I joined a like a closed group of sellers and I started learning about it and I
Speaker:dedicated every day, 12 hours of work, how it works, how to find products
Speaker:and this is how everything started.
Speaker:It was not a side hustle, it was like, I needed to do something, I had nothing to
Speaker:do, it was like my only opportunity, and this is also what made me very committed
Speaker:to it, and this is also one of the lessons that I'm trying to bring to people
Speaker:today, is that when you're going to start with something, take the time to do the
Speaker:research and to think about it, but once you decided to get started, you have to go
Speaker:all in, you have to decide, even if it's a side hustle, you need to count how many
Speaker:hours you can put in, and then just, you know, be fully committed to this project.
Speaker:Welcome to the e commerce podcast with me, your host, Matt Edmundson.
Speaker:The e commerce podcast is a show that is all about helping
Speaker:you to deliver e commerce wow.
Speaker:And to help us do just that today, I'm chatting.
Speaker:with Nahar Geva from Zik Analytics about the road to e commerce
Speaker:independence mindset and strategies.
Speaker:Oh yes, but before we dive into our conversation, let me share a
Speaker:previous podcast pick, a previous episode that I think you will enjoy.
Speaker:Well, maybe two actually.
Speaker:Check out how long does it take to make money with your e commerce
Speaker:Startup, uh, from Darwin Liu.
Speaker:That was a great episode, actually.
Speaker:I really, really enjoyed that, as was the one with Jesse Wragg, Should You
Speaker:Sell on Multiple Online Marketplaces.
Speaker:Two great podcast picks, uh, which you can access along with our
Speaker:entire podcast archive for free on the website at ecommercepodcast.
Speaker:net.
Speaker:That's ecommercepodcast.
Speaker:net.
Speaker:Plus, if you're there, and you haven't done so already, you know
Speaker:the drill, sign up to the newsletter and we will Send you out the links
Speaker:to the pod pack podcast picks.
Speaker:It's not easy to say, uh, along with the notes, uh, from our conversation,
Speaker:they come straight to your inbox totally for free, uh, which is awesome.
Speaker:So, uh, just sign up for that at the website.
Speaker:Now, are you struggling to grow your e-commerce business?
Speaker:Do you feel like you are constantly spinning your wheel?
Speaker:Trying to figure out what to focus on next.
Speaker:Well, let me tell you, I have been there and I know how frustrating it can be.
Speaker:That's why e commerce cohort sponsors this show.
Speaker:They take all of that away.
Speaker:They help businesses like yours deliver an exceptional customer
Speaker:experience that drives Results online and to get help, you get started.
Speaker:There is a free resource which you can get access to called e commerce cycles.
Speaker:It's actually a training that I've done.
Speaker:It's a mini course, which walks you through the proven framework for building
Speaker:a successful e commerce business.
Speaker:That's right.
Speaker:It's what we do.
Speaker:At our own GCHQ.
Speaker:Oh yes, I'll take you through the specific steps that we use on our own
Speaker:e commerce companies so you can see exactly how to put those concepts into
Speaker:practice in your own e com business.
Speaker:And the good news, this mini training, it's all free.
Speaker:You don't even need an email address.
Speaker:You can find out more at ecommercecycles.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:That's www.
Speaker:ecommercecycles.
Speaker:com, uh, to get access to the free training and get started with it.
Speaker:And let me know what you think, because we've put a lot of time and
Speaker:energy into that training and I would genuinely love to know what you think.
Speaker:It's the same sort of stuff I actually use when I do coaching with clients.
Speaker:So if you ever want to know what that's like.
Speaker:Go watch that video.
Speaker:Oh yes.
Speaker:Now let's talk about the trailblazing e commerce guru and entrepreneur who
Speaker:has earned his stripes by identifying unique strategies for finding winning
Speaker:products to sell on eBay way back in 2015.
Speaker:Oh yes.
Speaker:Nahar is the mastermind behind Zik Analytics, the game changing
Speaker:suite of eBay tools that's taken the eCommerce world by storm.
Speaker:With a powerhouse team of over 35 experts and a loyal global clientele,
Speaker:Zik Analytics helps businesses supercharge their online selling success.
Speaker:What a great bio that is.
Speaker:Uh, Nahar, it's great to have you on the show, man.
Speaker:All the way from very sunny Portugal, I have no doubt.
Speaker:Uh, welcome to the e commerce podcast.
Speaker:Great to have you on, man.
Speaker:Thank you so much.
Speaker:It's a pleasure to be here as well.
Speaker:Pleasure to get the opportunity to speak to such a great audience.
Speaker:Thank you for the warm words, for the kind words.
Speaker:And I'm here to share value and to try to help as many people as possible.
Speaker:Fantastic, fantastic.
Speaker:So, you started out in 2015, which, let's be real, in digital terms is a
Speaker:very long time ago, isn't it really?
Speaker:Uh, it's, a lot has happened in the last seven years.
Speaker:How did you get, why eBay, how did you get started on that?
Speaker:Was that just, you were looking for a side hustle, or was there something more to it?
Speaker:Mm
Speaker:Actually, yeah, actually, it's a funny story.
Speaker:So I, um, I've been, uh, in Israel before in 2015, the beginning of
Speaker:2015 with my, uh, at the time, my girlfriend, now my wife.
Speaker:And we decided, yeah, we decided to move back to Germany.
Speaker:She wanted to complete her master's degree.
Speaker:I decided to give up on real estate career in Israel.
Speaker:And we moved to Germany, to cold Hamburg.
Speaker:I was sure I'm going to do real estate in Germany.
Speaker:You know, I came with a lot of confidence.
Speaker:But very quickly I realized that with my language skills, my accents, there is no
Speaker:chance to make real estate in Germany.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:so after one visit in Israel, I, I met, uh, uh, at the time he was the, um, the
Speaker:owner of the real estate office in Israel, very, very experienced guy, um, with
Speaker:over 40 years experience in real estate.
Speaker:And he's a guy who knows to recognize opportunity.
Speaker:And he told me like, look Nahar, I'll be honest with you, with
Speaker:your accent, you have no chance to do real estate in Germany.
Speaker:The only things you can do there is sell something online.
Speaker:Well.
Speaker:And, well, the guy didn't have any information about e commerce and anything
Speaker:like this, it just made sense to him, and I was thinking about it, and I had
Speaker:some experience with selling goods on eBay, physical goods, at the time, so I
Speaker:went back to Germany, and I told to my wife, I, I must get a laptop, I must, you
Speaker:know, dive into this world of e commerce.
Speaker:of eBay dropshipping.
