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I feel stuck in a certain stage of business.

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Why don't they just get it?

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But just like in any relationship, sometimes when you go inwards

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and you look at like, wait, what is it that I'm not getting?

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What do I need to change about how I communicate, about how I show up?

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It can change a whole dynamic of a relationship.

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And we forget that that's the same with your customers and with your audience.

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Figuring out what it is that you need to change to communicate better to them.

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And you know, just seeing them again as that individual person is what

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can really shift and change that whole dynamic of a relationship.

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Welcome to the e-Commerce podcast with me, your host, Matt Edmundson.

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Now, the E-Commerce podcast is all about helping you deliver e-commerce.

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Wow.

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And to help us do just that today I'm gonna be chatting

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with Monica Sharma-Patnekar.

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Uh, about discovering the human element behind the numbers.

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It's an intriguing title.

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I can't wait to get into it.

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But before we dive into our discussion, uh, let me share with

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you my previous podcast pick.

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Oh yes, A previous podcast episode that I think you'll enjoy.

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And yes, there's a lot of P's in that.

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Uh, so check out, uh, top content marketing advice for your online business,

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uh, from Tim Hughes, or check out from Startup to Growth with Maureen Mwangi.

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Another great episode.

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You can get, uh, access to my podcast picks.

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Or our entire podcast archive for free on our website at ecommercepodcast.net.

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Plus, if you sign up to, uh, our newsletter, we'll send you the

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links to our podcast picks, along with the notes, and of course, the

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links from today's show with Monica.

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They all get delivered straight to your inbox at no cost to you,

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which is pretty amazing now.

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I'm sure you've come across right, a bunch of folks stuck

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with their e-commerce business.

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You may even be one of them.

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You may have got siloed like I did, uh, working on just one or two areas of

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your business and miss the big picture.

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Well enter e-commerce cohort to solve this problem.

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It's a lightweight membership group with guided monthly sprints that cycle

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through all the key areas of e-commerce.

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Yes.

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The sole purpose of cohort is to provide you with clear actionable jobs to be

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done so you'll know what to work on and get the support to get it done.

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So whether you are just starting out an e-commerce or if like me, you're

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a well established e-commercer.

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Or a bit of a dinosaur, as some people like to say.

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Uh, I encourage you to definitely check out ecommercecohort.com.

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That's ecommercecohort.com, especially if you're in E-com.

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I mean, just go and check it out.

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Have a look.

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Let me know what you think.

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It's awesome.

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I'm in there every month.

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Uh, we've got some great people doing some great coaching in there as well.

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Uh, some amazing stuff's come out of the last few weeks, but do check it out.

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Okay.

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Let's talk about Monica.

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She is an e-commerce brand mentor and consultant, a purpose-driven digital

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brand, marketing and strategy professional with, check this out, 17 years of

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global experience building brands.

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She's worked across diverse sectors from companies, uh, and companies from

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Fortune 500 to scale, and startups.

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In other words, the ideal guest for the show.

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Oh, yes, Monica, welcome to the show.

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Great to have you all the way from sunny Amsterdam at least.

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I hope it's sunny.

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How are you doing?

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Hi Matt.

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Thanks for having me on.

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Yes, I'm, I'm all good.

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It's sunny now after Stormy nights.

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Oh, well, it's good for you.

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It's not sunny here.

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At least it's not raining.

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I suppose that's a, that's a, that's a bonus, isn't it, here in Liverpool.

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Yeah.

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So have you, have you always been native to Amsterdam or have you, have you

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sort of arrived there at some point?

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No.

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So, well, native to Holland.

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I'm born and raised here.

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I was a Indian by Heritage, that's by birth.

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Um, grew up in Behague.

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My family's all there, but I've been living in Amsterdam for

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over 10, 11 years now as well.

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So yeah.

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Oh, fantastic.

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Fantastic.

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Uh, lovely part of the world.

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Uh, and definitely put on tourist.

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Yeah, yeah, yeah.

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No, that's awesome.

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That's awesome.

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So, With your experience in sort of building purpose driven brands, Monica,

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I'm curious to know, how do you think tapping into the sort of the human aspect

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of brand growth can lead to say, a more sustainable and successful business in

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today's fast-paced e-commerce landscape.

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That's a heck of a first question.

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So let's just jump straight in.

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That's, that's a very big first question.

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There's so much I can say about that.

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So, uh, let me dive in.

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I think one, I think you, like you said, you, you said it, you know, the

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fast-paced e-commerce world, and I think over the last few years, decade.

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It has become such a huge numbers game, right?

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Yeah.

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Um, no so much.

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If this is your conversion rate?

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This is the traffic.

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What should we tweak to do that?

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Sometimes it feels like it's, a little game.

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You know, what can you tweak to just increase those numbers?

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And yes, numbers are important in business.

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You need to know your numbers.

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But if we just take a step back and just think about it from the bigger picture,

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depending what stage of business you are at, you're either getting, I don't

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know, a thousand, 5,000, 10,000 website visitors, and that's how we look at it.

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Like, oh, traffic coming in, but that's a thousand, 5,000,

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10,000 individual human beings.

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Coming to your site on a monthly basis, and imagine the ones interacting

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with you on social media, reading your emails, clicking through

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individual actual human beings.

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Now, if you had those people walking into a store or an event that you were

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speaking at, how would you interact with them, you know, as humans?

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We wanna be seen, we wanna be understood.

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We wanna be heard, and, people buy from brands that, that, that do that for them.

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You know, that they can relate to.

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And the biggest brands in the world you'll see are the ones that are able

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to tap into that because people buy.

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Especially in higher price category.

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You know, not the daily grocery shopping I'm talking about, but

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actually those things that are the once in life because of how it makes

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them feel, and being able to recognize that these are actually individual

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human beings coming to their site.

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I always challenge people like, how would you speak to them if that's how you

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started, if that's how you thought about it, what would you be telling them versus

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just seeing those as a, as another number on your website or in your analytics?

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Yeah, that's a very good point.

