Matt Edmundson:

Well, welcome to the eCommerce podcast with

Matt Edmundson:

me, your host, Matt Edmundson.

Matt Edmundson:

The eCommerce podcast is all about helping you deliver eCommerce wow.

Matt Edmundson:

And to help us do just that.

Matt Edmundson:

I am chatting with my very special guest today, Norm Farrar from the Lunch with

Matt Edmundson:

Norm Podcast about perceived value.

Matt Edmundson:

Is it all just American hype or is there something to it?

Matt Edmundson:

We're gonna get into that.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, if this is your first time here, a warm welcome to you

Matt Edmundson:

here, the eCommerce podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, you can find the notes, the transcript, everything for free on

Matt Edmundson:

our website, eCommercepodcast.net.

Matt Edmundson:

And what I'll do there, you can sign up for our newsletter, and each week we

Matt Edmundson:

will email you, uh, the links, the notes, the transcript from the conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

You can get that totally to your inbox, totally free.

Matt Edmundson:

Totally amazing.

Matt Edmundson:

Love that technology.

Matt Edmundson:

So make sure you sign up for that.

Matt Edmundson:

This episode is brought to you by the ecommerce cohort, uh, which helps you to

Matt Edmundson:

deliver e-commerce Wow to your customers.

Matt Edmundson:

Now, I was on a podcast earlier on Norm, and they said to me, You know,

Matt Edmundson:

some of the biggest lessons that you've learned, I said, Well, one

Matt Edmundson:

of the most expensive mistakes was when I got siloed in e-commerce.

Matt Edmundson:

In other words, I just worked on one or two.

Matt Edmundson:

Of my business and I missed the bigger picture.

Matt Edmundson:

Well enter e-commerce cohort to solve this problem.

Matt Edmundson:

It is a membership group, uh, with guided monthly sprints that cycle

Matt Edmundson:

through all the key areas of e-commerce.

Matt Edmundson:

So the sole purpose of cohort is to provide you with clear actionable

Matt Edmundson:

jobs to be done so you'll know what to work on as well as get the

Matt Edmundson:

support you need to get it done.

Matt Edmundson:

So whether you are just starting out in e-commerce or if like me, Well, a

Matt Edmundson:

well established eCommerce, I would encourage you to definitely check it out.

Matt Edmundson:

eCommerce cohort.com is the website.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, more information is available, uh, on the site.

Matt Edmundson:

Explains it in much better vernacular than I've just used.

Matt Edmundson:

But go ahead, check it out.

Matt Edmundson:

eCommerce cohort.com.

Matt Edmundson:

If you're involved in e-commerce, you'll probably want to

Matt Edmundson:

join, so head on over there.

Matt Edmundson:

Let's chat with Mr.

Matt Edmundson:

Norman Farrar.

Matt Edmundson:

He is an entreprevwe.

Matt Edmundson:

An entreprever, or an entrepreneur.

Matt Edmundson:

Take your pick.

Matt Edmundson:

We don't mind.

Matt Edmundson:

who provides online marketing and managed eCommerce solutions for brands.

Matt Edmundson:

Check this out, folks.

Matt Edmundson:

He has worked with Fortune five under companies such as Coca-Cola,

Matt Edmundson:

Mercedes-Benz, and 20th Century Fox, uh, since the early 1990s.

Matt Edmundson:

Norm.

Matt Edmundson:

Focused on helping entrepreneurs optimize their operations and

Matt Edmundson:

unlock their business potential.

Matt Edmundson:

Presently, he is the host of the popular Amazon Podcast Lunch With Norm.

Matt Edmundson:

I actually have been on Norm's podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

That's how we met.

Matt Edmundson:

We had a great time and a great conversation, and I knew actually

Matt Edmundson:

following on from that conversation on, we needed to get you onto the

Matt Edmundson:

eCommerce podcast cause I thought.

Matt Edmundson:

You've got some great value to add to what we do here, so thank you for coming on.

Matt Edmundson:

Great to, great to see you again.

Matt Edmundson:

How are we

Matt Edmundson:

doing?

Norm Farrar:

Uh, it's the first time I've ever been called an entreprevert.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, I'm, I'm, I'm not sure if I, how I would feel about that.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, so I'm sorry about that.

Matt Edmundson:

You can put that on your business cards going forward.

Norm Farrar:

Exactly.

Matt Edmundson:

Now, if you are listening

Matt Edmundson:

to the podcast, the one thing that you won't know about Norm, uh, is Norm has the

Matt Edmundson:

most incredible beard you have ever seen.

Matt Edmundson:

Right?

Matt Edmundson:

And so, uh, and actually in all your branding is obviously, you know, the

Matt Edmundson:

beard is a, is a big feature norm.

Matt Edmundson:

It's something that you are remembered by.

Matt Edmundson:

So how long have you done the beard thing?

Matt Edmundson:

I'm curious.

Norm Farrar:

Well, uh, I've done it.

Norm Farrar:

About five years.

Norm Farrar:

I've burnt it off right down the middle.

Norm Farrar:

Cooking hamburgers one night, so I look like you down.

Norm Farrar:

And it took about two and a half years to grow back.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

That portion of it.

Norm Farrar:

But, uh, yeah, it's, yeah, it's been growing for a long time.

Matt Edmundson:

Wow.

Matt Edmundson:

Well, it's great, man.

Matt Edmundson:

I, I have beard envy, I'm not gonna lie.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, it's, uh, it's an awesome, it's an awesome piece of, So, whereabouts

Matt Edmundson:

in the world are you, Let's tell the good folks a bit about you.

Matt Edmundson:

Whereabouts are.

Norm Farrar:

I live in a very small town about two hours north of Toronto.

Matt Edmundson:

Okay.

Matt Edmundson:

And so is it colder for you than it is for me?

Matt Edmundson:

You must be quite far north, right?

Norm Farrar:

Ah, don't even bring that up.

Norm Farrar:

I had a foot of snow last

Norm Farrar:

night.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh, it's definitely colder for you than it is for me.

Matt Edmundson:

That's impressive.

Matt Edmundson:

Foot of snow.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Not happy.

Matt Edmundson:

No.

Matt Edmundson:

Well, you know, uh, it's, it's always nice speaking to people that

Matt Edmundson:

maybe have slightly colder weather than what we have here in England.

Matt Edmundson:

I, I feel slightly better about myself.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, it doesn't happen often, . So how did you, how did you get started with,

Matt Edmundson:

um, let's start with the podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

What kick started that?

Matt Edmundson:

The lunch with Norm.

Norm Farrar:

That's a covid

Norm Farrar:

thing.

Norm Farrar:

I had my kids back, so I had to, my three boys were outside, two of us were smoking

Norm Farrar:

cigars and, uh, anyways, uh, we were just talking and phone rang and started helping

Norm Farrar:

out somebody, and then phone rang again.

Norm Farrar:

Somebody had a problem.

Norm Farrar:

Phone rang three times while we were having the cigar.

Norm Farrar:

And my one son.