Speaker:This is what I hear that I can start without investing.
Speaker:My first impression actually was negative.
Speaker:I searched about it on YouTube and I saw some videos calling it a scam.
Speaker:Oh, well.
Speaker:And then later on I, I, you know, I joined a like a closed group of sellers
Speaker:and I started learning about it and I dedicated every day, 12 hours of work,
Speaker:how it works, how to find products and this is how everything started.
Speaker:It was not a side hustle, it was like, I needed to do something, I had nothing to
Speaker:do, it was like my only opportunity, and this is also what made me very committed
Speaker:to it, and this is also one of the lessons that I'm trying to bring to people
Speaker:today, is that when you're going to start with something, take the time to do the
Speaker:research and to think about it, but once you decided to get started, you have to go
Speaker:all in, you have to decide, even if it's a side hustle, you need to count how many
Speaker:hours you can put in, and then just, you know, be fully committed to this project.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:No, it's very true.
Speaker:I was listening to, uh, what's his name?
Speaker:Ali Abdul on YouTube today and he was talking about how he gets asked a lot
Speaker:because he's quite a well known YouTuber.
Speaker:He makes a lot of money out of his YouTube channel.
Speaker:And he's, you know, he was talking about how a lot of people come to
Speaker:him and say, can I make 10 grand a month just from doing four hours
Speaker:a month on my YouTube channel?
Speaker:And he just goes, no, you can't.
Speaker:What's wrong with you?
Speaker:And it is interesting, isn't it?
Speaker:I mean, you do, you read about, um, people on the web or you.
Speaker:Uh, I, they seem to come up in my YouTube feed for some reason, um, you know,
Speaker:the videos from people who are like, make 10 grand a month from selling this
Speaker:on YouTube, it only takes one hour, you know, a week or something stupid.
Speaker:I have yet, uh, hi, maybe you can speak to this, I have yet to find
Speaker:any of those kind of things that actually work in the real life.
Speaker:Uh, you can't.
Speaker:It seems to me there may be one or two people in the world that look
Speaker:out and can do it, but growing an online business is going to
Speaker:require more than an hour a month.
Speaker:This is what you're saying, right?
Speaker:For sure, for sure.
Speaker:You need to be dedicated, you need to also, you know, you also need to choose
Speaker:your, uh, your, uh, uh, business wisely.
Speaker:If you don't, if you have only two hours per day, or three hours per
Speaker:day, you need to, you know, you need to choose, uh, the type of business
Speaker:wisely that will fit this type.
Speaker:And you also need to manage expectations correctly.
Speaker:You know, if you, if you put ten hours per day, you have, you will progress.
Speaker:Your progress will be much faster if you put only two hours per day.
Speaker:You can, you can make something out of it, but it will be much
Speaker:harder and it will take longer.
Speaker:So, of course, there is no magic here, it requires a lot
Speaker:of effort and, um, consistency.
Speaker:Consistency I would say is the key.
Speaker:Yeah, it's such an important word, consistency.
Speaker:I think you're right.
Speaker:And I think, um, one of the things that I've sort of realized is actually you
Speaker:can, you can, you can actually do a lot with an hour a day or two hours a day.
Speaker:If that is an hour a day or two hours every single day,
Speaker:Yes,
Speaker:it's, it's one of those where, um, you know, going to the gym
Speaker:is a classic example, isn't it?
Speaker:You go to the gym, you go to the gym once a month, it's not really
Speaker:going to help you other than it's going to make you a little bit sore.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Where is, um, if you're doing a little bit every day, it's that continual
Speaker:little bit every day, isn't it?
Speaker:That, that makes a big difference.
Speaker:And I like what you're saying there about consistency.
Speaker:So you started out then, um, 12 hours a day, just researching eBay,
Speaker:figuring it all out, um, doing drop shipping on eBay, finding products.
Speaker:How did you.
Speaker:So, how did you determine, or how do you determine now, when you are researching,
Speaker:what constitutes a good product?
Speaker:What makes a product good and worthwhile to sort of chase?
Speaker:Okay, this is the, this is the one million dollar question, and of
Speaker:course I will be happy to answer it.
Speaker:So I would say just, just before I answer it, when I started, no one
Speaker:teached about product research much.
Speaker:It was like, go to your supplier, copy all the best selling items of
Speaker:your supplier, paste into your eBay store, and it will be okay, you know?
Speaker:So just upload everything and it will be okay.
Speaker:And I came with a background of doing business, I had like a retail business
Speaker:before, different retail businesses.
Speaker:And it makes no sense to me, you know, it's the basic thing in, in,
Speaker:in trading is demand and supply.
Speaker:There is like, this is the basic thing, no one's talking about it.
Speaker:So first I try to figure out this, what, how, how can I figure out
Speaker:demand and supply on eBay or on any other market, e commerce marketplace?
Speaker:So um, And then I realized after figuring out, okay, I can see
Speaker:the sales history on eBay, right?
Speaker:I can see how many people are selling the same item and under
Speaker:the specific keywords or title.
Speaker:Now, what else is important?
Speaker:Yeah, because in the end of the day, yes, it is similar to any retail business
Speaker:on one way, On the other way, it's not like a shopping mall where you, you
Speaker:know, you have your store and people get to the store and people walking
Speaker:and they just decide where to go to the first store, first floor, second floor.
Speaker:Here it's in a different way.
Speaker:It's an algorithm, right?
Speaker:It's a search engine algorithm.
Speaker:So you need to take in consideration that if we compare it to the physical
Speaker:world, right, where I rent a shop and this will always be my shop on
Speaker:eBay, Amazon or any, any marketplace.
Speaker:My ranking, my, where, where my store, where my product appear
Speaker:depends on actions I take.
Speaker:So it's actually much more, uh, uh, much more fair than a physical,
Speaker:uh, shopping mall, you know?
Speaker:So it's, what, if now answering to your question, so it's starting from demand.
Speaker:Of course, this is the most important thing is validate demand.
Speaker:You need to have demand to a product before you list it to your store.
Speaker:Second, uh, research your competition.
Speaker:And then, uh, determine whether it's a high competition or low competition.
Speaker:Now, competition is not just about the number of people
Speaker:who are selling the items.
Speaker:It's also about how competitive I can be compared to my competitors.
Speaker:So, what price am I going to use?
Speaker:Do I offer a product with an extra value?
Speaker:Maybe it's some sunglasses that come with a case, you know, or something like this.
Speaker:And maybe it's a different color that does not exist.
Speaker:And then I actually, I come into market with a lot of competition, but everyone
Speaker:sells red, and I bring blue, for example.
