer Hen:And I think that also comes, uh, you know, most people.
Tomer Hen:Do the opposite.
Tomer Hen:They feel that once they have an idea, they need to be very, uh, they
Tomer Hen:need to keep it as a secret, right?
Tomer Hen:Mm-hmm.
Tomer Hen:, I, I, someone would steal my idea.
Tomer Hen:They would copy me, they would this and that.
Tomer Hen:And I think that once you realize that you have a very strong why, you know, and you
Tomer Hen:have this confidence, then no one could.
Tomer Hen:Copy you.
Tomer Hen:No one can really do what is the one thing that you do because mm-hmm.
Tomer Hen:, you build a relationship with those people once you share.
Tomer Hen:Your journey and you share your why with a certain person.
Tomer Hen:And people sometimes mistake that they speak to an audience, but they don't
Tomer Hen:speak to an audience or to a niche.
Tomer Hen:They speak to multiple individual human beings who listen to you and
Tomer Hen:create this kind of relationship with you, and this relationship that you
Tomer Hen:build is something that no one could ever copy, even if they sell the exact
Tomer Hen:same product and use the same ads.
Tomer Hen:This relationship, the combination of your why, your journey,
Tomer Hen:your struggles, your thought.
Tomer Hen:And the product is something that is very unique to you.
Tomer Hen:Um, so you, you also build that confidence that no one could ever copy you.
Tomer Hen:The, the opposite is true.
Tomer Hen:You want to collaborate with your competition.
Tomer Hen:You want them to be rallied on your, your cause and your journey
Tomer Hen:because you know that once you have more people on board, they would
Tomer Hen:share your jour, they will share.
Tomer Hen:And they will share, uh, um, uh, the value that your brand is
Tomer Hen:uniquely providing to the market.
Tomer Hen:Mm-hmm.
Tomer Hen:. And that's, that's an amazing feeling.
Tomer Hen:And I've been, you know, being an entrepreneur for
Tomer Hen:so long, I've been in, in.
Tomer Hen:This state of mind where you have to be very envy of your ideas.
Tomer Hen:You have to keep them as a secret.
Tomer Hen:You can't share with them with anyone.
Tomer Hen:You're afraid that your team, your parents, your sister, your, you
Tomer Hen:know, anyone would just copy you if you just tell them about it.
Tomer Hen:And that's a, this is not as part with the fun factor because it's not fun.
Tomer Hen:And b, it just very, very, very stressful.
Tomer Hen:Being on the other side of it, knowing that you would get more value by
Tomer Hen:sharing more and talking more about it.
Tomer Hen:And people sense this excitement, whether it's a one on one conversation and whether
Tomer Hen:it's a one to a hundred thousand people.
Tomer Hen:People sense this excitement.
Tomer Hen:Again, coming back to being authentic, being yourself.
Tomer Hen:When you are excited about what you're doing and why you're doing it, and
Tomer Hen:the products that you sell, it shows out to the world and people really
Tomer Hen:buy into that, that excitement.
Tomer Hen:People go on social media because basically they wanna be excited.
Tomer Hen:They wanna see someone who is excited about something and
Tomer Hen:get some of that excitement.
Tomer Hen:Um, so just, just give it out to them.
Tomer Hen:But if you sell something just because you saw it on Jungle Scout
Tomer Hen:and you feel that it would rank up better on Amazon, people would sense
Tomer Hen:that it's not very exciting for you.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:And I, There's no
Matt Edmundson:longevity to it either.
Matt Edmundson:Um, whereas what you are talking about, actually there's
Matt Edmundson:some real longevity to that.
Matt Edmundson:Um, I just wanna circle back to, uh, I'm aware of time here, Tomer, so I,
Matt Edmundson:I, but I, I do wanna circle back to something that you said, which I think is
Matt Edmundson:quite important, document your journey.
Matt Edmundson:Um, I, I know that a lot of, uh, entrepreneurs out there break out
Matt Edmundson:into a cold sweat when you talk to 'em about social media or, you
Matt Edmundson:know, creating content and it's just like, I dunno what to say.
Matt Edmundson:I dunno what to Do, you know, what I mean?