Norm Farrar:

You know, you should do a podcast or something.

Norm Farrar:

And I, anybody who knows me, especially back then, I'm scared to death talking.

Norm Farrar:

I don't like public speaking.

Norm Farrar:

I don't, Oh really?

Norm Farrar:

I would never, ever have done a podcast.

Norm Farrar:

I don't like it.

Norm Farrar:

Um, now, It's different.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, I've done it enough that, uh, you know, I'm okay.

Norm Farrar:

But back then it was, I, I couldn't even watch, like the first time we

Norm Farrar:

did it, our guest showed up late.

Norm Farrar:

So people position dropped to the floor not knowing what to say, you know, just,

Norm Farrar:

just feeling sick, like, oh, he was like, pure, you know, that you're just kind

Norm Farrar:

of pulling myself back up to the chair.

Norm Farrar:

But, uh, that's how I got started.

Norm Farrar:

It was the guys, my boys, and then we tried to find different angles.

Norm Farrar:

So, uh, we, you know, we wanted it to sound, uh, professional.

Norm Farrar:

So my son is a musician.

Norm Farrar:

He put every, everything together, the graphics Kelsey did.

Norm Farrar:

Then we came up with this thing called Wheel of Kelsey, and.

Norm Farrar:

It's a giveaway that we give out every, every, every episode.

Norm Farrar:

You saw that And, yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

This kind of people know us now for, you know, information and

Norm Farrar:

also this Wheel of Kelsey thing.

Matt Edmundson:

It's brilliant because your podcast is, is live, right?

Matt Edmundson:

It's an interactive live podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

And so people get to comment, they go on this, uh, Wheel of Kelsey

Matt Edmundson:

and you pick out a winner and the winner will usually win something.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, I thought it was all good fun and obviously you, you draw in an

Matt Edmundson:

audience, but you are prolific, right?

Matt Edmundson:

This is not like once a month you are doing this.

Matt Edmundson:

This is, this is quite a regular podcast.

Norm Farrar:

three times a week.

Norm Farrar:

Yep.

Norm Farrar:

Live at noon, Monday, Wednesday, Friday.

Norm Farrar:

It's, it's a bit of work.

Matt Edmundson:

Does it, does it, does it suck the life out of your,

Matt Edmundson:

or do you find an energy in it now?

Norm Farrar:

Oh.

Norm Farrar:

It's like I own a variety of different businesses.

Norm Farrar:

I find good people.

Norm Farrar:

I can, I can oversee the larger picture, but they run the business for me.

Norm Farrar:

And that's the same thing with lunch with Norm.

Norm Farrar:

When I go and sit down with somebody, I get the, the facts or the bio

Norm Farrar:

or the information about who I'm interviewing, about five to 10

Norm Farrar:

minutes before I get in and I, I talk.

Norm Farrar:

So everything is done where we've got.

Norm Farrar:

A VA sending out and looking out, like outreach to try to find people.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, we have back and forth, you saw probably the, uh, emails

Norm Farrar:

that went back and forth mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, uh, to try to get the information.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, and then, uh, Kelsey comes on and he takes care of, you

Norm Farrar:

know, all the back and forth.

Norm Farrar:

So we have a producer, which is him, and then one other

Norm Farrar:

person that does the outreach.

Norm Farrar:

And then we do have, we spend a lot of time and money on, um, social media.

Norm Farrar:

So we have another person doing that as well.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. But, uh, yeah, my, my role in this, I, because I, I can't

Norm Farrar:

spend hours doing it every day.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, mine is sit down Monday, Wednesday, Friday for an hour, and I'm, I get

Norm Farrar:

prepped about 10 minutes beforehand.

Norm Farrar:

That's fantastic.

Norm Farrar:

And, and you do, you just have these conversations with people, don't you?

Norm Farrar:

And it, it's really intriguing where.

Norm Farrar:

It's just what we didn't want it to be is like, uh, we, we just wanted a

Norm Farrar:

casual, um, Very casual interview and, uh, I used to have this other pod, like

Norm Farrar:

I told you before, I hated podcasts.

Norm Farrar:

Well, we didn't launch one, We launched two . That's the sign behind me.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, it's called, I Know This Guy.

Norm Farrar:

And all it was, was talking about the, uh, the, the person's, uh, their backstory,

Norm Farrar:

but I called it failure to Succeed.

Norm Farrar:

What it takes, Like what was your failure that brought you

Norm Farrar:

to where you are right now.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah, and it's kind of interesting that that happened.

Norm Farrar:

It was just so casual.

Norm Farrar:

We were bringing out all this information and.

Norm Farrar:

We just kind of applied it over to lunch with Norm.

Norm Farrar:

It's just sit back, relax, we go down a ton of different rabbit holes.

Norm Farrar:

And at the end of the day, you know, uh, we've got a really great community

Norm Farrar:

that, uh, that is very engaging.

Norm Farrar:

So we know a lot of people by name.

Norm Farrar:

We know where they live.

Norm Farrar:

We, you know, it's, it's a, it's a really engaged community.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah, it is.

Norm Farrar:

It is.

Norm Farrar:

And so, um, who, who's the podcast aimed at or.

Norm Farrar:

Well, we're, we're trying to mix it up.

Norm Farrar:

So originally it was Amazon FBA sellers.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, however, the bigger audience and where people are going.

Norm Farrar:

So it's evolved, especially over covid.

Norm Farrar:

What we're finding is the people who have been on Amazon, uh, they're

Norm Farrar:

tired of being a one-legged stool.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, Amazon can come and they can, you know, close their account down or they can make

Norm Farrar:

it tougher, put inventory restrictions on, so they need it to spread.

Norm Farrar:

Okay.

Norm Farrar:

What's the next step?

Norm Farrar:

Okay.

Norm Farrar:

Walmart, Shopify.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, today we had a really great guest, Steve Wiedman on

Norm Farrar:

about SEO content marketing.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

so.

Norm Farrar:

Anyways, uh, we are, we are still targeting Amazon.

Norm Farrar:

Our audience is made up a third or third or third.

Norm Farrar:

People who know very little are just coming off of a course, the intermediate

Norm Farrar:

and then the advance we've got.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, I know for a fact we've got some sellers that are a million dollars a month.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, I know one person that's there who, um, has had over

Norm Farrar:

a billion dollars in sales.

Norm Farrar:

Actually, there's a couple people.

Norm Farrar:

A billion dollars in sales.

Norm Farrar:

And um, you know, I've sat down, I like, after I heard about them because

Norm Farrar:

we interview some of our brands sometimes that, that are listeners

Norm Farrar:

and to hear their stories and you're sitting there going, Oh my gosh.

Norm Farrar:

First of all, you gotta become on the podcast.

Norm Farrar:

You gotta tell me your story and tell me what I need to know because yeah, I

Norm Farrar:

can learn so much from all these other.

Norm Farrar:

. Matt Edmundson: Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

And in interviewing people that have turned, you know, sold a billion dollars

Norm Farrar:

of products through Amazon, uh, what are some of the lessons that you've learned?