Speaker:So, so, we validate the demand by how many times the product sold
Speaker:in the last 30 days, at least.
Speaker:I would say this is the most important in the last 30 days, then we can go further.
Speaker:Then, um, I look on the price, the average selling price, I
Speaker:look at all my competitors.
Speaker:How many feedbacks they have, how strong they are, my competitors.
Speaker:Then I'm basically, after I validate this, I'm going to the supplier.
Speaker:It can be wholesale supplier, it can be dropship supplier, it doesn't matter.
Speaker:And then I'm trying to look for the same product or similar product.
Speaker:If I can get it For low enough, so I can say it's for competitive price, great.
Speaker:It's a bingo, right?
Speaker:I have, I'm on the first stage of finding a winning product.
Speaker:The next step is, okay, what my competitors are using, like what title,
Speaker:keywords, images, item specifics.
Speaker:Shipping policies, return policies, how I can be better than them.
Speaker:Mm hmm.
Speaker:Mm
Speaker:I just logically try to be better than them in every aspect.
Speaker:Now, it's not always possible to be better in every aspect, but if I
Speaker:have better price, faster shipping, and I optimize my title better,
Speaker:it's already a huge advantage,
Speaker:hmm.
Speaker:Or if I have amazing images, this is by the way, people don't give enough
Speaker:attention to it, but in marketplaces like eBay or Amazon, but if all your
Speaker:competitors with very bad images, It's actually an opportunity, even
Speaker:if you're a bit more expensive.
Speaker:Because today people buy, you know, they like to see what
Speaker:they less read, they more look.
Speaker:So if your images are much better, it's the way to kind of
Speaker:like overcome your competitors.
Speaker:So this is a winning product.
Speaker:You need to put all these puzzle pieces together and try to just,
Speaker:you know, make sure you have more pros than cons on your competitors.
Speaker:Yeah, there's a lot there, right?
Speaker:I'm not gonna lie.
Speaker:There's, I've got a lot of notes, um, so we can jump into those.
Speaker:So I love what you say, uh, right at the start, that you have to validate demand.
Speaker:And this has always been one of the things that's intrigued me, uh,
Speaker:whether it's eBay, whether it's...
Speaker:E commerce, whether it's Amazon, is that people buy products
Speaker:without ever validating demand to sell on their website.
Speaker:And then they're always curious why they're not selling.
Speaker:Uh, and it is the fundamental law of economics, demand and supply.
Speaker:There has to be the demand, especially if you're selling
Speaker:in a Western culture, right?
Speaker:Uh, where...
Speaker:The demand drives in effect the sales, so I've used the example before, the amount
Speaker:of times I've seen people do things like go to AliExpress, buy cheap sunglasses,
Speaker:and then put them on a website and charge 20 bucks for something they've
Speaker:just gone and paid a dollar for, and they just don't sell, and they struggle
Speaker:to understand why, and it's like, well, I No one actually wants to pay 20 bucks
Speaker:for the sunglasses on your website.
Speaker:That's your first fundamental problem, you've not validated demand, have you?
Speaker:So, you talk about validating demand, like you look at how many sales...
Speaker:Uh, so we'd call it maybe sales velocity in the last 30 days, um,
Speaker:which is, is, uh, doable on eBay.
Speaker:I'm guessing you can see the sales reports on eBay.
Speaker:Is that right?
Speaker:Yeah, so you can either go, if, now, it's, it's almost possible to the
Speaker:other way, so with eBay you get the actual, like, the, the, the positive
Speaker:side of eBay, you get the actual number of sales, the real number of sales.
Speaker:It's not some formula or some prediction.
Speaker:So uh, for instance, in Zip we collect this data, then we show you
Speaker:this on, on different time frames.
Speaker:You can also go to eBay, just go on the search result, you know, just search
Speaker:for something, then go to completed listings, and then you just see.
Speaker:You don't have the data collected, you still need to gather this
Speaker:information manually by yourself, but you can see the item that sold.
Speaker:You can go into this item, you can go and see how many times they sold.
Speaker:On Amazon, it's a, it's a, you don't have this, uh, data
Speaker:Mm hmm.
Speaker:you know, you can't just grab this data.
Speaker:But, there is today very accurate formulas, where they take reviews,
Speaker:BSR, and different information from Amazon, and they come up with
Speaker:formula that it's pretty close.
Speaker:It's not 100% accurate, but it's enough to make decisions, it's
Speaker:enough to validate the manuals.
Speaker:And even on Shopify, uh, it's possible today to, to, with certain
Speaker:tools, to, to, to do, to see.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:So we can hack Shopify to check out demand and sales.
Speaker:Um, one of the things that you mentioned there with Amazon, and one
Speaker:of the things I'm a big proponent of actually is, um, reading the reviews
Speaker:on your competitors websites, right?
Speaker:Um, and the reviews, so they sort of tell you so much, don't they?
Speaker:It's unbelievable what you can gain from people's reviews.
Speaker:So on Amazon.
Speaker:can say, well, you, you can make all kinds of assumptions, can't you?
Speaker:Which says, right, for every one review that is on Amazon,
Speaker:maybe there was a hundred sales.
Speaker:And so if we see that there's been seven reviews in the last seven
Speaker:days, we can assume that there was about 700 sales of the product.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And this is what you mean in terms of there's accuracy now, which
Speaker:you can use reviews and so on and so forth to try and predict.
Speaker:But you can do a similar thing on your competitors websites.
Speaker:You can go, well, when was this product last reviewed?
Speaker:Um, and if you buy that product from your competitor, And understand
Speaker:their review policy, like, did they email you asking you for a review?
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:Ah, okay.
Speaker:Yeah, it's like, you can start to pick that out and go, well, in relation to
Speaker:all the products on their website, I know their website does about a million a year.
Speaker:This is like the fifth selling product and it's got a hundred reviews.
Speaker:And so you can start to then build up sort of correlation models, can't you?
Speaker:And start to, it's not accurate, like spot on balls accurate, but actually it gives
Speaker:you some really interesting insights.
Speaker:Just by looking at the reviews on, on various different people's websites.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And actually the best you can learn from the bad reviews, because if
Speaker:you go on a product and you see like 100 bad reviews with similar...
Speaker:With similar, uh, complaint, then you understand, okay, if I want to improve
Speaker:this product, all I need to do is solve this problem everyone complained about.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:So there's another way to use this information.
Speaker:which comes back to what you were saying in terms of being
Speaker:better than your competitors.
Speaker:So you could be better on price, but actually what you can do, and
Speaker:to be fair, we have done this.
Speaker:We have gone through our competitors reviews, figured out what.