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It's funny, isn't it?

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Cuz you, I was talking to someone about this the other day in the sense that

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we've had, um, we, we were talking about one of the YouTube videos we've put out.

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Yeah.

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That's had, um, I put it out.

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It was honestly, uh, Monica, it was the simplest YouTube video.

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I, yeah.

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Anyway, we put out this video, it's two and a half minutes long

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about how to create a PowerPoint.

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I think I put it out like 10 years ago.

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Do you know what I mean?

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I, I, it was a long time ago, isn't it?

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Yeah, it's well outta date.

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Let me just tell you because PowerPoint has evolved, but I put this video out

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and it's had over a million views, right?

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Yeah.

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And I was talking to somebody about that the other day.

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That's a million people.

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Yes.

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Have watched the video and I'm thinking, you know, when I go and watch

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Liverpool, I'm a bit of a Liverpool fan cuz I, I, let's not go anyway.

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Uh, when I go to the stadium, there's 50,000 people in that stadium.

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Yeah, exactly.

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That's 20 thou, uh, 20 times that amount of people have watched my video, and

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that's just one of the videos and it blows my mind when you think about it like that.

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E.

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Exactly.

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And that's my point.

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And so often we are busy thinking like, you know, oh, those people are not

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getting our message, or they're not understanding, how do I find more of them?

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Or I feel stuck in a certain stage of business.

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Why don't they just get it?

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But just like in any relationship, sometimes when you go inwards

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and you look at like, wait, what is it that I'm not getting?

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What do I need to change about how I communicate, about how I show up?

Speaker:

It can change a whole dynamic of a relationship.

Speaker:

And we forget that that's the same with your customers and with your audience.

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Figuring out what it is that you need to change to communicate better to them.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

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And you know, just seeing them again as that individual person is what

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can really shift and change that whole dynamic of a relationship.

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And I think sometimes that's where we've skewed too much to the numbers.

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You know, we need to find that balance between the two and find Okay.

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That Midway and I, I'm seeing that happening.

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I'm finally seeing Facebook ad experts now talking about, oh wait,

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we need to understand the customer.

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The algorithm is no longer working for us.

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It's, it's about the messaging now.

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We can't just expect things.

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So you're seeing this conversation finally starting to happen and I'm so happy about

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that, but I just, but I still see a lot of people hesitant to do that and I say,

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I really challenge, I want to take that step back and just think of each person

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as an individual human being coming to your store that you are able to speak to.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Now it's a fair point.

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I think just if you look at your daily traffic numbers and then go, okay, I've

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had whatever, a thousand, 2000 people, if you imagine those 2000 people in

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an arena, um, just sort of walking through, it's kind of like you're

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gonna change how, you're not gonna be tolerating necessarily the stuff on

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your website that you probably should be tolerated anyway, you said that.

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Um, You said that this makes you super happy, right?

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That, that this sort of more of a recognition in this area.

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Yes.

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Why does that make you super happy?

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What sort of drives you in this whole area?

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Well, I think what we forget is that, you know, business or anything in life.

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I mean, in that essence, it it's about customer relationship.

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It's all about relationships, right?

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And, uh, we are so focused on that really quick ROI, quick return on investment.

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Whereas we forget that business is a long-term game, right?

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To build any.

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To build a long term sustainable, profitable business, it takes time, right?

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I can, I can quote a lot of things.

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It takes on average three years to build a profitable business or break even.

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Even if I look at some of the largest businesses in the world that we

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all admire, some of them not even profitable or cashflow positive, right?

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Yeah.

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So, but still everybody's like, what can I do now to see.

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10 times our way in the next 30 days and what we need to take that step back, it's

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really about building those relationships for the long term and customer loyalty

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and, you know, just speaking to people as human beings and saying, okay, how

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do I, what do they need to hear from me?

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How do I guide them to the customer journey?

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How do they help them and understand better what my product are about and

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what I do and why it would help them.

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and for me, it's really about building those long-term sustainable

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and profitable businesses.

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And not just that one-time fly by night, business that may shut down

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in the next six months to a year.

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And also as a business owner, to be able to have fun in your business.

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not just surviving, but really thriving and having some fun whilst doing it and

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growing that business is gonna help you sustain whatever lifestyle you want.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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No, I'm a big fan of having fun, uh, in business.

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Yes.

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Uh, we should do a whole podcast on that one day.

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Just so how to have fun in business.

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Yes.

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Because I feel like that's a bit of a lost art in itself.

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You know, everyone's got a little bit too serious.

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And you're just like, no, it's fine.

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It's okay.

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It's okay to have a bit of fun.

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Uh, exactly.

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You don't have to be Google.

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Uh, that was the other thing that I noticed.

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Everybody was like, well, you know, Google's fine.

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They can do the fun things cause they're a big enough company.

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You're like, no, no, no, no, no.

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You can do it cause you're small.

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I exactly.

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I, I don't think a lot of the businesses are only urging the fun things.

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That, that's the opportunity we have as a small business owners to

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really connect with your customers and have some fun doing it.

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So what have you seen then, um, as we're talking about fun?

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Cuz I, I, I could wax lyrical about this all day.

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Genuinely.

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Um, what sort of things have you seen, or what sort of things do you perceive to

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be fun then when it comes to customers?

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How, how can we do that?

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First of all, it's really, really going back to fundamentals,

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getting to know your customers.

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Um, the one thing I think people still don't do enough, and I have

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seen this create real shifts in people's, not just businesses, but

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mindset and how they start showing up.

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But really going back to understanding who your customer really, really is.

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Uh, You know, what are the core needs, wants and desires?

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Why are they buying?

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And then looking at, okay, how do I deliver that and what's

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the value I add I bring to it?

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Um, but just even having those customer conversations, it's those

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cus deep dive customer interviews is when I start people seeing having a

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little more fun in their business.

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They're like, oh, okay, this is who I'm doing it for.

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This is what they really want.

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It's not what I thought.

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Uh, and it just changes how you completely show up.