Norm Farrar:

Resilience, number one.

Norm Farrar:

Mm.

Norm Farrar:

So, you know, uh, I always say, uh, when you, and it doesn't have to be Amazon.

Norm Farrar:

It could be with licensing, it could be with any business venture

Norm Farrar:

that you get into that you have to become that authority figure.

Norm Farrar:

Because authority, p figures, uh, builds trust, but the resilience

Norm Farrar:

factor comes in is when you get hit between the legs and you drop to your

Norm Farrar:

knees and you think it's over for me.

Norm Farrar:

And to be able to stand up and do it again.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

And you know, a hundred times over when you say, Please kick me between the

Norm Farrar:

legs, um, you know, . But that's it.

Norm Farrar:

What I found is that first of all, It's being resilient.

Norm Farrar:

Second of all, it's being the authority.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Authority equals trust equals sales and jumping on opportunities.

Norm Farrar:

So don't say no, you don't have to go after every shiny object.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. But you have a system in place, systems standard operating, uh, systems so you

Norm Farrar:

can automate and scale your business.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. And then at the end of the.

Norm Farrar:

You just wanna make sure that you have what we'll be talking about in a bit,

Norm Farrar:

building a brand, building perceived value, that people want to come

Norm Farrar:

back based on a customer experience.

Norm Farrar:

That's, that's everybody I've talked to is basically the same.

Matt Edmundson:

Well,

Matt Edmundson:

that's, It's a mic drop moment, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

I don't have a mic in my hand, but it's that kind of.

Matt Edmundson:

It's, it's funny, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

How, um, when you talk to people who were mega successful, um, and you are

Matt Edmundson:

kind of curious as to how they did it.

Matt Edmundson:

It's, it's not, it's not rocket science.

Matt Edmundson:

There's just consistency.

Matt Edmundson:

Like you say, there's resilience right place, right time.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, there's, there's no real silver bullet.

Matt Edmundson:

Is there, Uh, I dunno if you've, if you've sort of found this, . But there

Matt Edmundson:

is something quite inspiring, usually about the person that you are talking to.

Matt Edmundson:

There's usually some massive obstacle they've had to overcome.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and you, and you think, Wow, okay.

Matt Edmundson:

That's maybe why you are where you are at.

Matt Edmundson:

Right.

Matt Edmundson:

. Norm Farrar: Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, and the other part to this is I think every major seller or

Matt Edmundson:

every major business person I've ever met is in that give to get.

Matt Edmundson:

So they share.

Matt Edmundson:

So they're either mentoring people or they're starting out and they're looking

Matt Edmundson:

for mentor, they're going to campaigns, they're trying to become excellent in

Matt Edmundson:

whatever they're doing, and they're not afraid to share that information.

Matt Edmundson:

Mm.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, that's a very good point actually.

Matt Edmundson:

That is a very good point.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, uh, thank you for bringing that up.

Matt Edmundson:

So let's talk then about, um, perceived value.

Matt Edmundson:

I said to you, I said, Norm, we need to get you on the show.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, we decided to get you to come on the show without any idea

Matt Edmundson:

of what we're gonna talk about.

Matt Edmundson:

I just knew we'd have a great conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and you said, Well, let's talk about perceived value, uh, and how

Matt Edmundson:

to double your profits in a month on Amazon, and is it all American

Matt Edmundson:

height, which I thought was great.

Matt Edmundson:

So hence the reason why I've robbed that at the start.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, so let, What do you mean when you talk about perceived.

Norm Farrar:

I'm talking about the overall customer experience from the

Norm Farrar:

second that they're typing what they're looking for into a search field, seeing

Norm Farrar:

the products, and look, when you're going on to Amazon, I'll just, and I'm gonna

Norm Farrar:

use Amazon, but it could be any platform.

Norm Farrar:

It could be Walmart, it could be on Google, it could be anything.

Norm Farrar:

But when you, when you have the search results, Which one are you gonna click on?

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. It doesn't have to be the reviews.

Norm Farrar:

The very first thing you're gonna be looking at is either there's

Norm Farrar:

something different in that image.

Norm Farrar:

So either it's going left or right, and everybody else is going right to left.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, you know, something that brings out a, could be color, it could be

Norm Farrar:

the quality of the overall, um, image.

Norm Farrar:

It's usually that the one that stands out is the person that split test that image.

Norm Farrar:

Against three or four other images that they may have had in product photos.

Norm Farrar:

Does it have, is it doing, The customer research is going

Norm Farrar:

left to right, Right to left.

Norm Farrar:

Is it filling the frame?

Norm Farrar:

Is it Sometimes every one of the products is filling the frame, so

Norm Farrar:

you make it a little bit smaller.

Norm Farrar:

That's really bizarre cuz everybody says, Oh, you gotta fill the frame.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. Try making a bit smaller to draw your attention.

Norm Farrar:

It might be all, all the boxes are black.

Norm Farrar:

Well make it with a one with a yellow stripe.

Norm Farrar:

Something to grab the eye.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

The other thing is some are just great with just having the product,

Norm Farrar:

others with the packaging, some with having the cap off or cap on.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, it's, it's, it's just the perfect, uh, product photo.

Norm Farrar:

That's where I start.

Norm Farrar:

And within the product photo.

Norm Farrar:

There's other things.

Norm Farrar:

So on Amazon, if you think about it, or Shopify, you have a storyboard.

Norm Farrar:

So it's a slide deck and a lot of people just throw it up there.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, a lot of people will put a book up there, like you're reading

Norm Farrar:

a book and you've seen it.

Norm Farrar:

It's a book.

Norm Farrar:

Nobody's gonna read your book.

Norm Farrar:

That's over for like, that's.

Norm Farrar:

on the bullet points, what you do is you highlight information, but

Norm Farrar:

like Bert's Bees does this real uh, uh, uh, really does this well.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Where they have a chocolate or a honey, uh, Bert's bees wax, right.

Norm Farrar:

Or uh, you know the lip bum.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

They don't anything.

Norm Farrar:

Except high, high, high quality graphics that bring out, like you want to eat

Norm Farrar:

the picture, you know, the chocolate or whatever illustration that they have.

Norm Farrar:

Well, it's the same thing here.

Norm Farrar:

It's being able to bring across that storyboard where,

Norm Farrar:

okay, what is the benefit?

Norm Farrar:

Why am I buying, What pain point am I solving that a lot

Norm Farrar:

of people put out the features?

Norm Farrar:

Well, okay, that's nice, but make that a second or third, or third or fourth pitch.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Lifestyle pictures.

Norm Farrar:

Showing somebody that you've solved their problem, that they're happy.

Norm Farrar:

A lot of the times I see the people that have used user-generated content,

Norm Farrar:

and its like grumpy old men like , Why?

Norm Farrar:

Why did you put that picture up there?

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

That make sense?

Norm Farrar:

And then a video.