Speaker:People didn't like about those products and then made a better
Speaker:product because that's all customer data and research, right?
Speaker:And so you can be better on price or you can actually be better because you
Speaker:have a better product And that's uh, I mean it takes a little bit more You've
Speaker:obviously got to get it manufactured or developed or whatever and but you
Speaker:can do that and it's a really valid way I mean to be honest with you.
Speaker:No, I'm just I'm Helping my kids build their own little online Hustle at the
Speaker:moment, you know, they're at uni, they want to make some extra money on the side.
Speaker:And so we've got a few product ideas and all we've done is we've
Speaker:just literally gone through reviews of web on websites and on Amazon.
Speaker:the first thing we did, validate demand and how can I make the
Speaker:product better, you know, and it's, uh, it's really interesting some of
Speaker:the results that come out of that.
Speaker:So, um, now I'm loving that, loving that and, and what else, what other
Speaker:tricks do you have up your sleeve?
Speaker:So you validate demand, um, you try and be better than your competitors,
Speaker:um, either in price and shipping and, and all of them, uh, what other
Speaker:tricks do you have up your sleeve?
Speaker:I, I would say, I wouldn't call it, what I'm going to show now is not a
Speaker:trick, but it's something that, uh, it's a mindset thing that, that we
Speaker:all have and we need to get rid of.
Speaker:And you know, like sometimes.
Speaker:We want something so much, you know, we want something people want something
Speaker:so much and it's happening to all of us I'm sure we want something so
Speaker:much that we are a we are a Blurring the truth, you know what I mean?
Speaker:Like we want to so much get started So we like you say we go and we pick the first
Speaker:item that we found And, and I think this is one, like, to practice this way of
Speaker:being, like, honest with yourself or just, you know, look, look on the reality as
Speaker:is, without to, you know, look, because there is, like, cold data there, the
Speaker:data is not lying, the information is there, you know, the sales numbers are
Speaker:there, the features of your competitors are there, and the numbers that you
Speaker:get from your wholesalers are there, so just follow this, I would say this is
Speaker:the most important thing, follow this.
Speaker:And then it's become as simple as we just discussed, you know, but make
Speaker:sure, and I'm saying to everyone, make sure you're, you stick to hard facts
Speaker:and you're not blaring the truth.
Speaker:You're not like overexciting yourself about something that
Speaker:is not as good as you think.
Speaker:So this, I would say, one of the main reasons people are failing.
Speaker:This is in everything in life, you know, like I can tell about
Speaker:myself in my business, I take it to a different direction.
Speaker:When we, when we are hiring people, you know, and I can tell you how many times
Speaker:in the beginning of my, of, of, in the first three years of the company, how many
Speaker:times I've hired people, expect, hope that they will be much better than they can
Speaker:actually can be, you know what I mean?
Speaker:Like, they are not professional in something, and I hope they can become
Speaker:professional in it, and I take them with this hope, but nothing has happened, you
Speaker:know, so it's the same with products.
Speaker:Just stick to hard facts.
Speaker:Other tricks, um, I would say is...
Speaker:This is, this is more technical, is when you go into a new niche, you want
Speaker:to, you are going, you wanna go into new, like find a new products to sell.
Speaker:So let's say you start with a niche, right?
Speaker:So try to see who is the new, the, the new sellers who manage to rank high on
Speaker:this niche or new sellers who manage to outperform results of, of, uh, Experience
Speaker:sellers, because then it means, first, they just listed their items lately.
Speaker:Second, they did something very right, because they come into a new market.
Speaker:It's a very competitive market, right?
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:are sellers with hundreds of thousands of feedbacks on their
Speaker:store, or with products that sold.
Speaker:With thousands of reviews, but they're still, just got started, just
Speaker:said 100, 200 reviews, but they're still ranking on the first page.
Speaker:How they do it.
Speaker:I want to learn from them.
Speaker:I don't want to learn from the one with the 100, 000 reviews
Speaker:that are already in the market for 20 years or 10 years or 5 years.
Speaker:He already built a very strong reputation, you know, the algorithm of the marketplace
Speaker:is selling, whether it's Amazon or eBay.
Speaker:Like him already, like them already.
Speaker:But the new one who just list his item in the last 4 5 months and
Speaker:he's already ranking to the top.
Speaker:Why can't he be different?
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:his work, you know.
Speaker:And then see, maybe, like you say, he worked on a better product.
Speaker:Maybe he had something different in the SEO.
Speaker:And then when I'm going to bring a new product, I'm going to try to compete
Speaker:him because he has less reputation.
Speaker:It will be easier for me to compete.
Speaker:Someone with less reputation.
Speaker:So this is a trick that worked for me on eBay a lot, and this is about eBay.
Speaker:About, if you want to touch also Shopify or selling on your own store, I would
Speaker:say, where you need to drive traffic, I would say it's a bit different because
Speaker:there is the wow element that on a marketplace you don't really need it.
Speaker:On a marketplace you look for Products that people are searching for.
Speaker:you sell on your own website, if you are not just using Google Shopping for
Speaker:ads, but you also want to run video ads on Facebook or other platforms, your
Speaker:product needs to have a wow effect.
Speaker:It needs to make people stop the scroll and look.
Speaker:It's a different environment.
Speaker:And I see a lot of people that, uh, when they go, they start their own store.
Speaker:And they, and they, doing research, they stick to the stats, they see,
Speaker:yes, it has a lot of demand, but they're missing this important element,
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:you can't sell on, on Facebook or Facebook ads or TikTok if
Speaker:your product is not interesting, if you're not a scroll stalker.
Speaker:yeah, no totally.
Speaker:Well, again, a lot there, let's just rewind a little bit.
Speaker:So let's go back to the mindset, the blurring of the
Speaker:truth, which made me smile.
Speaker:This idea of self awareness, because I think it's very true.
Speaker:Or there's a truism which feels very true, and that is...
Speaker:We lie mostly to ourselves as human beings, you know, where if
Speaker:we're going to lie to anybody, it tends to be more to ourselves.
Speaker:Um, and that's true in business.
Speaker:That's true emotionally.
Speaker:That's true.
Speaker:Whatever it is, you know, that sort of that aha moment where you wake up and
Speaker:go, actually, what I've been thinking and believing is entirely not true.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, and one of the things that I've, I've noticed in, uh, with people that start
Speaker:out is they start up with a product or an idea and they get one or two sales.
Speaker:Um, which excites them, but that one or two sales tends to come from their mum.
Speaker:you know what I mean?
Speaker:And it's like, and so as you were talking, I was, I was writing down
Speaker:and going, that's actually true.