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Yeah.

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No, fair.

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Uh, very good.

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Very true.

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But, um, so the, the getting to know your customers aspect of it, um, you mentioned

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they're doing, uh, customer interviews.

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Is that what you do?

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Is that the, is that the route I'm gonna go down to get to know my customer?

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Yes, absolutely.

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Of course there are things you can do around it.

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You know, there's, there's, there's your analytics that will show you information.

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It's always great to dive into all the testimonials, reviews,

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any content, any conversations you've had, and even surveys.

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But they don't allow you to dive deeper into motivations and the why and really

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understand deeper what's going on.

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With your customer.

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So customer interviews I always say is non-negotiable.

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Whether you choose to do it as a group with a focus group or

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individual one-on-one, you have to be speaking to your customers

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and really getting to know them.

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Yes, absolutely.

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That's really intriguing.

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So let's say, um, Because I, Monica, I know a thousand businesses that have

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never interviewed their customers, right?

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Yes.

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Uh, and most people I know many more.

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Yeah.

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How do you, how do you get started with that?

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Is that just a case of, I'm just gonna go down my customer, I'm gonna

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pick this, this customers bought three times, so I'm gonna call up.

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Go.

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Hello, Susan.

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Uh, it's Matt here from, uh, you know, Acme.

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Cool.

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Um, I see you've purchased from us three times.

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Can I ask you some questions about it?

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Is that, is it as simple as that or is there a bit more to it?

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Well, it could be as simple as that, but I always say to first reach out to

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your customers, you know, email them.

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Um, you and I always say it's really great.

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You start with those customers who are the most loyal.

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Cause those are the easiest.

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Obviously you'll have the customers who purchased from you really often.

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They're uh, the ones who maybe only purchased once and stopped.

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And then there are people who you've seen have been following you, opening

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your emails, but just not buying.

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Mm-hmm.

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And it's really nice to be able to, you know, speak to different

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people from those groups, but start with the most loyal ones.

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Cause those are the easiest.

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Email them, reach out to them and just say, you know, um, I'm

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looking to, you know, serve you better and improve my business.

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Um, Would you have some time to speak to me?

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It's a, and and then you'll see that quite a few people do respond and that

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makes it so much easier to get on a call, because then it's not like a cold call

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where, you know, people are gonna think, are you trying to pitch me something?

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Mm-hmm.

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Uh, no.

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So just email them, reach out to them first, and people will tend to respond

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and then get onto a, uh, call with them.

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Yes.

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Fantastic.

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And would you, would you incentivize the customer to do that or is

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it just you don't need to, you don't, your, your experiences

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you don't need.

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My experience is that you don't need to, but I always do say, I love

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just giving somebody as a thank you.

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It's like a little gift for your time.

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Thank you for your time.

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Here's a voucher, or here's something from my store.

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Um, it it, it's just a nice gesture, right?

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Yeah.

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To give something back for somebody's time.

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You don't have to, but it just adds that one level of

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appreciation for somebody's time.

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So let's role play a little bit, Monica.

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And now, um, so, uh, I'm, I've emailed you, Monica, you've purchased

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from us three or four times.

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We'd love to have a conversation.

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Um, Are you up for that?

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I guess they have used something, I guess, like zcal or something like that

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to schedule a time that works for them.

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Right.

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And are you, are you, am I, am I doing this call on Zoom?

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Uh, whatever works?

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Zoom is great because you can record the conversation.

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Um, it's nice to have it face-to-face, right?

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It, it always makes a difference.

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Zoom is great.

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Uh, you can record it to listen back to it and always say, and, and if

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somebody's really reluctant, you know, then of obviously a phone call.

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But, uh, try and do it as much as possible on like a video call where

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you can also see the person and record it for yourself just to be

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able to take notes later as well.

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Yes.

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Yeah, that's an important point, I guess, taking the notes later.

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As much as you hate listening to your own voice, uh, watching back

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the video, I was actually gonna help you make a better call next time.

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I would've thought.

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Right?

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It makes a better call.

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It will help you pick out actual little quotes and, you know, snippable words

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that you can use, but it's so difficult when you're in a conversation to know

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down everything somebody's saying.

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Right?

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Yeah.

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And really pick out everything.

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So it's really good to just ha be able to listen back and make sure you haven't

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missed any of the important things.

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It's a bit like how I do podcast, Monica.

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I'm not gonna lie.

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I take down very basic notes as we go along and then we have it

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transcribed and we can pull out some really good information.

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Okay, well, I, this is a beautiful thing.

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So, um, we're on a Zoom call then chatting.

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What sort of things am I gonna want to ask you?

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Like, um, how do I, how do I know what questions to ask?

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Because I think that scares people.

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That in general, I think conversations like these scare people because

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people, I, I, I, I sense a fear.

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People have a fear of rejection that people may not wanna speak

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to them, they're afraid of any kind of criticism they may hear.

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Um, my quick reminder here would be people love helping, especially small

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business owners, and people love, again, back to that connection piece

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we talked about right in the beginning.

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People love connecting.

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They wanna be seen, heard, and understood, and they feel.

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Every customer I've worked with has come back to me and said, oh

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my God, some of those people I interviewed became my loyal customers.

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Cause they said, you actually care.

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Many businesses don't do this.

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So it is scary cuz you haven't done it before.

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The more often you do it, the easier it gets.

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But just treat, remember that people do love helping people

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and they wanna be understood.

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So this is a great chance to also differentiate yourself and

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show that you care about them.

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And then in terms of the questions to ask, I have actually broken it

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down into, uh, a framework 4Ds.

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So, um, the desires over, yes, desires over demographics, and obviously we

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do start a bit with the demographic.

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Just get some of the factual information about them.

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It just, Creates a good picture and a perspective, and if you do

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ever do advertising and targeting, it will give you some great

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information to have upfront.

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Sure.

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So make sure you get those demographics down.

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Then for me, one of the most key elements is desires.

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Which I called.

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So who's this person?

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What's going on in their life?