Norm Farrar:

Everything is video nowadays, so you wanna make sure that you have, It doesn't

Norm Farrar:

have to be a Hollywood production.

Norm Farrar:

There's tons and tons of really good video content out there that you, or video

Norm Farrar:

apps that you can get very inexpensive.

Norm Farrar:

And Amazon has their own video creator right now, which is new, that you can

Norm Farrar:

go in there, put in some slides, make it into a gif or gif, whatever you wanna call

Norm Farrar:

it, and put, you know, The bullet points there, so everything's pointing that way.

Norm Farrar:

But the next step with this, and you don't have to do it right off the bat,

Norm Farrar:

I do, when I do my product research, I know that if I'm gonna buy a thousand or

Norm Farrar:

something, I wanna be the best out there.

Norm Farrar:

I know I can get sales right off the bat because I'm gonna do that

Norm Farrar:

research, I'm gonna do the slides, the slide deck properly, and

Norm Farrar:

I'm gonna spend the time to be.

Norm Farrar:

And let me, let me use a case study.

Norm Farrar:

I just, That'd be amazing.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Beforehand, but there's, there's actually two that are really crazy, but

Norm Farrar:

the first one is every single search, every single search that you look at

Norm Farrar:

on Amazon, you'll see that people enter into three different price points.

Norm Farrar:

You've got.

Norm Farrar:

Usually the Chinese manufacturers who just are remming it through at the

Norm Farrar:

lowest price, they don't care about images, They, everything is the lowest.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

And sometimes you'll see that people are using the same manufacturer's

Norm Farrar:

pictures, which is kind of funny.

Norm Farrar:

But, um, Dead Sea Mud is one that I took a look at just recently.

Norm Farrar:

Betsy Mud.

Norm Farrar:

The entry point is $6 and 78 cents around a $14 range.

Norm Farrar:

That's your first price tier, eight ounce to 16 ounce.

Norm Farrar:

The next tier up is 24 to 44.

Norm Farrar:

And the same thing, 16 ounce.

Norm Farrar:

But what you'll notice is those pictures, and if you click into those

Norm Farrar:

listings, they're much better research.

Norm Farrar:

They've got better quality design, and the packaging is starting

Norm Farrar:

to take, uh, it's not just in a, uh, an ugly white plastic jar.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Then the highest one, and this was unbelievable, $78.

Norm Farrar:

To $95.

Norm Farrar:

And the $95 brand was 3.5 ounces.

Norm Farrar:

Wow.

Norm Farrar:

But it was really, it looked great.

Norm Farrar:

It was just in, in a frosted glass, um, container.

Norm Farrar:

It looked really high end.

Norm Farrar:

It was everything about the listing and everything about the

Norm Farrar:

images were high perceived value.

Norm Farrar:

Now, there's a trick here if your images are.

Norm Farrar:

And you have great perception, then that's great.

Norm Farrar:

You'll end up with a very high, um, user or uh, uh, customer experience.

Norm Farrar:

If you have really great pictures and your product is terrible,

Norm Farrar:

expect one star reviews all the way, people are gonna be very upset.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

And then at the end, you're doing yourself a disservice if you're coming in at price

Norm Farrar:

level two or one with really crappy images and you've got a really great product.

Norm Farrar:

If you're going in, That's why I say you have to go in at the tier

Norm Farrar:

level that you wanna achieve.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Now perceive value.

Norm Farrar:

Everything.

Norm Farrar:

Every time I look at it comes down to the brand.

Norm Farrar:

Is the brand consistent?

Norm Farrar:

If I go in and coffee mug rise of the micro brands,

Norm Farrar:

that's what we are on Amazon.

Norm Farrar:

Everybody is a micro brand.

Norm Farrar:

They're not a huge brand.

Norm Farrar:

Nobody knows you.

Norm Farrar:

What are they gonna do?

Norm Farrar:

They're gonna search you on Google.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. Okay.

Norm Farrar:

If you come up and you're not consistent, if, if you've got certain colors and now.

Norm Farrar:

If they're completely different or you're using 10 different fonts or you

Norm Farrar:

don't have a great message out there, people are looking for red flags.

Norm Farrar:

And if you don't become the authority or if you don't become trustworthy.

Norm Farrar:

So authority equals trust equals sales people will click off very

Norm Farrar:

quickly, so you don't have to have an expensive website, one pager.

Norm Farrar:

Just make it look nice.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah, you don't have to have a ton of social media.

Norm Farrar:

Pick one.

Norm Farrar:

Make it look nice, Do a press release, write a bit of

Norm Farrar:

content, become the authority.

Norm Farrar:

So once people see that and they go back, now they wanna

Norm Farrar:

make sure, okay, it looks great.

Norm Farrar:

The packaging, the overall like, Like let's say there's an outside package and

Norm Farrar:

an outer package, that's gonna be a lot.

Norm Farrar:

Most people don't, especially in the beauty category, don't even put package.

Norm Farrar:

It costs pennies to create a really beautiful package.

Norm Farrar:

And I'll give you an example about that one.

Norm Farrar:

So, uh, I was working with a knife company and they came in

Norm Farrar:

a, just a plastic clam shell.

Norm Farrar:

Cost of the knife was 16 bucks.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, he was selling it at $49.

Norm Farrar:

He was making money.

Norm Farrar:

However, I looked at it and I said, Why don't we put it in a different package?

Norm Farrar:

Let's make it a rigid box.

Norm Farrar:

People, when they open it up, it kind of unveils the, the product.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, and then there's a nice message there.

Norm Farrar:

You have a sheath.

Norm Farrar:

Um, but it's just everything is, is a nicer look.

Norm Farrar:

And we improved the images.

Norm Farrar:

Well, we, we were able to take that from $49 up to $124.

Norm Farrar:

Wow.

Norm Farrar:

And the traffic didn't.

Norm Farrar:

It was, it was very low decrease.

Norm Farrar:

So this guy went from 49 to 124, and then I said, like, I, I knew the manufacturer.

Norm Farrar:

I said, This is the same knife at $16.

Norm Farrar:

Why don't we hammer it instead of have these 67 layers of steel, why don't

Norm Farrar:

we hammer it and put it into a wood container and see what we can do with it?

Norm Farrar:

So, Hammered the steel and it looked like it was completely different.

Norm Farrar:

It was still $16 and we, we brought it out at $224.

Norm Farrar:

Wow.

Norm Farrar:

That's perceived value.

Norm Farrar:

The wood case cost us a couple of bucks.

Norm Farrar:

It was like, I think it was $3 with all the packaging included for an extra

Norm Farrar:

a hundred on top of the a hundred.

Norm Farrar:

That's incredible.

Norm Farrar:

. Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

And those are the things that you're, you're looking at.

Norm Farrar:

So if you took a look at this, what did the what?

Norm Farrar:

What did the mess when?

Norm Farrar:

Like when the customer received it, it comes down now to building the

Norm Farrar:

brand to do it for every product that you have with that brand.

Norm Farrar:

So, The person received this outer box, which looked like an iPhone box.