Speaker:It's like, how much do you listen to your mum?
Speaker:Because your mum's always probably going to tell you you're amazing
Speaker:and you can change the world because that's what mums do, right?
Speaker:They're just amazing people.
Speaker:Um, but I think one of the ways to.
Speaker:Uh, shift that mindset to stop blurring the truth that I've found is actually
Speaker:to go and get a good mentor, um, someone who is not, um, opposed to speaking the
Speaker:truth in love, as we like to say, speak the truth in love, um, but someone who
Speaker:is not opposed to speaking the truth.
Speaker:And that's.
Speaker:That's actually quite helpful.
Speaker:So if you've, I don't know if you've done this in your career, but, but,
Speaker:um, done that thing where you've had an idea where you've had a thought,
Speaker:you're excited by it, do you sense check with people what you're thinking?
Speaker:Or have you just, every time you've just gone for it and it's
Speaker:either worked out or failed?
Speaker:absolutely.
Speaker:A mentor is very important.
Speaker:I actually have a very personal story about it from my real estate career.
Speaker:It would be great to share it, but I would say it's not just
Speaker:having a mentor, it's also...
Speaker:Once you decide for the mentor you want to go, it's following your
Speaker:mentor blindly, you know, like trust him blindly because if we will doubt
Speaker:everything and we will not follow what this experienced person tell us to do,
Speaker:we will never be able to determine if his advice were good or not, you know.
Speaker:Mm hmm.
Speaker:in the beginning when we get started is just about like, I would say
Speaker:the best ways to start with mentor.
Speaker:I always share my, my ideas with other people.
Speaker:And I can say that when I started my real estate career, I
Speaker:joined this office in Tel Aviv.
Speaker:In the first month, I was working like crazy, and I didn't make any results.
Speaker:And the boss, he came to me and he told me like, Look, Nahar, you're
Speaker:working very hard, I think your name, because you work with people,
Speaker:your name is a bit problematic.
Speaker:It's pretty unique, and it's sometimes hard for people to pronounce it.
Speaker:I think you should work with the name Niro.
Speaker:This is what he said, you call yourself Niro, from now on you work as Niro.
Speaker:I looked at him like upset, like what?
Speaker:Why did he want me to change my name?
Speaker:Where is the connection?
Speaker:I went back home.
Speaker:I told him I would think about it.
Speaker:The guy there, the guy I arrived in my building, there was an older guy walking
Speaker:there on a, on a laundry, laundromat.
Speaker:And he's telling me like, what happened?
Speaker:Why you look upset?
Speaker:And I'm telling him, yeah, my boss, after one month, I'm walking like crazy.
Speaker:He's coming to me and he's telling me that I need to change my name.
Speaker:What is the problem with my name?
Speaker:He looked at me and he asked me, how many years this guy
Speaker:is in real estate, your boss?
Speaker:I told him like 30, 40 years.
Speaker:He told me a guy with 40 years of experience, give you the advice.
Speaker:And you doubt if to take this advice or not, you have nothing to lose.
Speaker:This guy has 40 years of experience, you have one month's experience.
Speaker:Try it out.
Speaker:And I went back and I said, I'm going to do it, I'm going to be Niro from now.
Speaker:And six months later I was one of the top agents in the office.
Speaker:And I take this lesson for myself that I say, and I say to everyone else, if you
Speaker:have a mentor with a lot of experience,
Speaker:Mm hmm.
Speaker:first of all, put the research, you know, put the effort to find a good mentor.
Speaker:Second of all, trust this guy blindly.
Speaker:Do everything he say.
Speaker:Give it a, you know, you can give it like four months, five months, six
Speaker:months, a period of test, testing period where you're trying out his advice.
Speaker:Be fully committed to it because if you're not going to be fully committed,
Speaker:you will never know if the advice is actually going to work or not.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:yeah, powerful stuff, powerful, and, uh, uh, it's, it's interesting the,
Speaker:the name change story, uh, that I'll, I'll remember that, that, that'll
Speaker:stick with me, that'll stick with me.
Speaker:So get a mentor, don't ask your mum, um, and avoid the blurring of the truth
Speaker:mindset, which I, I, I still, you know, stop telling yourself lies, basically.
Speaker:yes, yes, yes.
Speaker:And then you talked about, uh, niching down and I, one of the things that you
Speaker:mentioned here I want to come circle back on cause I thought it was fascinating.
Speaker:You don't just want to look at the guys that have been successful for 20 years.
Speaker:You really want to do a deep dive on the guys that have been successful in the
Speaker:last few weeks or the last few months.
Speaker:Because, they've not got the reputation to rely on, they've had
Speaker:to do something tactical to get to quite a high place in the rankings or
Speaker:in the sales numbers, haven't they?
Speaker:Um, so how do you, I mean, and I think that's brilliant advice,
Speaker:I think that's very top advice.
Speaker:Um, I guess, how do you, um, How do you extrapolate that backwards?
Speaker:How do you analyze the somebody that's just sort of appeared out of nowhere?
Speaker:What sort of things are you looking for?
Speaker:So I would, I, I always, in eBay's you can always filter by feedbacks,
Speaker:how many feedbacks the store have.
Speaker:If the, if the store have just 100 feedbacks is and is ranking on
Speaker:the first page is pretty new, you know, so in eBay you can determine
Speaker:by the feedbacks on Amazon.
Speaker:You can also determine by reviews if the product have, if everyone else have like
Speaker:20,000 reviews, 10,000 reviews, and this product have like one 500 reviews, 200
Speaker:reviews, or even less, then it's, this is your, your sign, you know, so, So this
Speaker:is what I'm doing first, then what I'm trying to do is I'm looking on this new
Speaker:guy and I'm looking on those experienced guys and I try to see what difference.
Speaker:Usually you find something that is different.
Speaker:Maybe the images are better, the title is a bit, his target different
Speaker:keyword in the title or um, I try to, like investigating, you know,
Speaker:looking for clues, what's different.
Speaker:And then you, most of the time you find something different.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:of the time, I would say 95% of the time, you will find that they do something
Speaker:different here, whether it is the price, the images, the product, the SEO.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:No, very, very good.
Speaker:I like that.
Speaker:Uh, so find the new competitors and, and realize that they're your competition.
Speaker:I thought that was also good.
Speaker:You know, competing with somebody that's been around for, uh, for 20 years is much
Speaker:more complicated than being competing with a guy that's doing well after
Speaker:a couple of months and I like that.
Speaker:Um, I think that's a really interesting, uh, statement.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So we've got the mindset, we've got the niche.