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What are their struggles?

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What makes them happy?

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What can help them get more of those moments?

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What do they really want in life?

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and what's happening?

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So a lot of times people forget this box because they wanna straight

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go into their products, but just.

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Like I said, people buy because of how your product makes 'em feel.

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You're not just selling a product, it's a feeling and experience and it's about how

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that product fits into their lifestyle.

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So really try to understand that person beyond just the

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product that you're selling.

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Mm-hmm.

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And that's why this box is super important to understand.

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And then we go into the third one, which I call do.

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This is about behaviors.

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How do they behave within their, cate, your category of products?

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What are, you know, what are they doing?

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Where do they find you or competitors?

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How do they get to you?

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What's, you know, why are they buying?

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What's stopping them from buying the triggers and barriers to buy?

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Uh, how does that whole experience of shopping with you make them feel?

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Mm-hmm.

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And then the final one is delight.

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You know, how that entire shop, what really makes them happy?

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What would they tell others about you?

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What would they tell others about competitors are buying from?

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You know, from the whole shopping experience to actually getting

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the products at home, what do they really love about it?

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What makes them really happy?

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And what could you be doing there for doing better?

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So it's really about understanding that person, demo demographics and desires, and

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then understanding the whole more specific to your product and category and how

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they purchase it, what makes them happy.

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So those are the four Ds.

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Fantastic.

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So I've got demographics, desires, do, and delight.

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Yes, I got that down right?

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Absolutely score me.

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Okay.

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So, um, so how long do these conversations take?

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They do take, I would say budget easily anywhere between 45 minutes to an hour.

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Oh, wow.

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If you want do them Well, yeah.

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If you wanna do them well.

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So 45 minutes to an hour.

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Ironically, the same length time as my podcast.

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I'm just, yes.

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Uh, it's, it's almost like it's written in the stars.

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Um, so, so I'm doing, I'm, I'm sort of chatting away.

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45 Am I letting the client know it's gonna take that long in the original email?

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Yes, obviously I, I usually say around 40 minutes to 45 minutes.

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And then if it takes another 10, 50 minutes longer, people don't mind.

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Um,

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yeah, people give you a little bit of grace, don't they?

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If you tell it's an hour, they'll freak out.

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They may freak out.

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So I always say, say around 40 minutes, 45 minutes max.

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You know, and then if it goes over, and usually people end up enjoying

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the conversation once they're on, so they don't mind and they like

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giving so much information away.

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Um, so te tends, it tends to go over naturally, so you

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don't have to worry so much.

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Yeah.

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Very good.

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And how do you prevent then?

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Uh, I kind of know how you're gonna answer this question, Monica.

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Uh, but I, I feel like I need to ask it.

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How do you prevent this scenario where I just happen to call that

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one particular person who is the outlier and they are completely

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different to everybody else, right?

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Yeah.

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Um, and it just is just you, you know, random luck that I've picked this one

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person, or maybe these two or three people who are, who are over there,

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but 97% of people are over here.

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Yeah.

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How do I, how do I know that I've done that I guess?

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So first of all, you're not just doing one interview, right?

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You're gonna be doing multiple.

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So you'll start seeing a trend on the ones that are sticking out a little bit.

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I mean that's, it's as simple as that.

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And I think you need to keep doing these over longer period

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of time as well for yourself.

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Mm-hmm.

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Don't just make this a one time thing and I'm done.

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Cuz your business evolves, everything evolves, markets evolve, customers evolve.

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So keep doing that.

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And another way to do it is also to then use surveys.

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You know, say you've done these deep dive interviews mm-hmm.

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And you've got a basic understanding of who your customers

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are and you've really got.

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This gives you the motivations.

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It's about quality, really diving deep, but then you can use surveys to test it

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out over a large number of people, right?

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If this really holds.

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So then you can use what you've learned to then set up a survey and send out

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to a larger audience or email list, and then see what the consistencies

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in the answers that are coming out.

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So, uh, the, these are multiple ways of doing it, but first of

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all I would say is make sure you're doing multiple interviews.

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You're doing 6, 7, 8 of them, you will start seeing that there's one

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or two people who are answering completely differently than others.

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Yeah.

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Um, and that will already give you that feeling.

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Okay.

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There is, there is some differences, but you'll also start seeing some

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of the commonalities coming out.

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And I think it's more important to say, okay, what's really

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the common thread that's coming across all of these interviews?

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Yeah.

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And often those will go beyond the demo.

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The demographics may be the outliers, but maybe what they really want and

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what they're looking for is, is common.

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Um, and that's what you wanna really focus on.

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Okay, so I guess my, I, how many of these am I doing?

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Am I in my head?

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I guess there's two ways to do this.

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I'm, I'm like, well, I'm just gonna do 20 and see what happens.

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Or I can talk to, I mean, you know, in my ecom businesses we have, I

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have the privilege of having a team.

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I don't know whether the team should do this actually, or the customer service

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team or whether I need to do this.

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Um, do I say to each one of the customer service team,

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you need to do one call a day.

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Um, with one customer, and it's just, it is what it is, you know, and we,

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and we start to do this and we, we budget time for that, so over, and

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we just do it con continually, you know, you get out, I guess we got

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three people in customer service.

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That's a thousand calls a, a year.

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I don't know.

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Um, what's the, I guess what's the frequency?

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The frequency, I think, I think that's something you can decide.

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And, and it also depends on the size of business you are, how much

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support you have, you know, whether you're, you know, a sole founder

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versus like you, you have a team.

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Uh, all of that is going to impact it.

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But I would say if you can just even do this on a monthly basis.

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So if you've never done this before, I would say try and do eight to 10, find

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eight to 10 people that you can speak to so that you can get that base done.

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Yeah.

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And have that deeper understanding.

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And then on a monthly basis, I would say even if you're just doing this on

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a monthly basis, that everybody speaks to one to two customers, uh, that

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will keep giving you that consistency.

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And every time maybe somebody buys you new customers, you say it can

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be trigger something in your system and then you can say, Hey, let me

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speak to a few of these people.

