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are you gonna get more repeat customers?

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And I think it varies depending on the type of product that you're selling.

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And is it a product that does, you know, result in people purchasing it more

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often, um, and is delivering, gonna make it better for that, for your customer?

Speaker:

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

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

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And to help us do just that, I'm chatting with today's guest, Steve Orenstein,

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from Locate2u about how you can master.

Speaker:

Oh yes, same day delivery.

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We're gonna be talking about how we can do that in our own e-commerce business.

Speaker:

But before Steve and I dive into our conversation, let me share with you

Speaker:

a podcast pick, a previous episode or two that I think you might enjoy

Speaker:

from the e-commerce podcast archives.

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The first one, given today's topic is how to build a fulfillment infrastructure

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that will scale with your business.

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Our conversation was with

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Harry Drapuch, which was

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a

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phenomenal conversation.

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So do check that out.

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And actually, I did an episode way back, which probably has still some relevance

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though on understanding the real costs of e-commerce shipping for your business.

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You can access our podcast picks and our entire podcast archive for free on

Speaker:

our website at ecommercepodcast.net.

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Plus, if you're there, sign up for the newsletter.

Speaker:

We will send all the links to our podcast picks along with the notes and the links.

Speaker:

Uh, from today's conversation with Steve, they all get delivered

Speaker:

straight to your inbox at no cost to you, which is pretty amazing.

Speaker:

Plus we'll email you every week when we do a new episode, so you stay up to date.

Speaker:

Now, are you struggling to grow your e-commerce business?

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Do you feel like you are constantly spinning your wheels trying to

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figure out what to focus on next?

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Well, let me tell you, I have been there and I know how frustrating that is, and

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that's why I love, love, love the cohort.

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Oh yes, the e-commerce cohort, which sponsors this show and the e-commerce

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cohort has brought to you a free resource called E-Commerce Cycles.

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It's a mini course which walks you through the proven framework that I

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use in all my e-com businesses, uh, for building successful e-commerce businesses.

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I'm gonna show you the specific steps I take in my own e-commerce

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company so you can put those to practice exactly how I do them.

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And the good news is, of course, as you would expect, just like

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the podcast, it's completely free.

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You don't even need an email address to get access to it.

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Uh, you can find out more at ecommercecycles.com, e-commerce

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cycles as in a bike, you know, the cycle of e-commerce.

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Uh, ecommercecycles.com.

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Uh, to access this free, to access this free training and get started today, it

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is time to start delivering e-commerce.

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Wow.

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To your customers with the help of e-commerce cohort, so do check that out.

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Now, that's the sponsor.

Speaker:

Let's talk a little bit about today's guest.

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Steve is a born entrepreneur who blazed his trail by Ditching University

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at 19 to build his own business.

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Connect2Field.

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After successfully selling it to Fleetmatics, he set his sights on

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revolutionizing same day delivery with the groundbreaking Zoom2u platform.

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And now also the Locate2u platform.

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With over 120,000 happy customers ranging from SMEs to corporate

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giants like DHL, Bunnings and Nespresso, Steve is shaking up the

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delivery world one parcel at a time.

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And given that this is such a hot topic, uh, and always will be a hot

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topic with e-commerce cuz we are delivering something at least, quite

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looking forward to this conversation.

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Steve's great to have you on the show.

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Thanks for joining us Bud.

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How you doing?

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Good, Matt.

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Great to be here.

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And it is fair to say, uh, if those aren't those of you listening to the podcast,

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which is I know the vast majority, like 99.9% of people listen to it, you

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won't see the fact that it is pitch black, uh, for Steve and that you are

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on the other side of the world, right?

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That's, that's it, yeah's, uh, just after 10:30 at night in Sydney.

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But, uh, yeah, great, great to be here.

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It's funny, the different time zone things still.

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I, I still, um, I still can't get my head around how it works, especially

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when you fly from LA to New Zealand that somehow you, you, you, you

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kind of miss a day of your life and I'm not quite sure how it works.

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Yeah.

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Or or the other way you gain a day.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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It's like, what, how did I do that?

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I don't know.

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I've just gone back in time.

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It's very, very peculiar.

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Do you travel to the states much?

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I do.

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Yeah, definitely.

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Um, in fact, all over, um, we've got a team actually in Manila and we've got

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a team in India, so definitely, yeah.

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Spend a little bit of time there and also to the US to meet, meet with customers.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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And so you, you're quite used to this time zone hopping thing.

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Yes, definitely.

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Yeah.

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So we read there in your bio, Steve, that you dropped outta uni at 19.

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Uh, which is, uh, it's not an unheard of story, is it with anyone that's a little

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bit entrepreneurial, but what can I ask?

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What were you studying at uni and why it was so bad that

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you decided to drop out at 19?

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Yeah.

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Um, I, I started, uh, studying IT and so, uh, and also I was doing

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a, a business degree at the same time, so we're doing two degrees.

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Um, yeah, and I guess what I started, I really wanted to run a business.

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Um, I dunno why, but I just did.

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And, um, A lot of, like the software side of things that we were learning

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and even the programming that they were teaching was just quite out of date.

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Mm.

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Um, and so after doing that for a little while, you know, I had an

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opportunity to go and I just decided to pause it and go and work for someone.

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And at that stage ended up, um, taking over the business

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that I was, I was working in.

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And, um, yeah.

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So I, I planned to go back, but uh, never went back.

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Never went back.

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It's interesting, isn't it?

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It's, uh, and, and why would you need to now, right.

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So yes, fast forward, uh, a few years and we have, um, locate2u.

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So for those that maybe don't know what that is, um, listening to the

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show, just give a quick background on the company and then we're gonna,

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we're gonna jump into the whole conversation about delivery and e-com.

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Yeah, sure.

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Um, so 2019 I started a business called Zoom2u, and essentially it's Uber

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for delivery based here in Australia.

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Um, we operate in mo all the major capital cities, um, providing a same

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day delivery experience, um, designed for e-commerce and retail businesses,

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but also for, um, lots of others.