Speaker:We're going to come to the wow element you mentioned, because again,
Speaker:I was smiling when you said this.
Speaker:I'm going back to the guy that's selling sunglasses off
Speaker:Aliexpress that no one's buying.
Speaker:And it's because his website actually puts people off rather than makes
Speaker:people go, Oh my goodness, I need to, but there's no wow aspects of that.
Speaker:So how do you And you talked about having wow in product as a product
Speaker:that actually stops on the, you know, stops the Facebook feed, is something
Speaker:different, something unique, or it's marketed in a slightly interesting
Speaker:way, or it's, the image is quite, it's just, it's going to help you stop.
Speaker:What um, what sort of elements do you think we need to
Speaker:look at to deliver that wow?
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:So there, I will break it into two groups.
Speaker:There is one group of problems, so there are some serious problems people have.
Speaker:And if you solve their problem, I mean, this is the best, wow.
Speaker:So, if you see a lot of very successful products on Facebook ads, are products
Speaker:to solve back pain, or, or, uh, uh, clean ears, or do all these, uh, a bit
Speaker:disgusting things, you know, because, you know, people have this problem sitting
Speaker:all day on the computer, and that suddenly they sit, how, how they sit straight, or
Speaker:people have some certain type of disease.
Speaker:This is a very successful product as well.
Speaker:This hand massager, you know, I was asking myself, why this
Speaker:hand massager is so successful?
Speaker:Like what's, and then I read through the descriptions of the ads and I see
Speaker:like, it's solved, it's helping to like, there's like four or five different
Speaker:diseases that this hand massager solved.
Speaker:So it's, it's wow effect for these people with this, uh, disease because
Speaker:they have huge pain in their hand and now they can relax this pain with some
Speaker:nice massage, you know, for example.
Speaker:Another thing is just like, um, um.
Speaker:You know, like, uh, all the gadgets, uh, things that, like, just, like,
Speaker:very, like, wow, I want to have this, uh, uh, color changing necklace, or
Speaker:this, uh, amazing gadget that open beers or open wines, or, you know
Speaker:what I mean, all these kind of things.
Speaker:So these are the two things.
Speaker:And I will add a third, third genre, third category, this is more seasonal.
Speaker:So, you know, you use the demand in specific season to give people
Speaker:what they want, and then it just...
Speaker:Halloween is a great month for, for wow effect products because all, every
Speaker:product, every costume can be wow, you know what I mean, like it's, this
Speaker:is what it is, and then also people in need for it, so you use both, but
Speaker:yeah, it's looking for things that just making people stop and look, basically.
Speaker:Fantastic, very, very true, very true.
Speaker:So, um, we've got somebody then who's got a product, uh, they're selling
Speaker:because, you know, we've validated demand.
Speaker:We're doing something different.
Speaker:We've analyzed our competitors.
Speaker:We we've done some, we're up there on the rankings.
Speaker:We're growing, we're developing.
Speaker:What are some of the problems that you have seen, some of the challenges,
Speaker:maybe, that scaling businesses have found, so that, you know, you do get
Speaker:these companies that hit a vein and it just starts to take off, doesn't
Speaker:it, and they start to do well.
Speaker:But that's only the first problem, now we've got to scale it, now
Speaker:we've got to grow effectively.
Speaker:What are some of the things that you've seen there, some of the obstacles,
Speaker:maybe, that we need to overcome?
Speaker:So yeah, it's a great topic as well, and I will talk about it in general
Speaker:first, because this is something that we realized in the last six years, since
Speaker:we started with Zik, and we started to look, you know, into how the users are
Speaker:doing, who is becoming successful, who is not, who is able to move through
Speaker:the first step of getting started to becoming profitable, from breaking even
Speaker:to becoming profitable, and who has managed to scale from being profitable
Speaker:to actually financial independence, to actually, you know, like, turn it into
Speaker:full time business, making a lot of money.
Speaker:And we realized that these are three key steps in the e commerce journey
Speaker:when you first break even, cover your cost, then when you, you, uh,
Speaker:become profitable, and then when you, uh, achieve financial independence.
Speaker:So
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:the hardest part I would say is, is break even, it's covering your cost.
Speaker:Why?
Speaker:Because you come, you have no information, you have no knowledge, no experience, that
Speaker:you are going through the learning curve.
Speaker:Uh, there is, uh, online, e commerce, the first few months we don't see much result.
Speaker:And sometimes it's hard to continue, right?
Speaker:Without a series of, you don't get the feedback.
Speaker:We used to get feedback from our mom, as you say, like, you do good,
Speaker:you do bad, like, we get feedback.
Speaker:Here, you don't have feedback.
Speaker:Here, you don't make sales, right?
Speaker:So, so, but we know, what we've seen is that 90% of the people who manage
Speaker:to break even, also become profitable.
Speaker:And then, the last part of scaling, and there is a lot of people who are
Speaker:getting stuck in the profitable stage.
Speaker:A lot of people.
Speaker:They make 2, 000, 3, 000 per month, But they are not able to scale, like you say.
Speaker:So what I, what, what, the way we approach it, the way today I see
Speaker:it, and we realized it just in the last, like, one and a half, one year
Speaker:after analyzing six years of data, is that every stage needs to have a
Speaker:different strategy, different approach.
Speaker:So it's, it's very technically, like, pricing strategy, um, uh, review,
Speaker:uh, communication strategy with the, with the people, with the buyers, uh,
Speaker:the type of products you start with.
Speaker:Also aligned to how much you can invest.
Speaker:And then when it comes to scaling, first you need to have the foundation,
Speaker:that you are able to get enough stock, you have enough cash flow.
Speaker:This is when you buy one stock.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I would say a lot of people are not able to scale because they're stuck
Speaker:on this, they're stuck on cash flow.
Speaker:Other suppliers cannot provide them enough stock, or it's too complicated to
Speaker:produce the quantity of items they need.
Speaker:I can say about, for example, my sister has a dress, She's selling dresses, she
Speaker:has a brand for women's dresses, and she has struggled with scaling the quantities
Speaker:because of production, so this, so in advance you should pick product, you
Speaker:shouldn't put effort into product, you're going to have problems with production.
Speaker:This is number one.
Speaker:Number two is about your profit margins, so if you have a very low profit
Speaker:margins, it would be very hard to scale without taking a loan from the bank,
Speaker:because how can you cover your costs?
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:Oh, you need to get money out of your pocket, you know, the profit that you
Speaker:generate is not enough to, to bring stock.
Speaker:And the last one I would say is, um, is, it's coming from
Speaker:where to focus your energy.