Matt Edmundson:And, and it's like this thing just.
Matt Edmundson:This wall just instantly goes up.
Matt Edmundson:Um, and actually for me, what I found at one of the keys here is, is
Matt Edmundson:like you say, Document the journey.
Matt Edmundson:I came across this great phrase, document Don't create.
Matt Edmundson:And I thought that was quite a fascinating, I dunno where it came from,
Matt Edmundson:but I thought it was a fascinating phrase.
Matt Edmundson:And I've been doing a little bit of an experiment recently.
Matt Edmundson:I've been putting out, um, like a seven to ten second video of
Matt Edmundson:my day, just like with, uh, on Instagram as an Instagram reel.
Matt Edmundson:Just little snippets like one to one and a half seconds long
Matt Edmundson:throughout the day, just a with a text comment on there and some music.
Matt Edmundson:Various numbers of people have watched this from, you know, several
Matt Edmundson:thousand to just a few hundred.
Matt Edmundson:I, I don't really care.
Matt Edmundson:I, what I can tell you is, um, that I've been consistent at doing it and
Matt Edmundson:it just documents my day and I've connected with some extraordinary
Matt Edmundson:people as a result, uh, who have got in touch and just gone, Man, that's great.
Matt Edmundson:And, um, I find that that just something as simple as that document don't
Matt Edmundson:create, I think will be a big, big help.
Matt Edmundson:So, How do people reach you?
Matt Edmundson:How do they get hold of you?
Matt Edmundson:Uh, what's the best way to do that?
Matt Edmundson:Because undoubtedly there's gonna be more questions.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, I I have a whole lot more.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, so , how do people, uh, connect with you if they wanna do that?
Tomer Hen:Yeah.
Tomer Hen:Thank you so much for that and I'm always happy to speak to excited,
Tomer Hen:enthusiastic entrepreneurs.
Tomer Hen:So, uh, I'm pretty active on LinkedIn, so you can, uh, look
Tomer Hen:for my handle on LinkedIn or you can go on Tomer hand.co co.
Tomer Hen:Um, uh, to just.
Tomer Hen:Join my mailing list and get some updates from me.
Tomer Hen:Some, uh, insights and nuggets, uh, of about brand building entrepreneurship.
Tomer Hen:Uh, I just do this for fun, to be honest.
Tomer Hen:Um, my business is to help entrepreneurs and creators build their brands.
Tomer Hen:Um, but I, and that's what my company does.
Tomer Hen:So, uh, I always love talking to entrepreneurs, uh, creators, influencer.
Tomer Hen:Uh, anyone who would like to, uh, to build a business, so,
Tomer Hen:or, or grow their business.
Tomer Hen:So very happy to connect.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:And we will of course, put all of those links in the show notes.
Matt Edmundson:Um, uh, but uh, yeah, do get in touch.
Matt Edmundson:Do connect with Tomer, I'm sure.
Matt Edmundson:I'd love to hear from you.
Matt Edmundson:Tomer, thank you so much for being with us here on the eCommerce podcast.
Matt Edmundson:Honestly, genuinely loved it.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, you're a top like, and thank you for sharing all your wisdom.
Tomer Hen:Thank you so much, Matt.
Tomer Hen:It's been great and thank you for everyone for.
Matt Edmundson:So there you have it.
Matt Edmundson:What a fantastic conversation.
Matt Edmundson:Huge.
Matt Edmundson:Thanks again to Timer for joining me today.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, and also a huge thanks and big shout out to today's show
Matt Edmundson:sponsor e-commerce cohort.
Matt Edmundson:Do head over to ecommercecohort.com for more information about this new
Matt Edmundson:type of membership, uh, and community.
Matt Edmundson:I'll be.
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Matt Edmundson:from because we've got some great conversations lined up, let me tell you.
Matt Edmundson:And I don't want you to miss any of them.
Matt Edmundson:And in case no one has told you today, you my friend.
Matt Edmundson:Are awesome.
Matt Edmundson:Utterly, utterly awesome.
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Matt Edmundson:So that's it from me.
Matt Edmundson:Thank you so much for joining me.
Matt Edmundson:Have a fantastic week.