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You know, small businesses and consumers.

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Um, and so that business, you know, drivers have an app on their phone.

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They can choose to accept bookings as they come through.

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Um, but the customer gets that live tracking experience so they can see

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when that delivery is actually arriving.

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And also on the same day.

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And as we were building that business, uh, what we found was a lot of

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companies were running their own fleet of their own drivers, but were

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wanting to use the technology that we'd built inside of the Zoom2u business.

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Um, and so then we started building the locate2u product.

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Um, and today we now sell that across, across the globe.

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We've got over 500 customers globally.

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Um, and that helps companies that are running their own fleet

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of their own drivers, allowing them to do things like route

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optimization, um, but also be able to.

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Send a live tracking link to their customer so the customer can see the

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live location of, of the driver arriving.

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And so I think, you know, when I started the business, it was all

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around making sure that you tell the customer when you're arriving.

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And in most e-commerce stores today, even when you go through the checkout process,

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the, the consumer never actually knows when that product's actually gonna arrive.

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And I think over, you know, in the future that's gotta change.

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And I think Amazon has done that pr pretty well in most parts of the world.

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Um, but most of these small, medium-sized e-commerce businesses still at the point

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of checkout you, it's gonna go through, you know, your typical postal networks or

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maybe a courier company, but the consumer never has an idea of when that's arriving.

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And often they're not gonna get that on the same day.

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And, um, yeah, we, we, we set about solving that and initially

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just in Australia with, with our network through Zoom2u.

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but now doing that, uh, on a global basis with our locate2u product.

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Well, that sounds fascinating.

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And, and, and let's jump in.

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I mean, you mentioned the e-commerce business, you know, and.

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You go through the checkout and it's still the biggest reason

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for cart abandonment is um, yes.

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Hi.

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Things like hidden shipping fees or I don't know when it's going to arrive.

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It's correct.

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It's not clear on the site, right?

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Yeah.

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Um, And I guess for a lot of entrepreneur, uh, a lot of e-commerce

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businesses, they're at the mercy of the couriers, which they use.

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So you take, correct.

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Um, our e-comm brand, for example, we distribute all over the world.

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So I'm not, I'm, I've not got my own worldwide delivery network yet.

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Maybe one day I'll compete with Amazon when we get big in, um, but

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I, I ju I just don't have that.

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So I'm at the mercy in a lot of ways at um, I'm at the mercy of our, our couriers.

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Um, and so it's, is it, it's a little bit more complex to say this is

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exactly what it's gonna arrive, right?

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Definitely, definitely.

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Yeah.

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And so I think it is, um, it's still complicated today and I think it's, it's

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gonna get simpler in, into the future.

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But I think it's also dependent on different types of products and, you

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know, whether it's a retail store or whether, you know, it's certain types of

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product lines, um, you know, if you're selling a relatively low value item,

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um, it doesn't make sense that you're gonna do like a fast delivery, cuz the

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economics does, doesn't make sense.

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But if you're selling a high value item, then you can do a lot of, you

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know, Smarter things around how you can actually do that delivery and

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having multiple carriers available at the point of checkout to choose

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giving the customer choice as to which particular carrier that they're gonna

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use, um, and then being able to select something that's gonna be faster.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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And so what kind of things make sense then for same day delivery?

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Um, I mean, we see, I think it varies between different types of

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products, but, you know, I've seen great success even with, you know,

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some larger items like furniture, um, which, you know, high value value,

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electronics, you know, mobile phones, um, yeah, all those types of things.

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But then, you know, you might have, you know, a, a florist and baked goods.

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Um, those all definitely make sense.

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I think, you know, any product.

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That is over $50 and you're able to do, um, you're able

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to get volume of that product.

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So if you're only selling one of those items a day, then it makes it

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harder to make same day delivery.

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Make sense?

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But if you are able to put through these amounts of volume mm-hmm.

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And potentially it's also about restricting the delivery area that

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you're actually offering that from.

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And so if you're running a retail store or even e-commerce, you say, okay, well

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within a 10 kilometer radius of that particular location, then I'm gonna be

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able to offer a same day service, and you're gonna batch them into areas.

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Uh, and I would always start by thinking about batching it into time windows.

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Um, often people make the mistake of saying, I'm gonna turn on three

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hour delivery from the time of when that order arrives and have

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it delivered within three hours.

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And that's generally not gonna be practical.

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Um, because you, you just dunno when those orders are all gonna come in,

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you're not gonna be able to consolidate many orders together and you're not

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gonna get the efficiencies around getting the price as low as you possibly can.

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Whereas if you batch it into Windows, then you know, okay, we're gonna have

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three windows throughout the day.

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You might start with one window, might be between.

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Six and nine o'clock at night.

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And then orders come in through the day, the customer knows that at nine

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o'clock, you know, before nine o'clock, they'll have that product delivered.

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They'll actually be at home cause they've left work.

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Uh, and then you can actually, you know, deliver it at a cost effective price.

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Uh, one of, I guess one of the biggest things that we see from

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e-commerce businesses is around, wanting to do faster delivery, but

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wanting to do that, cost effectively.

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And the way you do that is by batching those orders together.

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And so, It's typically the distance in how far that driver's having to

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travel is how much it's gonna cost you.

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Yeah.

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And if you're able to give that driver 10, 20, 50 parcels in one go,

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then, and they're able to do that in a, in a short period area, then you

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can drive that cost to be, you know, at, at sometimes as cheap as what

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you're doing with your local courier.

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Mm-hmm.

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It's interesting, isn't it?

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I mean, I, um, I'm very aware that when it comes to e-comm, the

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final mile is a big thing, right?

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Yep.

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We, the last mile they call it, don't they?

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So you, um, especially if you're using like a National Courier service, you know

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that what happens in that last mile is, is usually the most important, critical,

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and what you're doing in effect is you're saying, well, if, if you're selling those

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locally, why, why give it to someone else?