Speaker:This is, again, we're going back to the same things with, you know, being honest
Speaker:with yourself, like see the truth, see the facts, is we have this issue, like
Speaker:people, everyone have this issue of I have to finish what I started with.
Speaker:You know this?
Speaker:Like, I started with, I launched this new product.
Speaker:It's doing great.
Speaker:I'm already profitable.
Speaker:But I'm not going to give up until this product is going to sell 20, 000 times.
Speaker:Or until I'm going to make 101 million.
Speaker:And then they get stuck on this product.
Speaker:All their energy goes to this product.
Speaker:While with all their knowledge they have.
Speaker:All the experience they have, they could go and launch another product
Speaker:that have much more potential because of the niche, because of, you know,
Speaker:like, many of these kind of things.
Speaker:So, I think that in this stage, in this stage of profitability, when
Speaker:you have one successful product, you need to really create a list.
Speaker:I have the, I, I call this, I, we developed an algorithm in the, in the
Speaker:company, a strategy of prioritization in the company, where you have, uh,
Speaker:uh, impact, you have three columns.
Speaker:So every, every idea, get three ideas, three, three columns,
Speaker:Mm hmm.
Speaker:time to impact, and effort.
Speaker:So take, you know, take you, what I suggest to people that in this stage,
Speaker:create a Google Sheet, put your first product that is already live.
Speaker:It's live, right?
Speaker:I want to scale it now.
Speaker:The goal is to scale it to, uh, I don't know, 100, 000
Speaker:revenue or 200, 000 revenue.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Can I do it?
Speaker:Can this product get there?
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:What is the time to impact?
Speaker:Then you can say, like, what we do, we have, like, medium
Speaker:levels, like high, medium, low.
Speaker:So, uh, impact is high.
Speaker:Yes, I theoretically can get this product to 100, 000, right?
Speaker:Time to impact?
Speaker:Then you're trying to understand, okay, I need enough stock, I need
Speaker:enough for it to spend on PPC.
Speaker:So, I need, let's say, the competition is XYZ, I need six
Speaker:months to get there, right?
Speaker:And effort, how much money I need to spend now, for on this product?
Speaker:I need to buy more stock, uh, I need to spend more in PPC, or, uh, I need
Speaker:to, uh, To, uh, also spend time on it.
Speaker:Now, this is one.
Speaker:Then you put more ideas.
Speaker:You cannot have one idea.
Speaker:It's, it's not possible to do this comparison with one.
Speaker:Then you want to compare it to other products.
Speaker:You want to see, okay, if I go and start new products, this product in
Speaker:a niche that it can get to 2 million.
Speaker:So I can put the same effort, the same money on this new product,
Speaker:but the potential is 10 times more.
Speaker:So why should I invest in, why should I fight my first product, try to scale
Speaker:it, if the maximum of this niche is just 200, 000, while another one is 2 million.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And then it's just to be able to say, okay, this is generating great revenue for
Speaker:me, but I'm going to test new products.
Speaker:So I would say this is the main, this is where people get stuck
Speaker:the most on their prioritization.
Speaker:That's really, yeah, I can see what you're saying and I, I, I, and I, I
Speaker:get how that would make, especially on platforms like Amazon and eBay.
Speaker:You know, and, and that would, that would make an awful lot of sense to me.
Speaker:And I like your impact, time to impact and effort, uh, model.
Speaker:I think that's a really, three really interesting questions.
Speaker:What's the impact, what's the time to impact and how much is
Speaker:it going to take to get there?
Speaker:Um, a really good questions.
Speaker:Um, and yeah, I can see how that, so is that, is that if I'm, I'm just.
Speaker:I'm thinking slightly sideways here, Nahar, I'm not gonna lie.
Speaker:Um, but if I'm, uh, wanting to set up a business and focus on eBay as my
Speaker:main sales channel, for example, is that a good winning strategy to take?
Speaker:It's like, I'm gonna go, I'm gonna find some, I'm gonna find a product,
Speaker:but I'm not gonna just focus on that one product I'm gonna learn and I'm
Speaker:gonna be continually introducing, uh, uh, you know, products at
Speaker:a, at a fairly reasonable pace.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I would say in eBay, it's the most important to list.
Speaker:It's very important to list a lot of new products.
Speaker:Not like on Amazon.
Speaker:Amazon, you have huge sales velocity for one product.
Speaker:Mm
Speaker:huge demand.
Speaker:eBay, even the top products.
Speaker:Products are not, don't have, not close to how much Amazon can drive,
Speaker:how much traffic Amazon can drive.
Speaker:So you need to have a lot of products.
Speaker:For Amazon, but if we look on Amazon in this scenario, I would say the
Speaker:strategical decision I would take about products to list on Amazon is
Speaker:products that have a lot of variations.
Speaker:hmm.
Speaker:Mm
Speaker:if I get into products with a lot of variations, I get
Speaker:in one product, ten products.
Speaker:So, I increase the, the quantity, the traffic that I can get
Speaker:into my listing, I increase the amount of sales that I can do.
Speaker:It's much easier to scale because it's the same production line.
Speaker:It's much easier to scale because it's the same supplier, you know, so I would
Speaker:suggest to people to go, if it's Amazon, go on Variations, look for niches that,
Speaker:um, uh, you can come with different smells, different taste, different
Speaker:length, different quantities, you know.
Speaker:Stuff like this.
Speaker:Different colors.
Speaker:And if it's about eBay, just try to have a store with a couple of thousands of items.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:And built up to a couple of thousand items on eBay.
Speaker:Is it, um, I mean, let's just focus on eBay for a little minute here.
Speaker:Is eBay still a good platform to start an online business with?
Speaker:The reason I ask is...
Speaker:Again, going back to what comes up on my Instagram feed and my YouTube feed, it
Speaker:all is about start a business on Amazon.
Speaker:That's the message that you, that seems to be pumping out at the moment.
Speaker:And it's almost like people have forgotten about eBay.
Speaker:Um, which I, I, I thinking it through, obviously doesn't make a whole great
Speaker:deal of sense given eBay, but, um, Is eBay still a good, I appreciate the
Speaker:obvious answer to this Nabil, but I feel like I want to ask, you know, is
Speaker:eBay still a good platform to sort of charge, charge forward with?
Speaker:So, definitely.
Speaker:So, so, sticking to what we said in the beginning of being honest, you know,
Speaker:and like looking in the reality as is.
Speaker:Of course, that Amazon is the number one platform, no doubts, they
Speaker:have the highest amount of traffic and the highest amount of demand.
