Welcome to the eCommerce Podcast with me, your host, Matt Edmundson.
Speaker:This is a show all about helping you to deliver eCommerce wow.
Speaker:And to do just that, to help us along, I'm chatting with my very
Speaker:special guest, Neil Hoyne, the Chief Strategist from Google and author of
Speaker:the fantastic book, Converted, which is all about the data driven way,
Speaker:to win customers hearts.
Speaker:And it's actually a great book.
Speaker:I've enjoyed reading it, uh, but we'll get more into that in just a second.
Speaker:So before we get into the conversation, let me just take a moment to let you know
Speaker:that this podcast is brought to you by eCommerce Cohort, the eCommerce membership
Speaker:group, which you should definitely be a part of if you're involved in eCommerce.
Speaker:And one of the benefits, as well as all the expert workshops and usual stuff you
Speaker:get is you get to come along and listen to the live recording of this podcast so
Speaker:when we have amazing guests like Neil you can be watching it before it goes live.
Speaker:You can write all your questions in the comments and if we get
Speaker:chance, we'll definitely ask them.
Speaker:So do check it out at ecommercecohort.
Speaker:com I also want to give a bit of a shout out to SubSummit, which
Speaker:is where I first came across Neil.
Speaker:We were just chatting about that before we hit the record button.
Speaker:Uh, a great show and I know they're doing SubSummit 2024.
Speaker:I will be there again more than likely.
Speaker:They've asked me back again.
Speaker:I don't know why I don't, but apparently I'm going.
Speaker:So come join us.
Speaker:Now let's talk about today's guest, Neil.
Speaker:Uh, Neil Hoyne reigns as the Chief Strategist at Google
Speaker:and has penned the bestseller, Converted, the data driven way.
Speaker:To win customers hearts.
Speaker:With a senior fellowship in Artificial Intelligence at the Wharton School.
Speaker:And a board seat at Purdue University Global, he's quite
Speaker:the scholarly strategist, oh yes.
Speaker:Now beyond the boardroom, he is a patented innovator in marketing,
Speaker:a published contributor to the Harvard Business Review, no less.
Speaker:Uh, and sought after speaker who has dazzled audiences
Speaker:in over two dozen countries.
Speaker:Uh, Neil, welcome to the show, man.
Speaker:It's great to have you.
Speaker:Thank you so much for joining me.
Speaker:Hey, the pleasure's all mine, Matt.
Speaker:Thanks for having me.
Speaker:Oh, no, it's great that you're here.
Speaker:I've been looking forward to this one for a few weeks.
Speaker:Uh, and in full anticipation of our conversation, I've,
Speaker:uh, read the book Converted.
Speaker:Uh, so let's just start by asking you the question I like to ask all authors, what
Speaker:on earth possessed you to write a book?
Speaker:Boredom.
Speaker:It's
Speaker:March 2020 now.
Speaker:That enabled it.
Speaker:That enabled it.
Speaker:Who goes to that?
Speaker:Look, the first time you're writing a book, you get to bask in the ignorance
Speaker:of not knowing the process, right?
Speaker:You think of the end result.
Speaker:I'm going to have a book.
Speaker:And you're like, well, what does it take to write a book?
Speaker:You, you write a lot.
Speaker:You write, I think in this book, 36 -37, 000 words, which I was told
Speaker:fairly light for a business text.
Speaker:I heard they're typically 50 to 60.
Speaker:So maybe I took the easy way out, but it was a little bit larger than
Speaker:that as well, which was a Genesis where, you know, somebody mentioned
Speaker:to me at the beginning of COVID.
Speaker:Uh, where things were in a dire state and also an uncertain
Speaker:state versus what we know today.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Where they said, wouldn't it be strange if, if all your knowledge died with you?
Speaker:Now, this wasn't a comment meant to me.
Speaker:I could take it as such, and that'd be a nice, Oh yes.
Speaker:I have a lot of knowledge.
Speaker:It's valuable.
Speaker:But to anybody.
Speaker:You go through life with these stories and with these experiences and the
Speaker:unfortunate fact is that we often discount the value that those stories
Speaker:and experiences have to other people.
Speaker:We think about them as commonplace because they may be common
Speaker:to us, but unique to others.
Speaker:And so where it became was really just me writing some of these stories and
Speaker:then actually sent some of them out to university students who looked and said,
Speaker:Hey, I wish I knew that when I graduated.
Speaker:Small business owners, some entrepreneurs who said, I didn't know
Speaker:that information that to be honest with you, I took as trivial at the time.