Norm Farrar:

It had a silhouette of, uh, the knife on the one side,

Norm Farrar:

and then it had a full color.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, it, it looked like a full color knife on the other side.

Norm Farrar:

When they opened it up, there was a, it was a black package

Norm Farrar:

with yellow, so it stood out.

Norm Farrar:

Every other knife was in a black package.

Norm Farrar:

We just put a yellow strip on it, so, Oh, yep.

Norm Farrar:

There's a, your IU is drawn to it and it's magnetic class.

Norm Farrar:

You open it up.

Norm Farrar:

People love the customer experience.

Norm Farrar:

And then we had an insert in there that drove them over to a 52, uh,

Norm Farrar:

week meal plan, and we took, we went to culinary schools with it, and

Norm Farrar:

we gave them all these students.

Norm Farrar:

One condition that they give us recipes and they hold up the knife.

Norm Farrar:

And so now we started to get, and all these young guy, I'm an old guy,

Norm Farrar:

everybody's on social media tagging each other with these knives, sharing

Norm Farrar:

these recipes, and he was able to take those recipes with permission.

Norm Farrar:

Put them on Amazon for his user generated content and in Amazon

Norm Farrar:

Post, which is Amazon Social Media.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, which he had one image that had 200,000 impressions.

Norm Farrar:

Wow.

Norm Farrar:

What did that do for his sales?

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. So I'm not gonna go down the, like, that's something else that is really

Norm Farrar:

cool, but you get lots of, um, you can convert very easily using these Amazon

Norm Farrar:

sales, uh, the way that Amazon set it up.

Norm Farrar:

But because he built in this customer experience because, Instead of the

Norm Farrar:

knife, just in a plastic container, you put E Eva foam around it.

Norm Farrar:

So it's a dye cut with an area for your finger to go in to pop

Norm Farrar:

up the knife to make sure that it had this really beautiful sheath.

Norm Farrar:

Now what did he do?

Norm Farrar:

He came out with a multipurpose knife, a pairing knife, a bread knife.

Norm Farrar:

Now the whole, every single one is consistent with the brand.

Norm Farrar:

He's got thousands and thousands and thousands of emails every time

Norm Farrar:

he wants to, uh, sell another.

Norm Farrar:

It's a no brainer.

Norm Farrar:

He can sell it for 10%, send it out there, 10% off, and he's got a ton of people with

Norm Farrar:

his launch because people know the brand.

Norm Farrar:

It's consistent.

Norm Farrar:

So that's a few things.

Norm Farrar:

Now the other thing is safety, so, or the little things I call it.

Norm Farrar:

So I own a soap company.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. And one of the little things that we do is we write an individual note

Norm Farrar:

to every person that buys the soap.

Norm Farrar:

There's lots of soap.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, there's thousands and thousands of orders coming in.

Norm Farrar:

How do you do it?

Norm Farrar:

We don't, We order them from China.

Norm Farrar:

We order our notes and there's, we, they're all generic notes.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. Oh, thanks so much for your soap.

Norm Farrar:

Enjoy your day.

Norm Farrar:

Okay.

Norm Farrar:

20,000 of those come in at a time and you know, it costs us pennies.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, we put them in each order and guess what?

Norm Farrar:

On our reviews.

Norm Farrar:

Oh.

Norm Farrar:

It's such, such a nice personal touch that this company gave us a personalized note.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

You know, making sure, And this is psychological shampoo.

Norm Farrar:

You wanna talk about perceived value again, somebody goes and

Norm Farrar:

they, I don't know about you, but you're reaching for shampoo.

Norm Farrar:

Now, don't make any jokes about hair

Norm Farrar:

I have to wash my beard.

Norm Farrar:

So you're, you got your shampoo and it's got the same cap as your conditioner,

Norm Farrar:

or they're in the same bottle.

Norm Farrar:

Well make one cap different or make the color of the

Norm Farrar:

bottle a little bit different.

Norm Farrar:

So, you know.

Norm Farrar:

Oh, that's the conditioner.

Norm Farrar:

That's the shampoo.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Psychological thing.

Norm Farrar:

Shrink wrap.

Norm Farrar:

You know, just, uh, especially like supplements.

Norm Farrar:

I don't know about you, but nowadays if you don't see that seal or if you don't

Norm Farrar:

see the shrink wrap, you get nervous.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

You get nervous.

Norm Farrar:

So all these little things add up and then, Pricing optimization.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, you, you have to play with that at launch.

Norm Farrar:

I have a trick.

Norm Farrar:

I take a look at that second tier level, and there's lots in between.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, the first and the second, and the second and the third.

Norm Farrar:

But let's say it's that 24 to $44 level.

Norm Farrar:

Is it The second is the second row.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. I give a coupon that shows my, my mine is in the upper side, so let's say it's

Norm Farrar:

$124 that I'm selling it for, and it has dropped a 99, so it's 99 to 1 24.

Norm Farrar:

I'll give a 20 or $30 coupon that could drop it down to the second.

Norm Farrar:

So people look at it and they go, Wow, I can get this high perceived.

Norm Farrar:

So this first tier product, And it's only gonna cost me in that second tier.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, it's, it's a psychological thing, but if you go back to the Dead Sea,

Norm Farrar:

let's say I can get that $95, uh, Dead Sea Mud for $48, I would do it.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

You know, you see the big slash it's 50% off now with the knives, it's

Norm Farrar:

not that much, it's not that big.

Norm Farrar:

A dramatic difference with Thaty mother is.

Matt Edmundson:

That's really

Matt Edmundson:

interesting, Norm.

Matt Edmundson:

So I I, I, I feel like I could listen to your stories all day long.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, you're in essence taking products, which people are selling on Amazon and

Matt Edmundson:

going, How can I add value to this?

Matt Edmundson:

The, the knife was in effect, the same, The, the Dead Sea Mud is in fact the same

Matt Edmundson:

mud in all of the, the, the products.

Matt Edmundson:

But the way you've, the way you've charged it, the way you do it is you're asking

Matt Edmundson:

yourself, Well, how can I improve it?

Matt Edmundson:

How can I modify it?

Matt Edmundson:

How can I increase the perceived value of this?

Matt Edmundson:

And there's a lot of lessons I think to learn here, uh, on that, whether it's

Matt Edmundson:

Amazon or whether it's across eCommerce.

Matt Edmundson:

It's like, um, how can I reinvent this product or what can I add to it?

Matt Edmundson:

And I love that example that you talked about with a knife.

Matt Edmundson:

You know, this one's got a sheath and a nicer box.

Matt Edmundson:

This one's got a wooden box and we've smacked it a little bit with a hammer.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, it's just, it's.

Matt Edmundson:

It's really fa So is, is it the way your brain works?

Matt Edmundson:

Do you just see something on Amazon and instantly know I can increase

Matt Edmundson:

value here by dot, dot, dot.

Norm Farrar:

I think it's the time we take on doing competitive analysis and asking

Norm Farrar:

our manufacturer, we, we had no idea.