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That's right.

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You can sort it out yourself.

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That's that's right.

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And you can, you can get that too.

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To somebody's house.

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So yeah.

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What kind of number numbers start to make sense, Steve?

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Because, um, I, I get that if I'm doing baked goods, if I'm doing a florist, if

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I'm doing expensive electronics and I've got a good local market, you know, people

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are buying online and I'm delivering stuff, what sort of numbers makes sense?

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You talked about volume.

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Um,

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yeah, I mean, I look at it in, in one way is that, Every e-commerce

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business spends a lot of money getting a customer to your site.

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Mm-hmm.

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And then the delivery experience is generally poor.

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And so you don't get that repeat order.

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And so I think the way in which e-commerce businesses should think about

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it is, I wanna provide a really great delivery experience, particularly for

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the people that are locally around me.

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And I'm gonna get a whole bunch of word of mouth from that, and I'm

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gonna get a whole bunch of people coming back and repeat ordering.

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Depending on the type of product you're selling.

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If you're selling a product that's just like a one-off

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purchase, then probably not.

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Yeah.

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But if you are a product that people are gonna keep on buying, then if you can

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make that delivery experience really good, then you're gonna be able to drive volume.

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And so it may mean in the, in the early days of starting this, you may lose

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some money in, in starting this out.

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but then you should be able to get to some scale where you make

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it, um, where it makes sense.

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And so, um, I, I think even at, you know, 20 or 20 orders a day, you can

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actually do this cost effectively, right?

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Um, and you might, you might start with a smaller radius.

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You might just say, you're gonna only offer this in, you know,

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within five kilometers, which means you're gonna drive density.

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Um, and so the driver's not gonna have to travel as far, they can get all those

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deliveries done within a couple of hours.

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Mm-hmm.

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And, you know, you've got this fixed cost to actually do that

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every single day of the week.

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That's really interesting.

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So, uh, five kilometers for our American listeners.

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Uh, about 3.5 miles, I'm guessing somewhere around there.

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3, 3, 3.

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About 3, 3, 3 and a half miles somewhere.

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Anyway, um, five clicks I think is the military term, isn't it?

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Uh, it's uh, it's a five click radius.

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Um, so, so I mean, this is really interesting, isn't it?

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So if you are getting sort of 20, 30 local orders a day within.

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Uh, a five kilometer, five click radius, three and a half mile radius from your

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business, then actually you're, you should probably start looking at something like

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same day delivery because you are, you're gonna deliver a much better service and

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the costs, um, of it aren't too dissimilar to what you would've been paying anyway.

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Is that what I'm understanding?

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That's right.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Def definitely, definitely.

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And you know, with most courier companies, usually you're

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paying for multiple parcels.

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Yeah.

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Um, and so there's a fee every time there's numerous parcels, whereas if

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you're just running your own fleet of your own drivers, you're probably paying maybe

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a per drop rate or you're paying an hourly rate for that particular contractor.

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Yeah.

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Um, and so, you know, you're not paying extra for those additional parcels.

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So often it, it, it can be really cost effective.

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So how do you go about, um, I mean, I, I get that if, if I'm listening to this

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thinking, actually, I, for, for me, I.

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If I was in London, I can see straight away that this would make sense for us.

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You know, we could do some kind of something in London, same day delivery.

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Yeah.

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Uh, which would be really interesting.

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Um, but how do, how would I go about, I.

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Finding, maybe this is is a silly question, but I I'll

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ask it anyway cuz Why not?

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How do I go about finding people that I am paying to deliver this service?

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Am I connecting with Uber drivers?

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Am I connecting with taxi drivers?

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What, what's the sort of the, yeah.

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What things have you, you found work there?

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Yeah.

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Uh, in any country, every country it's, it's different.

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Um, but you know, the one thing that I.

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Is probably common across all of them is, you know, Facebook groups really good.

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Mm-hmm.

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There are lots and lots of, uh, Uber Facebook groups, so, Um, and

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Uber driver fa like Facebook groups.

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So you can actually join those.

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You can actually post something in there saying you're looking for a driver in

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this area, and you'll get inundated.

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Um, I'd suggest you get, you put up a form of, of some sort of a link

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to a form where you can actually, I can fill out that information.

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Um, but yeah, just generally getting drivers is now relatively easy.

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Um, that's easy part of, of our business.

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In the Zoom2u side of things, um, yeah, there's d lots of different sites,

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you know, whether it's going on to.

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There's, you know, general recruitment sites, you can post jobs on there.

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For drivers, it's, it's pretty easy to get drivers.

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Okay.

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Um, and so that's, I think that's the easy part.

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And it's just finding, you know, good ones and it's probably thinking about,

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you know, what is the way of being able to identify what is a good driver or

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what's a, what's gonna be a poor driver.

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One of the things that we did inside of Zoom2u very early on is that we actually

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made it like, and we've got thousands of drivers on our Zoom2u platform.

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Um, we actually made the onboarding process complicated and we made them

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go through a series of steps purposely.

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Okay.

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Because it ident, it allowed us to identify whether or not the

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driver could follow instructions.

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And if they could follow instructions, then they're gonna be, you know,

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great at being able to deliver.

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Cuz that's what they have to do is, you know, follow instructions typically.

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Um, and whereas they couldn't follow the instructions and we knew that they

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couldn't quite understand things and we knew that we were probably gonna have

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difficulties in them actually being a driver on the, on the Zoom2u platform.

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Yeah, that's really fascinating.

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So, just to clarify then, with the, the same day delivery service, if it's

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something that you are listening, you know, listening to this podcast and you

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are thinking, listen, now I wonder if I could make this work in certain cities.

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This is not a case of getting, um, Uh, my branded vans and drivers

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with my branded uniforms, like UPS.

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This is a case of actually I'm gonna tap into a network, which is already there.

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These guys have already got cars.

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They're already used to delivering stuff.