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We have some new buyers in, or there a couple of people who have been coming to.

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Back to buy more often, you know, so you can pick and choose.

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I would say even just doing it on a monthly basis is, it is really good.

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And you'll be ahead of the curve.

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Very good.

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Now, I, I'm not gonna let you get away with it.

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Oh, I'm not gonna, let me get away with it.

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But when I said, uh, who should do this?

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My team or me?

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You said both and I kind of skipped over it.

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Uh, so I'm, I know I, yeah, yeah, yeah.

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Uh, I, I just want you to know you were heard.

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Uh, and so, um, why both?

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Well, um, at the end, you're also leading the business, right?

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And I think it's everybody.

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I would encourage everybody that's involved in the business system,

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somebody from the marketing team, not, and the customer service team,

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even somebody from the product team.

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I would involve everybody if you have a bigger business

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where you have different teams.

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Hmm.

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Involve all the people because all of them need to understand the customer.

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To be able to best deliver the work they do and then pull those insights together.

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Mm-hmm.

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Um, and that makes a difference in everybody's work, I think that you do.

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So I wouldn't only leave it to the customer service in

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the customer facing teams.

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I love that.

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I love that the guys in the warehouse need to do the calls

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as well, freaks them right out.

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That whole concept, talking to people, uh, they, that's why they're in the warehouse.

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They're like, I like headphones and not talking to people.

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Um, so here's the thing, right.

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Uh, and I'm just gonna join two dots together because, you know,

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this is how my brain works.

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I've, I'm a big proponent, I'm a big fan of podcasting as a marketing strategy.

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And here's what I'm thinking when it comes to e-commerce business.

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I've seen a lots of strategies when it comes to podcasting, uh, certainly for

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e-commerce businesses, and one of the things that I think you need to do on

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your podcast is champion your customers.

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Right?

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So what I'm, what I'm, what I, I'm joining two dots.

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I'm going like, I could do this conversation and take part

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of, just ask these customers.

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You know, a question, say, right?

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If you don't mind, we're gonna feature this on the podcast.

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So then they get featured on the podcast only for maybe like five or 10 minutes.

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Doesn't have to, you know, it's not a whole thing like this.

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45 minutes.

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Um, And that, that actually works really, really well.

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Uh, and you are, you are in effect taking, uh, some research, which is super helpful.

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Anyway, uh, you are mixing that with your marketing, which is yes.

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Also super helpful, and you're promoting your customer to a

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wider audience, which is yep.

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I'm, I'm winning on every kind of level here.

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Yes.

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So, um, I just wanted to join those two dots together.

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Thank you.

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Absolutely.

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Yes.

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There's so many ways you can use this, uh, as long as I will emphasize,

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get permission from your customers.

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Absolutely.

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And confidentiality is really important.

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Um, because all, obviously also remember that if you do.

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Um, say that you're gonna share this somewhere.

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They, some people maybe hold back a little more.

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So just keep that in mind about what part you wanna share, whatnot, and that you're

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very open to your customers about that.

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Yeah, no, absolutely.

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All top tips.

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Okay.

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So, um, obviously the, the customer interview is, is a big deal, right?

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And I'm, I'm starting to do this.

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I'm starting to collect the data.

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I'm starting to see some patterns, um, which should hopefully impact

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my, my business in some way.

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I say hopefully because it's not a given, right?

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No, I, the given is, it's not just that you're going to get that informa obs

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uh, the observations and the insights from it, but it's about how you're

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gonna translate that into your business and consistently, I think what people

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forget is that, you know, just doing these interviews is not like the magic

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tool right?

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It, it's going to give you information that you then need to bring into your

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business and consistently implement just like you do everything else into your

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messaging, into your content, into the ads you're running, into the products,

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you're deciding to maybe launch new products, uh, into your customer service.

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So it's about consistently implementing that again into it for

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a longer period of time as well.

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And it doesn't mean that the whole testing and tweaking that.

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You can eliminate that, you still need to do that.

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Uh, it's just that you'll be able to do more educated testing.

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Mm-hmm.

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Um, with the information that you've learned.

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So is this then how I got, I mean, coming back to the first mammoth

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question that I opened up with, um, is this, is this how we, we build then

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that sort of long term loyalty that, to build that sustainable business?

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Yes, absolutely.

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I think it.

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It's all about building customer relationships.

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So if you don't know who you're speaking to, how can you build that

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relationship for the long term?

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So you get to know them, but then make sure that you're consistently translating

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that into all the aspects of your business, every touchpoint that your

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customer is interacting with you, and for a longer period of time, of course.

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And making sure that, and then I would also really challenge is the

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part we tend to focus on the most is.

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Getting new customers in, but with what you learn, with what you learn,

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also look at the post-purchase process because um, I feel like a lot

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of people still ignore that a lot.

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What happens to a customer once they've bought from you?

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How do you interact with them then?

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I think that's where you can really use everything you learn to really

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build that loyalty for the longer term.

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Mm-hmm.

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Yeah, I couldn't agree more to be honest with you.

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Um, uh, so.

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So I'm, I'm doing my customer service interviews.

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I'm, I'm, I'm getting this wonderful information.

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I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm using that data to change my marketing.

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I'm using that data to inform my post purchase.

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Um, one of the things that I've seen Monica over the years, yeah.

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Is the rise of what I'm gonna call customer personas.

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Okay.

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Yeah.

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So I walk into, I remember walking into, into one sales director's office, and

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he had like five pictures upon the wall.

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You know, that, uh, he didn't know who these people were, but they,

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they had names underneath them.

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Susan, Simon, and Susan is this, this, this, this, and this, and Simon this, and

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this was all data that they'd collated.

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Um, from their user.

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Some of it was demographics, some of it was their desires.

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Some of it was what they do.

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Some of it was what delights them, remembering your four Ds, right?

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Yeah.

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So, um, are you a fan of the customer persona idea or is that, am I in danger of

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stereotyping too much and I'm forgetting about the individuality of the person?