Norm Farrar:

That, What the heck is a hammered Damascus knife?

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

I, I've never, you know, heard of it.

Norm Farrar:

We asked them, what can we do different?

Norm Farrar:

And they just happened to have this, Oh, well we have this

Norm Farrar:

knife and we have this knife.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Other same price.

Norm Farrar:

Um, I, this is, um, this is another quick one that I absolutely love.

Norm Farrar:

We had a person approach and say that they, over 18

Norm Farrar:

months, they sold 1000 bucks.

Norm Farrar:

This was to fungus remover.

Norm Farrar:

That's sexy.

Norm Farrar:

to fungus.

Norm Farrar:

Wow.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Okay.

Norm Farrar:

So yeah, I got excited, uh, . So why wasn't it moving anyways?

Norm Farrar:

Well, I knew why it wasn't moving because the box.

Norm Farrar:

Was powder blue.

Norm Farrar:

Imagine this a powder blue box with a yellow.

Norm Farrar:

It was a yellow circle with a foot with toe fungus.

Norm Farrar:

Okay?

Norm Farrar:

Yellow and underneath it were two yellow drops that looked like it

Norm Farrar:

was oozing out of the toe fungus.

Norm Farrar:

And the logo, you could not read, you couldn't read it if you wanted to,

Norm Farrar:

you could even read what this was for.

Norm Farrar:

So, Then when you opened it up in a cheap tuck box, like a cart stock,

Norm Farrar:

tuck box, these two bottles popped out.

Norm Farrar:

They were brown and they had sort of the same look on these bottles.

Norm Farrar:

They were ugly.

Norm Farrar:

They were absolutely nobody would buy them.

Norm Farrar:

So we said, Okay, this really looks like it's medicinal.

Norm Farrar:

You know, it looks ugly.

Norm Farrar:

It looks like you gotta put your head between your knees and kinda

Norm Farrar:

walk in or head down into a pharmacy.

Norm Farrar:

No, let's turn.

Norm Farrar:

When we did the product research, we found out that the same solution helps

Norm Farrar:

strengthen and beautify your nail.

Norm Farrar:

So now we said, Well, let's make this a wellness and health product.

Norm Farrar:

So we did it, we turned it around and we put it in a white box.

Norm Farrar:

Greens, blues, no feed on it.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. We put the logo on it and we, you know, and loud and proud.

Norm Farrar:

It was a tofus remover, but, uh, everything was about beauty.

Norm Farrar:

Everything was about be beautiful nails, and it was a sideline

Norm Farrar:

being this tofus remover.

Norm Farrar:

The first month we brought it out and they were in green bottles.

Norm Farrar:

By the way, this time, like really, it was, it looked really beautiful and when

Norm Farrar:

you opened it up, the, the bottle, the, the, We went from top opening up and

Norm Farrar:

kind of shaking it out to opening it up from the side and unveiling the product.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

So there was a message there from the manufacturer, you know, talking

Norm Farrar:

about beautiful nails and how you.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, you know, strengthen these nails on day to day usage.

Norm Farrar:

So that just increased cuz day to day usage is not just when

Norm Farrar:

you have to toenail fungus.

Norm Farrar:

We went the very first month we launched it, it went, uh, to $6,800.

Norm Farrar:

The second month went to 28, the third month went to 68.

Norm Farrar:

67 68, we topped off at $124,000 a month.

Norm Farrar:

Wow.

Norm Farrar:

And then it ran out of inventory.

Norm Farrar:

And this is all 100% because we just changed the perception of the product.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

And.

Norm Farrar:

And it went from the, the, the guy, uh, the manufacturer or the brand owner

Norm Farrar:

refused to allow me to put the price up.

Norm Farrar:

He said, Nobody's going to get over 9 99.

Norm Farrar:

Well, yeah, the product looked great.

Norm Farrar:

If you wanna swim with this horrible looking competitors, go for it.

Norm Farrar:

We went from like, the average price was 9 99.

Norm Farrar:

We took it 24 99.

Norm Farrar:

Oh wow.

Norm Farrar:

And.

Norm Farrar:

The guy made a, a ton of money.

Matt Edmundson:

That's really, yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

And yet another story.

Matt Edmundson:

No.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, of this whole idea of perceived value.

Matt Edmundson:

And I can, I, I can, I know what people are thinking cuz

Matt Edmundson:

I'm thinking the same thing.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm thinking, Oh, I've got some products.

Matt Edmundson:

How do I, how do I increase the value of this?

Matt Edmundson:

Now you talked about doing competitor research.

Matt Edmundson:

Is that where you start?

Matt Edmundson:

Do you start looking around and go, Right, well I've got this product here,

Matt Edmundson:

let me see what everybody else is doing and figure out how I can make this

Matt Edmundson:

better.

Norm Farrar:

Yes, absolutely.

Norm Farrar:

So it's not just on Amazon.

Norm Farrar:

Amazon's a good place to take a look, but, and to make, to

Norm Farrar:

look for different products too.

Norm Farrar:

Don't forget, you've got all these crowdfunding sites.

Norm Farrar:

You've got Sharks Tank, you've got Dragons.

Norm Farrar:

Then you've got, uh, Kickstarter, you've got Indigogo.

Norm Farrar:

You can check those out for really cool products and then improve.

Norm Farrar:

And again, go back and ask the manufacturer or if you've got a

Norm Farrar:

plastic shoe stretcher that everybody else has, figure out how you can

Norm Farrar:

first, if is it a good product?

Norm Farrar:

So if not competitors, see what, what their images are.

Norm Farrar:

See what the competitors are saying.

Norm Farrar:

What are the good things?

Norm Farrar:

What are the bad things?

Norm Farrar:

What are the good things and bad things are they saying about your product?

Norm Farrar:

And try to improve on them.

Norm Farrar:

And that's one thing a lot of people forget every time you put in an.

Norm Farrar:

You should be improving.

Norm Farrar:

You should be evolving the product to be a little bit better each time.

Norm Farrar:

Is it on the packaging?

Norm Farrar:

Oh, the QR code.

Norm Farrar:

Can I do something to grab an email address somehow?

Norm Farrar:

Uh, you know, and that's a, that's such an easy way to grab and maintain a customer.

Norm Farrar:

Getting a new customer is really tough.

Norm Farrar:

Repeat customers are uber easy.

Norm Farrar:

When you say, when you have a, when you drive them over to your website and it's

Norm Farrar:

a, a PDF on something stupid, um, are you gonna, will people nowadays give

Norm Farrar:

up their email or their phone number?

Norm Farrar:

You have to make it something of either an added value, something

Norm Farrar:

that's gonna solve a problem, uh, like.

Norm Farrar:

The knife guy.

Norm Farrar:

Two recipe books that were rock solid.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, um, a weekly meal plan that gets sent to the person every week.

Norm Farrar:

And oh, by the way, this is what's happening.

Norm Farrar:

Oh, here's a recipe.

Norm Farrar:

It's just p Now if we would've just with this, we could have

Norm Farrar:

done, uh, an extended warranty.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, that's okay.