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I'm just gonna go recruit them and they're going to use

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some technology like Locate2u.

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They're gonna have an app on there.

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Um, and just like they do with an Uber job, I'm guessing they, we, we as a

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company put out, we need this parcel.

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Taken from here to here, and this is a route you're gonna go down.

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Are you gonna drop all these parcels off?

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Who wants to do it?

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That's right.

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Exactly right.

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Okay.

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So, and this is, and this, uh, this batching that you talk about is

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obviously a much better way than just doing it on a per job basis.

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Yeah, def definitely.

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So you definitely wanna batch it because that's gonna give you a real efficiency

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in being able to, you know, just even doing the pick and pack, you're

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gonna know you've got these cutoff time windows when you can do that.

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Um, but then it means you've got the dri one or two or five drivers

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turning up and you're handing out these delivery runs to these drivers.

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Say, here's your, your batch of bookings to do is your route.

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And they know it's the most efficient route.

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And so, you know, in the old days the drivers used to have to figure out which

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way they were gonna do these deliveries.

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And you know, you'd manually figure out which driver's gonna do them.

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Now you don't have to do any of that, that that technology handles

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all of that and now Locate2u product does that really efficiently.

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That's fantastic.

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That's fantastic.

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So you said, Steve, that was the easy part, getting the drivers, which means

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there's a not so easy part and I'm curious to know what the not so easy part is.

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I mean, I think you're, it's a, it's a change to the way

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in which you're doing things.

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Um, and, and often I see conversations with, you know, the people that are

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running logistics inside of these e-commerce businesses, particularly

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sort of medium to larger e-commerce businesses, probably don't wanna do this.

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Mm-hmm.

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Because it's like they have to change their entire process for Pick and Pack.

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Yeah.

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They have to prioritize these orders.

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Um, they don't want to necessarily do this, do this work.

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And often where we've seen it being successful, it's been driven from the

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CEOs of these e-commerce businesses who are like, actually this is.

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Really important for our customers to have this.

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And this is what's gonna actually make our, our e-commerce business,

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you know, be better than the other, better than our competitors.

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Mm-hmm.

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Um, and I think, you know, over the next five years, it's gonna be really

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important for e-commerce businesses, the ones that are gonna be really

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successful, the ones that are gonna have a really great delivery experience.

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And, um, you know, that point of checkout is gonna be really important to tell the

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customer when the product's arriving.

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Yeah, that's, that's interesting, isn't it?

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So can I, I get that it's gonna be complex to put into my system

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and I'm, my brain's buzzing Steve.

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Right?

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So I've got a bunch of questions for you now.

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Um, and I'm, I'm thinking of the, the questions are more like how, so I'm asking

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myself, how would I, how would I implement this in my own eComm business, right?

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Yeah.

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Um, so my distribution, my pick and pack centers in Liverpool, we don't

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do a, we do some local deliveries in Liverpool, but I can't imagine that

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adding same day delivery to Liverpool.

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Postcodes is gonna transform my business overnight.

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Just the nature of what we do, right?

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Yeah, sure.

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Um, I, I get that there are some businesses that might work, but if I

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could do it, like I say in London, well that's a different category altogether.

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Now the last thing I want to do is go and set up a distribution center in London.

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Um, quite frankly, yes.

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Um, So, have you seen it work where there's a two stage process where I

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say, right, actually all the orders today that have come in from London?

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Yep.

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Rather than sending those out individually to clients, I'm gonna put those in

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one big, massive box and I'm gonna send them down to, uh, the driver.

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In London.

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Correct.

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Uh, whoever, you know, has agreed to do the job.

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Um, and I, I send them out, so I maybe send 20 parcels to this guy, 20 parcels

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to that guy, and then they distribute them the sort of the final mile.

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Yeah, yeah.

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Definitely.

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Definitely.

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Am I, am I creating a rod for my back?

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Making it more complicated doing something like that?

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Or actually, have you seen companies do that and it work well?

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Yeah, no, I've, I've definitely seen that that happen.

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Um, and it, it does create more complexity, but ultimately it's like,

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what's gonna be better for your customer?

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Mm-hmm.

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And is that gonna result in, if you do this, you're gonna have a

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better delivery experience, you're gonna have more control over it.

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Um, are you gonna get more repeat customers?

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And I think it varies depending on the type of product that you're selling.

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And is it a product that does, you know, result in people purchasing it more

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often, um, and is delivering, gonna make it better for that, for your customer?

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Then, then it makes complete sense to do something like that.

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Um, and so I think in that early days of setting that up,

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it's gonna take a bit of work.

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It's gonna take effort.

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You're gonna have things that don't work quite well and you know, you might have

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some unreliable drivers, but once you actually get it set up and going, then it,

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then it just ticks along and then yeah, then it just becomes like second nature.

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Yeah.

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That's interesting.

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What happens if I.

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Go on.

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You, you were still saying.

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And the other thing I've seen is depending on the number of products

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that you actually have, um, I've seen people where we've had, we've

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hired like storage locations, um, they've had padlocks on them that

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can be accessible by pin pin numbers.

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And they've actually sent drivers in to do the pick and pack for them,

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depending on the type of product that they're, they're they're shipping.

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Um, and you know, for, it's a very simple product to actually grab off the shelf

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and, and pack it away and, and deliver it.

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Um, so that, that way you can actually

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That's genius.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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That's genius.

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I like you could do that, especially if it's a smaller.

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I suppose less expensive product that your, your drivers are less likely to go

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and Rob and I've got some way of changing that pin code every night or something.

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You know, there's, yeah, exactly.

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Exactly.

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I mean, when, when Covid Covid happened, uh, we did this for quite

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a few customers, um, who wanted to set this up, and particularly around

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even distribution of hand sanitizer.

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Um, we basically, you know, set up these micro warehouses essentially

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out of these storage facilities.

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Um, it was the same product, you know, there was a couple

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of different variations of it.

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Drivers would just go in there and do the pick and pack and

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deliver it to the customer.