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I'm, I'm kind of curious as to where you stand on that.

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So there are two, a couple of things I wanna say about that.

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So customer persona, if it's based on one real customer interviews, right?

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Great.

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But I see most people building those customer personas maybe

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out of just analytical data.

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Never have really spoken to anybody or I call that you know, it, it.

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I always say real over ideal.

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Cause ideal is something from imagination.

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People call it that ideal customer persona.

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So as long one base off these actual customer conversations and real

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understanding, uh, that's important.

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And to be honest, I think we go into so much details in some

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of those customer personas.

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What are people eating, drinking, and what are they reading today?

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Yes, that's maybe great to start a conversation, but it's not what's

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gonna bring them to your store.

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Uh, I think sometimes we go just down to too much detail that's not even needed.

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Mm-hmm.

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A little too far.

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And if you have the time and you wanna do it, great.

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But I don't think required.

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Right?

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It's not required.

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I think sticking to those four Ds, really understanding your customer to that level.

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What's going on in the life, how your products fit into it, the

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trigger barriers, you know, in, in the whole purchase process.

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Um, that, that's the most important I've seen.

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And we don't need to go down to really that kind of a level.

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What is everybody eating, drinking, and watching on Netflix today.

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Yeah.

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Too much detail.

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Yeah.

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So alongside too much detail, what are some of the other problems

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I need to be aware of or avoid when I'm developing this out?

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Well, again, uh, one your own thoughts, assumptions.

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A lot of people like building that in, um, understanding that when we are,

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uh, looking into customers, we stay.

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So you have your customer segment, right?

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The.

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People with the common traits within that you have that real person

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that you're actually speaking to.

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And I think a lot of people stop at that level and which what I keep saying

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is you wanna get to that core desires.

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What is their needs wants and desires that they want.

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And it's sometimes it's not, it's not the solution that you're offering yet,

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but it's really what they're, what they want out of life and what could that be?

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Stopping and making sure that you go down to that kind of a level.

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Mm-hmm.

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Really the need.

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And desires, and that's the biggest element I feel missing

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in a lot of customer personas.

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They go into more of those behavioral things and you know, like we said, whether

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they're eating, drinking or watching today, but they forget what are really

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those core desires that they want in life.

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And then seeing how to.

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You know, add your product into that.

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So really making sure it's based on real information, real conversations.

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Um, I think really going down to the desires levels, and you don't have to

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go into way too much detail and just really making sure that you're not

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building in your own assumptions into it.

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So, uh, I, I'm sorry, I'm busy making notes here.

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No, I, I, I, a lot of it makes a lot of sense to me.

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I, I, I'm smiling because, um, I think a lot of people get into e-commerce so they

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don't actually have to talk to people.

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I know a lot of retailers like, I'm going online cuz I've had enough of people.

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Uh, and so they, they just become like a faceless number.

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And here we are saying, no, no, no.

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You must actually talk to people and base this on real info.

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So then marketers come along and say, listen, for those of you who don't

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wanna actually talk to people, we can run tests so we'll, we'll split test

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is a, is a popular thing, isn't it?

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We'll split test this, this, this, and this and we'll pick whichever

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is the winning number over here.

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And that's basically testing your assumptions on nine times outta 10.

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Right?

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You're gonna go Exactly.

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I have a theory that that ad will outpoll that ad.

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Let's put it out, let's test it.

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Yep.

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Let's see what happens.

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Um, but.

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That's based on my assumption.

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So here we go.

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You okay?

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You've told me no assumptions.

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I've gotta use real data and I've got to find out the desires of

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the people that I'm talking to.

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Yes.

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Love it.

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There are a thousand people listening to the podcast now just

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breaking out into cold sweats.

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They're just kind of going, no, no, no, no.

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This is not what I want.

Speaker:

So how do you, but the funny thing is, if anybody's done any kind of course

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around growth marketing, growth hacking, one of the first things they say to you

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in that is, uh, know, your customer.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

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But, but still people are using their assumptions to do those tests.

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So there is a disconnect happening over there.

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Yeah.

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Yeah, absolutely.

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Absolutely.

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But for those that are breaking out into a cold sweat, Monica, are

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there any other tools out there that are gonna help me know my customer?

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Or is it, I mean, beyond obviously doing the interviews, um, what are the tools

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out there that I should think about maybe that I should add to my arsenal?

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Or is it just literally not as folks on the interviews first

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and then the rest will come?

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So absolutely focus on the interviews first, because otherwise, if I

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don't say that, I can see everyone trying to grab those other tools.

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It's totally what's gonna happen.

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It's totally,

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and, and avoid this, but other ways to enrich it, um, are basically, I think

Speaker:

a hidden gem are your testimonials.

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Especially also negative testimonies of you or your competitors, cuz

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then you know what's missing.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

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Uh, right.

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And people look at testimonials only from the product point of view.

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What are people saying about my product?

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But if you actually read, and it, some people write really pretty,

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uh, descriptive testimonials about, I bought this for my grandchild.

Speaker:

It certainly tells you a little more about the person and what

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reason they bought something for.

Speaker:

So I would really say, look into your testimonials, any conversations

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you've had, email conversations, uh, content, you know, on social media.

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Then they are obviously sending out surveys.

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There's so many tools you can use for that.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

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Um, to test it out.

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And they are more and more, I don't wanna name the names cause I haven't

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tested them out yet, but I found out a few more AI driven tools that scrape

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things off the internet for you.

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Um, From all the different brands and go through the testimonials of all

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other brands that exist in with, within your category, um, that can really

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enrich that kind of data as well.

Speaker:

But again, I think this is to enrich it.

Speaker:

They still don't allow you to dive deeper into motivations, which is where actual

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conversations are absolutely essential.

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Okay, so there's no getting around it is there.

Speaker:

You're gonna have to actually talk to people.

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Okay, good.

Speaker:

Uh, let's just do this, deal with that one.