Norm Farrar:

But if you can find something that people want, In exchange for their email address.

Norm Farrar:

Man, that's where I think the stats are.

Norm Farrar:

40, 44% of your sales can come from repeat customers, just on email candidates.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah,

Matt Edmundson:

that would be, I think it would depend on the industry, but

Matt Edmundson:

yeah, I totally agree with you.

Matt Edmundson:

That would be my experience.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

And you can grow more if you look after that customer.

Matt Edmundson:

Well, yeah, definitely.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, totally.

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, we saw our repeat customer rates go through the roof with one of the, with

Matt Edmundson:

my beauty company that we sold last year.

Matt Edmundson:

We saw the repeat order rates go go significantly higher.

Matt Edmundson:

When we took out of the boxes, you know, the big plastic bubbles and like

Matt Edmundson:

the plastic pillows, we took those out because we realized people were a

Matt Edmundson:

bit more sustainably minded and they were buying a gift for themselves.

Matt Edmundson:

So we, we wrapped the whole, the whole order in tissue paper, but the

Matt Edmundson:

packaging material, we took out the plastic bubbles and we put in popcorn.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and it was phenomenal.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and the repeat rates went through, The people were posting pictures

Matt Edmundson:

all on social media just because it had a much more interesting story.

Matt Edmundson:

And so, um, I, I get the, the value of this perceived value norm, you've, you've

Matt Edmundson:

got my, um, you've got my gray matter.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, whatever the official term is now norm, listen, uh, one of the things that

Matt Edmundson:

we touched on before the podcast that I really, I wanted to dig into for at

Matt Edmundson:

least a couple of minutes, cause I'm aware of time here, but, um, you've got

Matt Edmundson:

this mad influencer challenge, uh, going on and, um, just tell the good folks

Matt Edmundson:

what, what this is, what your, what your, what your son's challenged you to.

Matt Edmundson:

All right.

Matt Edmundson:

So there seems to be a lot of stories norm in your life where

Matt Edmundson:

your son said you should do this, and you, you kind of go and do it.

Matt Edmundson:

, Norm Farrar: I, I know, I, I gotta

Matt Edmundson:

the Amazon side, I would consider myself somewhat of an influencer.

Matt Edmundson:

Not the biggest, not the small kind of, you know, Goldilocks right in between.

Matt Edmundson:

Mm-hmm.

Matt Edmundson:

. So I've got a really great following over there, but as a

Matt Edmundson:

buyer, I don't have a single, not a single one follower, not one.

Matt Edmundson:

So that's a problem.

Matt Edmundson:

They told me about becoming an influencer and I said, There's no way

Matt Edmundson:

that I can do just like the podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

It was like, I'm not gonna do a podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

And then I ended up, I ended up liking it.

Matt Edmundson:

One of the things we were talking about is how.

Matt Edmundson:

Influencers or this whole influencer side of things using influencers.

Matt Edmundson:

How do you find them?

Matt Edmundson:

Where do you find them?

Matt Edmundson:

How do you communicate with them is very difficult or it

Matt Edmundson:

looks like it's very difficult.

Matt Edmundson:

I wanna end that.

Matt Edmundson:

I want to go on TikTok.

Matt Edmundson:

It hasn't even started yet, by the way.

Matt Edmundson:

Mm-hmm.

Matt Edmundson:

. But I want go on TikTok.

Matt Edmundson:

I wanna do a video diary just telling people this is what I did today,

Matt Edmundson:

this is what I'm doing the next day.

Matt Edmundson:

This is, and just keep going.

Matt Edmundson:

365 days showing people exactly.

Matt Edmundson:

What I did, how I did it, and to grow the base.

Matt Edmundson:

But while I'm doing that, this is the stupid part.

Matt Edmundson:

I am becoming an influencer with no following.

Matt Edmundson:

I am going out there doing the video diary and saying, Hey, if

Matt Edmundson:

you wanna become an influencer, everybody's becoming an influencer.

Matt Edmundson:

Everybody's got a podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

All right, so now on the influencer.

Matt Edmundson:

It was tough to get an Amazon or affiliate account.

Matt Edmundson:

It was confusing.

Matt Edmundson:

Maybe it's just cuz I'm old, but then the influencer side and you know,

Matt Edmundson:

getting, getting to be approved.

Matt Edmundson:

What did I need?

Matt Edmundson:

What did I not need?

Matt Edmundson:

What was the equipment that I needed?

Matt Edmundson:

I had to build a studio just right over there.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, that's different than the broadcast studio.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, what do we need for.

Matt Edmundson:

All the problems, all the hurdles that are happening and, alright, so

Matt Edmundson:

they challenged me to go from zero to a hundred thousand followers.

Matt Edmundson:

So what I need to do is I need, I took the challenge up and I said

Matt Edmundson:

like, I got nothing else to do.

Matt Edmundson:

. Yeah, I'm going to become an Amazon influencer.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm gonna go on TikTok, I'm gonna do Facebook, I'm gonna

Matt Edmundson:

do YouTube, and I need product.

Matt Edmundson:

Anybody, include anybody who's listening if you want free of charge.

Matt Edmundson:

So I'm waiving set of fees.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm not doing this.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm doing it more of a challenge.

Matt Edmundson:

Set up fees, video production fees, uh, photo fees.

Matt Edmundson:

If I write content, it's all waived.

Matt Edmundson:

It's free.

Matt Edmundson:

We're just doing it, and I'm just doing it all like every, every night or on

Matt Edmundson:

the weekend, I'm just doing videos and videos and videos and hopeful.

Matt Edmundson:

People like what I'm doing and they see the products and they give me a

Matt Edmundson:

follow, or they put me into a group that want to get deals and I, you

Matt Edmundson:

know, pick up some followers that way.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, that's my challenge.

Matt Edmundson:

So it's called Lunch with Norm deals, uh, you'll be seeing it

Matt Edmundson:

more the, the web, the actual.

Matt Edmundson:

Is gonna be launching probably next week.

Matt Edmundson:

Okay.

Matt Edmundson:

I just started going on to Amazon Live and we're planning the TikTok video

Matt Edmundson:

journal, uh, probably starting next week.

Matt Edmundson:

Wow.

Matt Edmundson:

So by the time this podcast comes out, that will in theory be all

Matt Edmundson:

live and so people can go and follow you and connect with you and,

Matt Edmundson:

and see what the hell's going on.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

And oh, I should mention the only thing.

Norm Farrar:

So it is not like there's a, a string attached, but we are charging if

Norm Farrar:

there, it's all performance based.

Norm Farrar:

So if you get no sales and you just get, you know, a video out of it, that's fine.

Norm Farrar:

But if you do get sales, we charge 10%.

Norm Farrar:

And the reason we're absorbing all the charges for any paid

Norm Farrar:

advertising, any, anything.

Norm Farrar:

So my focus is building up this challenge.

Norm Farrar:

We're not, and this isn't a course.