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And do you find drivers are willing to do that?

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Yeah, I think it's, I think as long as they're being

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remunerated in a particular way.

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Um, then drivers well, and particularly where it's consistent work.

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Um, you know, I think there is this large pool now of people that are driving

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for ride share companies globally.

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Um, these guys are always, you know, guys and girls are always

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looking for, you know, additional ways of earning income and Mm.

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You know, they, they're happily, you know, pick up this type of work.

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It's amazing, isn't it?

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That what, what you're talking about, because one of the things which

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has been constantly plaguing us, I think as e-commerce entrepreneurs

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the last few years is the, the rise of Amazon and their exceptional

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delivery service and how, yeah.

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How it is almost impossible to compete.

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Um, yeah, that, but what you are talking about actually, if you

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can get it to work, is a way of competing with that because you're

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being on a much smaller scale, right?

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You're doing what Amazon have done.

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In the sense that you're putting these storage centers

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in locations around the uk Yeah.

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And you are using in effect, same day delivery service.

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Um, where Amazon, sometimes I can get same day delivery in the uk, but it's not, it's

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not as much as I thought it would be yet.

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Actually, it's still usually next day.

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Um, if you're a prime customer, So, but what, what I see here is actually all of

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a sudden there's something quite global because I could set up a store small

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storage facility in Sydney if we had enough enough business in Sydney, right?

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Yep.

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Yeah.

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And so then you could start looking at your data and saying, okay, where

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are a lot of my orders happening?

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Um, which locations does it where does it make sense?

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Um, mm Yeah.

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And you could, you know, if you're, particularly if you're doing

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international stuff, you could be holding stock in locations.

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Um, and maybe there's, there's cheaper ways of being able to send

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it there and yeah, so may actually be more efficient in doing it.

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Yeah.

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That's really interesting.

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I think it's a really fascinating idea of getting Uber drivers or whichever,

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you know, I'm sure they're right.

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Yeah, exactly.

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Comes out besides, but getting Uber drivers to be part of your staff at

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a fix rate where they pick and pack from where they are, which gives

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you, it instantly gives you depots all around a specific country.

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And if it makes sense for that city to then offer that same day delivery service,

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I think that's quite an interesting idea.

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Yeah.

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Are there companies successfully doing this?

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Uh, I mean, we see, we see that without, with our business today, particularly,

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uh, in the Australian market.

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Um mm-hmm.

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And, you know, lots of companies that are, are using the Zoom2u platform to

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do that, but also, you know, lots of our Locate2u customers are doing it as well.

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Um, one of the things that we're quite close in being able to release, um,

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we know that, um, you know, getting started with something like this,

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you know, takes a bit of effort.

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Yeah.

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Um, we're actually providing an integration layer from Locate2u.

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We'll connect you to different carriers, essentially across the world.

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And so it will plug into Uber's network, but it will also plug into DoorDash and

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many of these other sort of ride sharing companies that are now offering delivery.

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Um, you can have your orders come to Locate2u, and then it can actually

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send them out to the different, uh, carrier networks across the world.

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And so you don't necessarily have to engage your own drivers.

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I think that's generally the best way you're gonna get the best experience.

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But if you've got overflow work you wanna send out to them or you

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wanna start in that way, that's also one way of being able to do that.

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Which just again, reduces the barriers to entry in a sort of trial test, doesn't it?

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Exactly.

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That's really fascinating.

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I suppose the other part of me is thinking actually, if I was in the

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fulfillment game, So, well, technically I am, we do fulfillment, uh, from our

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warehouse, um, for other companies, right?

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So we say, listen, give us your products.

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We'll ship 'em out for you, especially if they're small.

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Yeah.

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Um, products, we're, we're pretty good at that.

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And so we have, um, customers that use us for fulfillment and we ship

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their products, um, mainly in the uk, sometimes internationally as well.

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And I'm really interested in this as a concept because I, if I

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could, I then, Suppose say, right.

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I can, I can think about this with my e-commerce entrepreneur hat

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on, but I could also think about this with my entrepreneur hat on.

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Yeah, yeah, definitely.

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Um, and start building in effect these sort of mini fulfillment centers,

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um, especially around key cities like London would be an obvious one.

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Maybe Edinburgh.

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Yeah, definitely.

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You know, Manchester and a few of these sort of places where you can then start to

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go, well we can do same day delivery now.

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Yeah, yeah, yeah.

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Um, and then everything else is next day delivery.

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Um, yeah, which would be a massive competition boost,

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I think, um, yeah for you

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. Exactly.

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When, when you're consolidating orders from many companies, um, yeah.

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You know, that allows you to get more volume.

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It allows you to drive density as well, and yeah.

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I, I think that, that definitely makes sense.

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Well, you know, on our, where our warehouse is, there's

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um, there's a unit on our.

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Warehouse estate for want of a better expression, where we distribute from,

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uh, I dunno the name of the company cuz.

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I think overnight, basically trucks come into the compound and drop off parcels

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from just about every single delivery company out there from every to, you know,

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whoever is, is particularly using them.

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And these guys, I think are the last mile they, in effect, yeah.

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Okay.

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Done.

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This kind of thing where it's like they, they have, they must

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be hundreds of drivers picking up parcels, filling their cars with

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parcels, um, and delivering them out.

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And I think.

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It'd be a really interesting experiment to do, just to say, actually we can

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offer same day delivery across Liverpool.

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Yes.

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Um, and, and target that to, I don't know.

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Uh, I'm, I'm just thinking outside my box a little bit here.

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Steve, you've got me thinking now you've got me thinking.

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So it's, it is really fascinating that now with technology,

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Um, uh, that you can do this.

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So I guess is, is the technology prohibitive?

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Is it pretty reasonable?

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Um, I mean obviously you've got locate2u, but what sort of other tech do I need?

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I'm, I'm kind of curious what the tech involvement is.

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Yeah.

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Um, so you're probably gonna need, there's probably two main things.