Speaker:And of course, selling on your own website, like Shopify or any other
Speaker:platform, uh, is, it has a lot of advantages as well because, uh, you know,
Speaker:you, you don't owe nothing to no one.
Speaker:You can't get your account suspended or stuff like this.
Speaker:And eBay, yes, is out of this tree, eBay is the smallest,
Speaker:the lowest amount of demand.
Speaker:But you need to ask yourself, again, what is the budgets I have?
Speaker:Do I have a lot of money to start with?
Speaker:I don't.
Speaker:And how much time I have?
Speaker:I would not go to start an Amazon business if I only have one hour per day.
Speaker:You know, like, or two hours per day.
Speaker:You're going to invest money in stock.
Speaker:I also wouldn't go to start an Amazon business if I don't have like a...
Speaker:Nice amount of capital, you know, like to be able to invest.
Speaker:So, uh, eBay is good if you start with low amount of, um, capital,
Speaker:if you don't have a lot of time, or if you want to have a quick start.
Speaker:It's also good for a quick start because you don't have all this process of
Speaker:shipping items to the warehouses and all these things that take time, you
Speaker:know, getting verified and all this.
Speaker:I would say that, of course, I think that everyone should aim to grow to the biggest
Speaker:platforms or In another way is to build your own brand and sell a multi channel.
Speaker:Also, I can say that about us as a company, about Zik Analytics,
Speaker:we are expanding right now.
Speaker:We are about to launch a rebrand and in the next three months, we're
Speaker:about to launch Amazon and Shopify features because we understand, you
Speaker:know, this is where the market goes.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:the biggest, these are the biggest marketplaces, and we also committed,
Speaker:you know, to the people to give them the best opportunities.
Speaker:I cannot come here and say, yeah, you know, eBay is the best
Speaker:because we are right now offering only analytics tools for eBay.
Speaker:I would say to any person that have capital and have the time to go and
Speaker:aim for the biggest marketplaces.
Speaker:No, no questions allowed.
Speaker:And just after you establish your brand on Amazon, sell multi channel,
Speaker:sell also on eBay, be everywhere.
Speaker:I think it's necessary.
Speaker:But, of course, If you have the capital and the time, go to
Speaker:Amazon or build your own store.
Speaker:If you want a quick, easy start, low risk, or you don't have a
Speaker:lot of money, start with eBay.
Speaker:Yeah, that's very, very good advice.
Speaker:And uh, some of the best companies that I've seen, actually multichannel
Speaker:do all three, don't they?
Speaker:They've got their own site, they're doing Amazon and they're doing eBay.
Speaker:Not necessarily every single product and every single channel
Speaker:they've thought it through.
Speaker:But, um, for, for quite a few businesses, all three channels
Speaker:seems to work quite well.
Speaker:Um, which I is, is fascinating.
Speaker:So, yeah, I, I like that.
Speaker:Uh, bring back, let's bring back conversations about eBay.
Speaker:'cause it just feels like we've not talked about eBay for a long time.
Speaker:Um, Listen, uh, Zaha, it's been, uh, Zaha, Nahar, sorry, getting your name
Speaker:wrong, it's going back to what your mentor was saying, I was thinking,
Speaker:um, I was thinking of two things at the same time, so you know when two
Speaker:words come out of your mouth at the same time, anyway, uh, Nahar, listen.
Speaker:If people want to find out more about Zik Analytics, want to connect
Speaker:with you, want to maybe have some questions for you, what's the
Speaker:best way for them to reach out to
Speaker:Absolutely.
Speaker:So, of course, we have a very active YouTube channel.
Speaker:You can find Zik Analytics' channel on YouTube.
Speaker:You can go on the website on zikanalytics.
Speaker:com, we have live chat support there with assistance.
Speaker:If you want to contact me directly, you can find me on LinkedIn, send me
Speaker:on LinkedIn or my Facebook profile.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:I usually answer to personal messages, maybe it can take some time, but I answer.
Speaker:I know a lot of people in this position are not answering at all, but I
Speaker:think this is the things, these are the little things that keep me with
Speaker:the feet on the ground, you know.
Speaker:So I'm trying to stick to it.
Speaker:And yeah, that's it.
Speaker:This is where you can find us.
Speaker:This is the main channels where we are active, where I am active.
Speaker:you?
Speaker:Fantastic.
Speaker:Fantastic.
Speaker:We will of course link to all of those in the show notes, which you can also
Speaker:get along for free, especially if you're signed up to the email newsletter,
Speaker:they'll be coming to your inbox.
Speaker:Don't panic about it.
Speaker:Uh, but no, thank you, uh, mate for coming on.
Speaker:Thanks for showing.
Speaker:Uh, your, uh, strategy or sharing your insights.
Speaker:Um, I just, it's just been great talking a little bit about eBay again.
Speaker:I'm not going to lie where it all started, you know, and it's, um, it's great that
Speaker:it's still going strong and, uh, I'm going to, I'm definitely going to check out.
Speaker:Um, some of the things that you mentioned actually, uh, from my notes
Speaker:and talk to my kids about it, especially with their little university stuff.
Speaker:Uh, but listen, it's been an absolute pleasure, man.
Speaker:Thank you so much for coming on the show.
Speaker:Uh, really, really appreciate it.
Speaker:Thank you so much, it's been a pleasure as well.
Speaker:Thank you for the opportunity.
Speaker:Oh, it's been great.
Speaker:Great.
Speaker:So a huge shout out to Nahar for joining me today.
Speaker:Also a big shout out to today's show sponsor, the e commerce cohort.
Speaker:Remember to check out their free training online at ecommercecycles.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:That's all one word, ecommercecycles.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:Also be sure to follow the e commerce podcast, wherever you get your
Speaker:podcasts from, because we have got yet more great conversations lined
Speaker:up and I don't want you to miss.
Speaker:Any of them.
Speaker:And in case no one has told you yet today, dear listener, you are awesome.
Speaker:Yes, you are awesome.
Speaker:Created awesome.
Speaker:It's just a burden you have to bear.
Speaker:Absolutely.
Speaker:Nahar, I have to bear it.
Speaker:I've got to bear it.
Speaker:You've got to bear it as well.
Speaker:Now, the e commerce podcast is produced by Aurion Media.
Speaker:You can find our entire archive of episodes on your favorite podcast app.
Speaker:The team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon and Tanya Hutsuliak.
Speaker:Our theme song was written by Josh Edmundson.
Speaker:And as I mentioned, if you would like to read the transcript or show notes, head
Speaker:over to the website, ecommercepodcast.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:That's it from me, that's it from Nahar, thank you so much for
Speaker:joining us, have a fantastic week, wherever you are in the world, I'll