Speaker:

So let's go back then to the desires aspect of it, Monica,

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because this really intrigues me.

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And this is something that you keep com, uh, keep mentioning.

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Yes.

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How do you find out the desires?

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What sort of questions would you ask?

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So let's, I'm just pulling something off the desk in front of me.

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Uh, if you're a regular to the show, you will know that I have on

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my desk my, uh, Lego Indiana Jones.

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There it is.

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Big fan of the old Lego Indiana Jones.

Speaker:

Uh, I'm kind of curious, right?

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That's the product say that I sell.

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Um, How would I, how would I find out the desires of the person buying that product?

Speaker:

What sort of questions would you be asking?

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So I think it's more about the technique of the question versus what.

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Okay.

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So, uh, what we haven't touched on, which is one big thing is, uh, I use a technical

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customer story program where you invite your customers to tell you stories.

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See what we do as humans.

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Again, we rationalize.

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Things, right?

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Um, I didn't eat those fourth pair of leggings.

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I bought them anyway, and I'm explaining it away at home to my husband why I

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needed it, cuz, oh, well, you know, I didn't have this color or look at the fit.

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Whereas I, I mean honestly I just wanted it, right?

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Mm-hmm.

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I'm just trying to explain away the choice, and that's what most of us do.

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And it's not that we are lying, it's just we don't realize it's all subconscious.

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So just like you use stories in your marketing because they're memorable,

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they're unique, they evoke emotions.

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It's the same way if you ask people for stories, uh, they will

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tell you things that you may not otherwise get in normal questions.

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Normally we ask people why, why you bought something just like a child have, you

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know, if you ever say to a child after they do something they're not supposed

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to, and you say, why did you do that?

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They're just, they're stumped.

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It's the same with us as adults, except that we try to explain things away.

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Mm-hmm.

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So, but instead, if you ask them, A story versus just why they did something.

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They will tell you about something that was unique to them, memorable to them, and

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usually has an emotional element to it.

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And that's what, and then you also, you are gonna have to dive deeper into,

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you know, reading between the lines and picking out, hey, what is it there for?

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What is really important to them?

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Mm-hmm.

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So it's really about more the technique that you use versus the actual questions.

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Cause I think people ask, you know, what makes you happy in life?

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Well, great, you know, um, You know, I'll, I'll just say what, I don't

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know, dancing, for example, but versus saying, you know, um, you know, if

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you just think back to the most recent moment that where you felt really

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happy, tell me a little story about it.

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Mm-hmm.

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The answer you'll get will be completely different.

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And I can give you a really concrete example.

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I, I asked somebody this really recently and it was about the Christmas break.

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And we asked this pers, I asked this person how they spent their

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Christmas break and she said, well, uh, you know, what did you do?

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And she was like, I was out and about running activities with my kids all day.

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Um, we had to keep them busy and we were out and about doing activities,

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going hiking, going climbing, going for walks, going to the park.

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I'm like, okay, great.

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Any brand would now build their whole messaging around this, right?

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Mm-hmm.

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But, What I ask.

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Okay.

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Tell me a little moment that really stepped by you, what

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that you remember the most.

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Tell me a little story about it.

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And then she started telling me about how she was actually, the moments

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when she was snuggling with her child on the sofa, on the couch when they

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were taking those moments of pause and she kind of just lit up and she

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could see the difference as well.

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And while she answered.

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And she's like, I was like, so.

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Those were actually the moments that were the most important to

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her, and what really mattered to her was taking that little time out.

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Mm-hmm.

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And to pause with her children versus being that busy mom running around

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something she felt like she had to do.

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Now, if you are a brand, look at the difference in the messaging

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you would do and what products you would probably creating by just

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having those two different answers.

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Yeah, that's very true.

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Uh, very, very, I like that because like you say, I guess the

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brand two options, haven't you?

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These trainers will get you from A to B faster, or these sneakers will get you

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from A to B faster and more comfortable.

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Um, or this product gives you, uh, a memory making

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moment or something like that.

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And that's a very different um, They're very good.

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Very good.

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It's what Netflix did actually when they first started out.

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If you cast your, I dunno if you, the early days of Netflix, they had

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a picture of a family watching TV on a couch all snuggled together.

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I mean, they couldn't have got any closer together.

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And you look at the picture and go, There is no way that's comfortable.

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They're all gonna get hot, but they all look cozy and, and, and everybody that

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had a family was like, that's what I want.

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I want these sort of coach cozy times with my young kids and

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my wife, and we're just happy.

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Uh, and I thought it was very clever.

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Um, and tapped into a, a, you know, a success for them,

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uh, using just that imagery.

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Nike.

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Everybody knows that and their whole messaging is around

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everyone can be an athlete, right?

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Mm-hmm.

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Even you can.

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So yes, those are the comfortable shoes.

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They make you run, you know, the comfortable shoes they make

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you run faster, but guess what?

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It ev, you know, it makes you healthier if you're exercising.

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And guess what?

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Everyone can be an athlete, even you.

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Hmm.

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Uh, I dunno about me, but yeah.

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No, fair enough.

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Uh, I don't.

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Listen.

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Uh, Monica, I could, uh, uh, I'm just feel like I'm starting to

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scratch the surface and all of this.

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I feel like we could, uh, we could talk for hours.

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So let me, um, let me ask you this, my, my question that I'm,

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I'm starting to ask everybody.

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Mm-hmm.

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This thinks a really interesting question.

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Okay.

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So this is more, uh, coming back to you.

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So, as you know, the show is sponsored by e-commerce cohort, which helps.

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Uh, E-commerce businesses deliver e-commerce Wow.

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To their customers through coaching and training, right?

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So imagine you have been one of the trainers on cohort, and let's do

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this in person rather than online.

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You're in a hotel and you've delivered, delivered your keynote.

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You know how to do the most amazing, uh, in, uh, conversation with your customers.

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I need a better title.

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I'm not great with title but you know what I mean?

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Um, and the cohorts are all in the room.

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They're like, ah, Monica.

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Yay.