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One is Yeah, something like Locate2u.

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So something that's gonna do route optimization.

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Um, and that's, that's gonna be really important.

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Uh, but the other thing you're gonna need is something on the checkout

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process that is gonna allow you to allow your customer to choose the

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different types of delivery options.

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Um, and so, you know, for example, on Shopify, Um, we, we have an app

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on there called local Delivery, and what that allows you to actually do

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is it allows the customer to actually select the point of checkout the day

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they actually want the product to be delivered, and then the time window, and

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it will display that information based on the person's postcode or zip code.

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Um, and so in the background you've got a series of rules that says, okay,

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if, um, on this particular day, on this zip code or postcode, we're actually

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offering a delivery time window, and these are the time windows, and these

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are the numbers of, uh, orders that we will accept inside of this time window.

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Um, and so, so you're gonna need a piece of software that's gonna allow you to

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have that sort of customization mm-hmm.

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At the point of checkout.

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Um, and so whether it's on Shopify or you know, WooCommerce or any other e-commerce

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platform, you, you'll need that part.

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And that's, that's the important part.

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And then that will communicate to the customer.

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To say, Hey, this is when your order's actually gonna arrive.

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And limiting the numbers of orders at the point of that time window is

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important because you typically don't have unlimited numbers of drivers.

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You're can have a, a set, a number of drivers.

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Mm-hmm.

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Um, but you also want to be able to change that.

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Order number on certain days.

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So, you know, if you're a florist and you're doing Valentine's Day, you wanna

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be able to spike that on Valentine's Day, and you, you would preplan the number of

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drivers you need at those types of things.

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Um, and so that's, you know, relatively simple to do.

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Um, you know, the local delivery software costs $20 a month, so it's,

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you know, it's, it's very inexpensive.

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Um, and then, yeah, then you.

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You'll need the route optimization.

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Again, that's not that expensive either.

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It's, it's usually on a per driver base, um, and varies in costs, but

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somewhere between sort of 30 to 50, $50 a month, um, per user, thereabouts.

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Right.

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So again, not cost prohibitive at all.

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No.

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It's all fairly straightforward stuff.

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Yeah.

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I mean, what we've seen now over the last, you know, five years in

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particular is that there are products out there that are available to assist

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companies in being able to do this.

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And it's really around e-commerce businesses, figuring out how this

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is gonna work with their business and wanting to make that change.

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And there is effort involved in making this change.

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Um, but then, you know, I think the return on investment is, yeah, the time, but

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also the money is, is, you know, you, you get a return very, very quickly.

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And do you find then that if I, if I, if I'm gonna go to the trouble of investing

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in the tech, which from a monetary point of view is not the, is not the

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monthly cost, it's just the upheaval, I suppose, to the site and the tech

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team getting it all set up, correct?

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Um, it's the change in process, isn't it, with the, with the pick and pack team,

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so you know how orders come through and so, so there's, there's a little bit of

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thinking, I guess, for each company to.

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To sort of go through.

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Definitely, definitely.

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Um, and if I, if I go to the expense of doing that, um, how do you,

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how do you remunerate the drivers?

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What, uh, maybe that's how long is a piece of string, but, uh,

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how does it work for the driver?

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How do they get paid for what they do?

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What sort of cost do I need to have in my head for that?

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Yeah.

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Um, It varies depending on like the product that you're delivering,

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um, but also the distance and how far that driver is traveling.

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But typically, um, you know, the simplest way I would be thinking about

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it is go into, you know, your ride sharing app, type in one location to

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another location, it will tell you how much it's gonna cost and mm-hmm.

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And that, you know, globally, it will tell you that, that will give you a sense of,

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okay, that's the cost on a per distance basis, whether it's kilometer or per

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mile basis, you, you can work that out.

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And so if you think about that and you think about, okay, well if a driver's

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gotta travel, you know, 50 kilometers or 50 miles on a particular day, this

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is what it's gonna cost them to do that.

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And if he's doing that many deliveries inside of that radius, then you can work

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out what that cost cost can look like Now.

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You want to have a cost every time that driver's gotta stop and

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get out of his vehicle, there's time associated in doing that.

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And so you wanna have some money that's available to pay

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for that, that time period.

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Um, and so you generally want to be able to work out, you

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know, it's a fee per delivery.

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Um, and that, that's generally gonna be the best way of being able to do it.

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Um, and you know, I've seen that where it's.

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Yeah, it, it can be as cheap as, you know, in our market.

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You know, I've seen it as five, six, $7 a delivery where a driver's

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delivering 60, 70 parcels in one go.

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Um, where it's other e-commerce businesses has been at 15 to

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20, sometimes $25 a delivery.

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Um, but yeah, and it varies in every market cuz you know, every

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country, obviously the wages are, are gonna be different.

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So again, it is this, um, if you do like same day delivery or, or this sort

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of local delivery, is that something that I, as the e-commerce entrepreneur

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would then charge a fee for to clients?

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Or is that how typically do it?

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Yeah, typically.

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And so what you would do is you would, your price per delivery may

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vary than what you are incurring.

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You would generally fix that cost to your customer, and then you would know

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that you've got enough margin to make sure that, you know, hopefully you

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should be receiving more orders because you're giving, you know, more certainty

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of when this product's arriving.

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Um, but you know, we've seen it work.

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You know, one of our customers, um, is Nespresso.

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And at the point of checkout they've got a number of different

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options that are available.

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They've got the postal network that's available, but if you want it faster,

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you've got these two options that are available and it's, you know, whether

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it's within a three hour time window or whether it's, you know, later

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on in the, in the evening delivery.

Speaker:

Um, and so I think it's, it, yeah, it's giving those customers flexibility.

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Um, And, and knowing you've got, you know, your pricing is set so that you're

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gonna cover that cost or you may lose some, but then you're gonna gain it

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because you're gonna, you know, receive, more, more orders from your customers

Speaker:

by, by having that option available.