Norm Farrar:

It's, This is strictly a challenge that I'm trying to do

Norm Farrar:

to see if I can, I can do it.

Norm Farrar:

That's, it.

Matt Edmundson:

Sounds fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm, I'm gonna be following along.

Matt Edmundson:

Norm, I'll be one of your followers.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, I'll be, I'll be commenting in there.

Matt Edmundson:

No problem.

Matt Edmundson:

All right, great.

Matt Edmundson:

That sounds great.

Matt Edmundson:

So, Norm, listen, you know, uh, this show is sponsored by

Matt Edmundson:

the eCommerce cohort, right?

Matt Edmundson:

Which is all about using coaching and peer mentoring to deliver eCommerce well.

Matt Edmundson:

So I want you to imagine you are stood in a room full of cohorts.

Matt Edmundson:

You've just delivered your.

Matt Edmundson:

Beach.

Matt Edmundson:

You've show, you've told your stories, you've shown photographs

Matt Edmundson:

of the Dead Sea mud and the lives and all that sort of stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

The Crowd is giving you a stand innovation.

Matt Edmundson:

It's going wild.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Going on.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and you're, you're up there and you go, Well actually, uh, I'm here

Matt Edmundson:

thankfully because of dot, dot, dot.

Matt Edmundson:

And so you get a chance to thank, uh, those folks who have

Matt Edmundson:

had a big impact on your life.

Matt Edmundson:

You know, family, mentors, authors, software, podcasters, et cetera.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm curious to know who is on the list of people you are thanking and.

Norm Farrar:

Prob outside of family out, probably the number

Norm Farrar:

one, and I highly recommend this.

Norm Farrar:

Always trying to improve.

Norm Farrar:

So the biggest improvement, the biggest group of people that I

Norm Farrar:

can thank is something called eo.

Norm Farrar:

It's an association that I, I, 27 years ago I got involved with.

Norm Farrar:

They're still around.

Norm Farrar:

They're a big organization where you have a monthly meeting,

Norm Farrar:

but then you have a forum.

Norm Farrar:

, our farm group still meets 27 years later.

Norm Farrar:

Wow.

Norm Farrar:

And it's like your board of advisors.

Norm Farrar:

So if something comes up, if you have a problem, they will help you out.

Norm Farrar:

Um, and also just the absolute knowledge and meeting people.

Norm Farrar:

They have universities, they call universities that you go to

Norm Farrar:

different cities and you learn, uh, from other business people.

Norm Farrar:

Um, just how to operate your business and run your business properly.

Norm Farrar:

So that's, that's.

Norm Farrar:

That's one.

Norm Farrar:

But within the group, I mean, just there's so many people, so many

Norm Farrar:

individuals that I've been able to, to meet and talk to and expand.

Norm Farrar:

You are who you hang around with, you know?

Norm Farrar:

Absolutely.

Norm Farrar:

People talk together and I got to meet so many people.

Norm Farrar:

So the, that's probably my number one.

Norm Farrar:

If I was gonna thank anybody, it's, uh, entrepreneurial organization.

Norm Farrar:

It's called e.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, I love those sort of coaching mentoring groups that have been around

Matt Edmundson:

for a while and you know each other well.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and you know, each other's got your back.

Matt Edmundson:

That's just brilliant.

Matt Edmundson:

That's fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Listen, Norm, it's been an absolute pleasure.

Matt Edmundson:

Honestly, I've loved hearing your stories.

Matt Edmundson:

I feel like I've got, you know, a thousand more questions.

Matt Edmundson:

I'd love to pick your brains on it some more, some time.

Matt Edmundson:

But for now, uh, because of time, how do people reach you?

Matt Edmundson:

How do people connect with you if they want to do so?

Norm Farrar:

Well, uh, I'll make it really easy.

Norm Farrar:

Norm at amz, like amazon amz.club, not.com or that would be going to Amazon.

Norm Farrar:

So Norm@AMZ.Club.

Norm Farrar:

amz.club.

Norm Farrar:

And of course if you are from the UK that's amz.club true

Norm Farrar:

uh, which is how the Queen would say it.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, well, had, sorry.

Norm Farrar:

That's how she would've said.

Norm Farrar:

That's probably slightly disrespectful now, uh, being the Queen's English.

Norm Farrar:

So Norm, thank you so much for joining us.

Norm Farrar:

We will of course, uh, put Norm's email in the show notes along with a

Norm Farrar:

link to his podcast, uh, which you.

Norm Farrar:

For free, along with a transcript, e-commerce podcast.net, or if

Norm Farrar:

you'll subscribe to the email, it will come direct to your inbox,

Norm Farrar:

uh, at some point this week.

Norm Farrar:

Yes, it will.

Norm Farrar:

So, uh, Norm, listen seriously, man, really appreciate it.

Norm Farrar:

It's been great getting to know you, uh, to connect both on

Norm Farrar:

your podcast and on this one.

Norm Farrar:

It's been an absolute treat and an absolute pleasure.

Norm Farrar:

Thank you so, so much for coming onto.

Norm Farrar:

Oh, you're very welcome.

Norm Farrar:

And we gotta get you back on lunch with Norm.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, well, we'll be doing this again.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm sure we'll be going back and forth.

Matt Edmundson:

It won't be the first time or the last time rather.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, so there you have it.

Matt Edmundson:

What a phenomenal conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Again, huge thanks to Norm for joining me today, and also a

Matt Edmundson:

big shout out to today's show.

Matt Edmundson:

Sponsor the e-commerce cohort.

Matt Edmundson:

Do head over to ecommercecohort.com for more information about this new

Matt Edmundson:

type of e-commerce community you.

Matt Edmundson:

Join, Be sure to follow the e-commerce podcast wherever you get your podcast

Matt Edmundson:

from because we've got yet more great shows, more great conversations

Matt Edmundson:

lined up, and I definitely don't want you to miss any of them.

Matt Edmundson:

And in case, dear listener, no one has told you yet today, you are awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

Yes you are.

Matt Edmundson:

It's just a burden.

Matt Edmundson:

You have to bear it.

Matt Edmundson:

Norm has to bear it.

Matt Edmundson:

I have to bear.

Matt Edmundson:

You've gotta bear it.

Matt Edmundson:

We may as well just suck it up and get on with it.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, the eCommerce podcast is produced by Orion Media.

Matt Edmundson:

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

Matt Edmundson:

The team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon, Josh Catchpole,

Matt Edmundson:

Estella Robin and Tim Johnson.

Matt Edmundson:

Our theme song is written by Josh Edmundson and My Good Self.

Matt Edmundson:

And as I mentioned, if you would like to read the transcript or show

Matt Edmundson:

notes, head over to the website eCommercepodcast.net where you can also.

Matt Edmundson:

For the weekly newsletter and get all of this good stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

Direct your inbox totally for free.

Matt Edmundson:

That is it from me and that is it from Norm for this week.

Matt Edmundson:

Thank you so much for joining us.

Matt Edmundson:

Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world, I'll see you next time.