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Go Monica.

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Um, And so afterwards, you, you sort of, after delivering your keynote speech, you

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have the opportunity to thank those that have had a massive influence on your life.

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Um, just say, I'd like to thank dot, dot, dot.

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Who would be on your list?

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Almost like at the Oscars and, and why?

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That's a easy one.

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That's my mom.

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Always, always, always, always.

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My mom.

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Uh, first and foremost, um, she, uh, raised us as a single mom.

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Uh, here in Holland in a country that wasn't her own that time.

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You know, I'm born and raised here.

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My sister's born and raised here.

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Was the three of us growing up.

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Um, she came from a family back where she was not allowed as

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a woman to finish her studies.

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So she came to, you know, she was in Holland.

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She worked as a receptionist for over 40 years.

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Got us through private international schooling, uh, moved us outta the

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public system to be able to give us a better opportunity and wow.

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Used even on that money.

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That she earned that limited money, even invested in some real estate

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to give a better life, and we were maybe not doing big holidays every

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year, but she showed us what is.

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It's, you know, it's not always about what you earn, it's about

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what's possible and what, and the opportunities you create for yourself.

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And I am where I am today, I think what owe it to my mom and

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I may choose a complete different path being in my own business.

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Mm-hmm.

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But it's just knowing the possibilities you can create for yourself.

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Um, it, it's played the biggest role for me in my life.

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And she's a three times cancer survivor as well, so Holy cow.

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Um, yeah, so she's been through a lot and just showed me what you can do.

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How positivity and how you can just, yeah.

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Be just achieve whatever you want with whatever you have actually.

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Um, that's amazing.

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So yes, it is.

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I may be cliche answer for many people, but it's true.

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It's, uh, my inspiration.

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You'd be surprised actually, I think out of all the people that I've asked,

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you're the first person to mention mum.

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Oh, it's seriously.

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Yeah.

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A lot of, um, a lot of guys mention their dads.

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Um, especially if their dads have passed away.

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That seems to be a common answer to this tough question.

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Yeah.

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But, um, yeah, I'm always surprised how many people don't mention their mums.

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Uh, I think maybe we'll just take her mums for granted, which probably,

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probably, uh, but which we shouldn't do.

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So what's your mum's name?

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Usha.

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Usha sounds like an absolute legend.

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Uh, so, uh, wow, that's quite an impressive, uh, quite an impressive

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resume your mum has, that's for sure.

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So, um, yeah.

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Well, don't, Usha.

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Awesome now.

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Miss Monica, how do people reach you?

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How do they, uh, connect with you if they want to do that?

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Um, you can follow me on Instagram business with Monica,

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uh, business with Monica.

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I'm on LinkedIn under my full name.

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Uh, obviously you can check on my website businesswithmonica.com.

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And we've provided the link, by the way, for the desires over demographics

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framework, the four Ds with a little checklist under each D so you can

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download it if you have missed it.

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So you also know what kind of questions to ask.

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And you can come on my, you'll be on my email list.

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So keep in touch that way.

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Uh, and obviously feel free to reach out if you wanna see

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how I can help work with you.

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I work with people one-on-one through my brand growth mentorship.

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Fantastic businesswithmonica.com.

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Instagram business with Monica.

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LinkedIn.

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We'll put the link in the show notes.

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We'll put the link in the show notes actually as well to your

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Instagram and to your website.

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You can get the show notes, uh, of course from the website.

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You can get the show notes from whatever podcast app you

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are listening to this show on.

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And if you're watching on YouTube, it'll be in the description.

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Basically, wherever.

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Wherever's Easy's for you, go grab the, the links.

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Monica, listen, I, I, I honestly really enjoyed the conversation.

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You've been an absolute legend.

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Uh, and um, thank you for coming on.

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Thank you for having me on.

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I really enjoyed it as well.

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It's been great.

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Honestly, I've got pages of notes.

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Uh, so we're, we're all good.

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We're all good.

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The team hate it cuz they're gonna go.

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Matt, what are we, I've got lots of good ideas from Monica guys.

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Guess what we're gonna do?

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Okay.

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So we will of course link to Monica's info, like I said in the show notes,

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which you can get for free along with the transcript at ecommercepodcast.net.

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Or if you sign up to the newsletter, that will be winging

Speaker:

its way direct to your inbox.

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Again, huge thanks to Monica for joining for me.

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Uh, joining me today, uh, great conversation and also a

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big shout out to today's show sponsor the e-commerce cohort.

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Uh, they do have some free training, which you can check out

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online at ecommercecycles.com.

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So do have a look at that.

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And also be sure to follow the e-commerce podcast wherever

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you get your podcast from.

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Because I have got some more great conversations, uh, lined up, and I

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don't want you to miss any of them.

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Now, before we wrap up today's episode, let me take a quick moment

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to invite you, dear listener, to become a part of the show.

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If you are an e-commerce entrepreneur, uh, or an expert in e-commerce in

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a field somewhere and would like to share your insights and uh, experiences

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like Monica has done today, well, we would love to hear from you.

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Or if you know someone who would make a great guest, then

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do please send them our way.

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Just head over to our website, ecommercepodcast.net and get in touch.

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That would be awesome.

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Genuinely awesome.

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I'll tell you what else is awesome.

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Uh, let me put this on.

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There you go.

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You are awesome.

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Uh, just in case no one's told you today, you are created awesome.

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It's just a burden you have to bear.

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Monica has to bear it.

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I have to bear it.

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You've gotta bear it too.

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Now, the E-Commerce podcast is produced by Aurion Media.

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You can find our entire archive of episodes on your favorite podcast app.

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The team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon, Estella

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Robin and Tanya Hutsuliak.

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Our theme song was written by Josh Edmundson, and as I mentioned, if you

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would like to read the transcript or show notes, you can find it all on

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our website, uh, ecommercepodcast.net.

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Now that's it from me.

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That's it from Monica.

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Thank you so much for joining us.

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Have a fantastic week.

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I'll see you next time.