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Yeah, and I guess it's one of those things you'll experiment with, isn't it?

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And you'll tweak it and then That's right.

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You can figure it out as you go along.

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That's right.

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Um, and I, and

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I think, you know, if you think about most businesses are spending so much money on

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advertising to try and get customers, Um, and so I would think about it in a point

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of view of like, just take some money and some budget, put it aside and, you

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know, even if you're gonna lose money on all these deliveries, just think about

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it as a marketing expense, um, because you're probably gonna find that you're

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gonna get more customers by doing this.

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Yeah, yeah.

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No, totally.

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It's, it's a really interesting idea.

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Um, and I think it cannot be overstated how well a good delivery

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experience brings a customer back.

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Definitely.

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Um, and how quickly a bad delivery experience will get

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a customer to shop elsewhere.

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Yeah, yeah.

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Right.

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Definitely.

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It's, um, definitely it's, it's one of those things that's usually

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out outside of your control.

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Yeah.

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So you say one of your clients then is,

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and I think, I think actually just, you just said something interesting.

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It's like most e-commerce businesses just think it's the courier fault and they

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leave it and they think they can't solve this problem, and They, blame the courier,

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but I think actually the e-commerce owner can have control over this.

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It's just a matter of setting something up.

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Yeah, it is, isn't it?

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It's just a matter of figuring out.

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Um, how you can, how you can do it based on where your customers are.

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Um, that's right.

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And not, I like it because the, the concept, the tech, the

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ideas give you possibilities.

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Um, whereas, and this is one of the things I love about e-comm and

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technology, it's sort of leveled the playing field, hasn't it really?

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Because for in England, We were stuck with the Royal Mail

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service for the longest time.

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That's right.

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And then different couriers came along and some of them were as bad

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and some of them were worse, you know, just to do worse what it was.

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Yeah.

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Um, and one of them very famously just went, well, let's just change

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our name and it'll con everybody into thinking we're brilliant.

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Again, British probably went, are you mad?

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Um, so, you know, we've still got the courier services.

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Then Amazon came in and.

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One of the interesting things, uh, with Amazon, and you see the little, I saw it a

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little bit in Australia as well actually, when Amazon came in, the delivery

Speaker:

system, which wasn't great at that point in terms of its speed has to catch up

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and has to become efficient because Amazon know what they're doing, right?

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Yes.

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And you and it, and you do see this effect wherever Amazon go.

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A few years later, the delivery network seemed to be.

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But they seem to be a little bit better, uh, wherever they're at.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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And so, uh, I, I do think this is one of those things which is constantly

Speaker:

changing, but the fact now that you can actually start to have your, you can

Speaker:

think there's a number of things that I never thought you would be able to do.

Speaker:

Number one, I didn't realize I'd ever be able to set up my own bank.

Speaker:

Apparently I can, uh, the bank of Matt, if you wanna gimme your money, no problem.

Speaker:

Um, and uh, I can now set up my own haulier, uh, you know, delivery company.

Speaker:

Um, And, and use a preexisting network and plug into that in a way

Speaker:

that actually is, is quite clever.

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Yes.

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Um, yes, I think and I love that.

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I love that about technology.

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I love that about innovation and where we're at at the moment.

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Yeah, yeah, definitely, definitely keeps it all exciting, doesn't it?

Speaker:

If you're an e-commerce entrepreneur.

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It's, it's like Absolutely.

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Um, and in fact, I, I imagine now, I mean we're having this conversation

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in the office cuz I, every now and again, I just go, I think we should

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set up a new e-commerce business because again, that's just my nature.

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Um, and I'm like, Thinking about an e-commerce business, but what, what

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you are in effect talking about now is actually how could I do something

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in e-commerce that's hyper localized and offer a delivery service that

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is unparalleled and unmatched?

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That would be a really interesting thought experiment, wouldn't it?

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Yeah, yeah.

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Yeah.

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It really would.

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It really would.

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So, um, you mentioned, uh, Nespresso and other clients like that.

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How does it work with them?

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Do they send you.

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Um, individual parcels and you sort them out and give them to drivers,

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or do they just use your software and have drivers come to their warehouse,

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or do you like pick and pack for them?

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I'm, I'm curious how you do it with other retail companies.

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Yeah.

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Um, and Nespresso is a really good example.

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Um, here in Australia, they, um, they actually, they've got lots of retail

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stores across the country and they use those as micro warehouses, um mm-hmm.

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And so they draw a radius from that, that retail store.

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Um, and so within that radius, as the person actually goes through the, the

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checkout process, they're entering their details of address information.

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And as they're doing that, it then just shows them the list of delivery options.

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And so if it's, uh, an order.

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That's for same day delivery that would go to the retail store.

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They would do the pick and pack.

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Driver would turn up there and pick that up.

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And that's generally, it's typically time windowed.

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Um, and so the retail store knows, okay, the driver's gonna be picking,

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you know, these five orders up in this time window to actually be delivered.

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And yeah, it works.

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Works really well.

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That's really interesting.

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I'm just thinking about, um, we used to do beauty, um, I sold the beauty

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business about 18 months ago, but one of the things that you, like a lot of

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the beauty brands here in the uk, they have salons that sell their products.

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And so actually they could do in effect the same thing, couldn't they?

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It's like, yeah, yeah.

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We can offer same day delivery.

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Um, on these products and, um, and actually you could do that probably

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around the, around the country.

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So postcode areas, you know.

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Yeah.

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Um, that'd be a really interesting experiment to do.

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I wonder how long it'll be before they start knocking on your door

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and going, oh, Matt, I heard Matt say that I could do this.

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Um, that's really interesting.

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Well, Steve, listen, you've got my, my brain pondering now and,

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and, and racing with ideas.

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What else in this industry is, is happening at the moment that

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we should be thinking of, um, as e-commerce entrepreneurs?

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What should, what else should we be thinking about?

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I mean, I think it is interesting to think about the likes of like chat

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GPT and the impact that's gonna have.

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Um, I think particularly, Uh, customer service wise, being

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able to respond to customers much faster using tools like Chat gbt.

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Um, particularly I think, you know, not necessarily not now, but I,

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I would imagine over the next six to 12 months, um, watching what's

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happening in the AI space, I think is gonna be really important.

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Um, because I think the early adopters of that are gonna, are gonna really

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accelerate their customer experience.

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Yeah.

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Um, so I think a lot's, lot's happening there.

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Um, yeah.

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And I think, you know, I think delivery.

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Now is gonna be what sort of really, you know, makes different e-commerce

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businesses really grow, grow and, you know, excel from their competitors.

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Yeah, no, I think you're right.

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I think this's gonna be one of the standout things.

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And so, um, this has been a really eye-opening conversation, Steve and

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so if people listening want to find out more, if they want to reach out,

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if they wanna find out more about, um, Locate2u, what's the best way to do that?

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Yeah, I mean, you can find out, you can head onto our

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website, which is Locate2u.com.

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It's the number two and the letter u.

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Um, if you wanted to reach out to me directly, um, you can just grab me on

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LinkedIn, just searching Steve Orenstein.

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Um, I'm also on TikTok.

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You can grab me on there as well.

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Um, and, and on YouTube.

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So, um, yeah, happy to connect and, um, yeah, always happy to chat and

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have, you know, provide any advice anyone's looking for and thinking

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about doing this for their business.

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That's fantastic.

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So do check out, uh, Locate2u.com.

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Locate the number two and the letter u.

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We will of course link to all of that in the show notes.

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Uh, Steve, let me close with, um, my final question.

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So, If I may, uh, it's a question I've, I've started asking, uh, a lot of people,

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I'm just really curious with the answer.

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So, um, this show is sponsored by e-commerce cohort, um, e-commerce cohort's

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like a monthly mastermind coaching program that we run, which is, I just love it.

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It's great.

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Got some amazing people in there.

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It's all digital of course, but imagine you are speaking to a room,

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a genuine room, uh, full of cohort members who are keen and eager to

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learn from you and your expertise.

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So you've just done this keynote speech on how to set up same day delivery, be

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hyper localized, and absolutely kill it and trash Amazon in the process.

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That'd be a great webinar title by the way.

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Um, And you've done that webinar and you know the crowd's going wild.

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Go Steve.

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Um, and you get to do that thing they do at the Oscars, which is, you know,

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that sort of speech, which says, I would just like to thank, um, who would you,

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who's had a big influence on you past or present on your business, how you

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see things at the moment that you would sort of bring into that list and why?

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Oh, that's a, that's a big question Matt.

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A big one.

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That's what I say.

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Yeah.

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Oh.

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I mean, I think, you know, over the years, uh, I've had lots of different people

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that have been involved in, you know, providing advice and mentoring me, um,

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you know, at all, all different stages.

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Um, yeah, I mean, I, I couldn't name someone specifically cause there's

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been, I guess there's been so many different people that have provided

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lots of advice, um, along the way.

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That's a good question.

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But I mean, you know, I really think also I.

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I've, I've built, you know, a number of different businesses and I've got

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two businesses running at the moment.

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Both Zoom2u and Locate2u.

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And ultimately it's, it's the teams inside of those businesses

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that do a lot of that work.

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Um, and I've got, yeah, a, a really great team, um, across the,

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across both of our businesses who.

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Work really hard on delivering a really great solution to our customers.

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Um, yeah, and I think, you know, without having a really great team

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and having those people that believe in the vision of what we're trying to

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deliver, um, you don't have a business.

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And so, yeah, I'd have to say the team that we've got, um, yeah, really, really

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helps, uh, our businesses, uh, grow.

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Fantastic.

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That's a good answer.

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Uh, the team that makes the dream work.

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Uh, absolutely.

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Absolutely.

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Steve, listen, thanks for coming on the show, man.

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And uh, no problem.

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It's been, it's been a really interesting conversation and like I

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say, lots and lots of food for thought.

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Um, I'm checking out, locate2u.

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I'm gonna check out the website.

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I'm gonna be talking to the team about same day delivery services, whether

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it's gonna make sense for us, but I'm curious to see whether we can implement

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this in our fulfillment services, um, in a few places around the country.

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That would be a really interesting thought experiment.

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Uh, and I'm really intrigued to see whether I can create a hyper

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localized e-commerce business.

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Um, that would be a really fun experiment.

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So watch this space.

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But listen, Steve, thanks for coming on.

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Thanks for sparking the old gray matter and, and getting me thinking about that.

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No, no worries.

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It's been an absolute pleasure, man.

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Uh, genuinely

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It'd be really good.

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Ah, no problems at all.

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Thanks, Matt.

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Awesome.

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Well, thanks Steve for joining me and also a big shout out to today's

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show sponsor, the e-commerce cohort.

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Remember to check out their free training online at ecommercecycles.com.

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Also, be sure to follow the e-commerce podcast wherever you get your

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podcast from because we have yet more great conversations lined up and I

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don't want you to miss any of them.

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And before I wrap up today's episode, uh, lemme just take a quick moment

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

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If you're an e-commerce entrepreneur or an expert and would like to share

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your insights with our audience, we would love to hear from you.

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Or if you know someone who would make a great guest, just like Steve,

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Then please send them our way.

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Just head over to the website, www.ecommercepodcast.net, and

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all the information is there.

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

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Yes you are.

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It's just a burden you have to bear.

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Steve has to bear it.

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I have to bear it.

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You've got to bear it as well.

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

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

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

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Robin and Tanya Hutsuliak.

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

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you would like to read the transcript or show notes, head over to the

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website ecommercepodcast.net.

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Where again, you can also sign up for the weekly newsletter and

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get all of this good stuff direct to your inbox, totally for free.

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Now that's it from me.

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That's it from Steve.

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Thank you so much for joining us.

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Have a great day wherever you are in the world.

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I'll see you next time.