Speaker:I thought, I thought these lessons were common.
Speaker:I didn't think there was anything new there.
Speaker:And so to be honest with you, the only reason the book project
Speaker:happened was because it was never designed to be a book, right?
Speaker:It was originally started just to be, look, I'll put together a
Speaker:collection of stories and lessons that if they're helpful to people.
Speaker:So be it.
Speaker:But there wasn't any pressure to say it needs to be published, it needs to
Speaker:go international, which has been great.
Speaker:It was designed to be a PDF that if somebody reached out to me and
Speaker:said, hey, could I, could I pick your brain about some stories?
Speaker:What would you do if you were me?
Speaker:That I could say, here, here's, here's a couple hours of my time.
Speaker:Enjoy it.
Speaker:And as it turned out, a good friend of mine who wrote a New
Speaker:York Times best selling book called How Google Works, Alan Eagle.
Speaker:He also wrote The Trillion Dollar Coach about a very successful
Speaker:VC out here in the Valley.
Speaker:He looked at this, this PDF, and he said, no, no, no.
Speaker:He's like, you're not putting this on the Kindle store or something else.
Speaker:He said, why don't you send it over to some people I know
Speaker:in the publishing industry.
Speaker:Let them take a look at it and see Do they think that there is a market?
Speaker:Yeah, because I clearly had no perspective sitting behind my little
Speaker:desks thinking there is and 72 hours later we had a contract back from Penguin.
Speaker:Oh, right.
Speaker:To put it into the book that you see before you.
Speaker:But it was very much the spirit that it went into, it's, uh, all the money
Speaker:from the book is donated, uh, to various food pantries around the U.
Speaker:S., there's not a profit motive, it's just kind of a sharing motive to say, I've
Speaker:learned so much from so many other people.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:This is just one channel for getting that information back out to others.
Speaker:Fantastic.
Speaker:And I saw on your website there's like a part two coming.
Speaker:There is, there is.
Speaker:I don't think it's going to be a full book because I can't put
Speaker:myself back through that yet.
Speaker:There will be another book.
Speaker:But instead where it's going is a lot of people have said, hey, you started
Speaker:writing the book in 2020 and while it was designed not to be a flavor of
Speaker:the month style approach, saying it's only relevant for a year or two years,
Speaker:something that's, as a publishing industry calls it, an evergreen title
Speaker:for years where the content is relevant.
Speaker:People have said, Hey, I want to go a little bit deeper into the data.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I want to go a little bit deeper into how I apply this specifically to my business.
Speaker:Give me the step by step guide, things that wouldn't have been
Speaker:appropriate for the book so we left them out, but they're saying, I'm
Speaker:interested in a little bit more.
Speaker:And so actually as recently as last night, uh, I, the microphone's back,
Speaker:the editing is back and we're actually.
Speaker:You know, working together with a small group to piece together even more
Speaker:content for those people that are really curious and say, the book is not enough.
Speaker:Can I get more of this?
Speaker:And that's going to be kind of a choose your own adventure approach through
Speaker:online learning, audio versions and all that coming a little bit later this year.
Speaker:Fantastic.
Speaker:Well, I look forward to it.
Speaker:I genuinely look forward to it.
Speaker:It's, um, and hats off to you, sir, for writing a book.
Speaker:I mean, I've mentioned this before on the show.
Speaker:Listeners will know this.
Speaker:I've been approached a couple of times.
Speaker:I've been in a few conversations about writing a book and it just fills me with
Speaker:dread, uh, the whole, which is why I do a podcast because it's a lot easier.
Speaker:Sure, if it doesn't, there's something wrong with you.
Speaker:Everybody with dread.
Speaker:It's like public speaking, except amplified for years.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You can never get away with it.
Speaker:So.
Speaker:You wrote the book 2020.
Speaker:You're obviously doing this upgrade and you know, the world of digital seems to
Speaker:move forward at a massive rates of knots.
Speaker:Um, although I mean your book fundamentally, I mean you, you deal
Speaker:with data, but you're, you talk a lot about customer relationships.
Speaker:You talk a lot about dealing with people.
Speaker:People aren't linear people.
Speaker:Do you know what I mean?
Speaker:Understand the data, understand your best customers.
Speaker:And we'll get into a whole bunch of that.
Speaker:I've no doubt.
Speaker:So what's changed between the time you wrote the book and now?
Speaker:Um, you know, sort of what are some of the key things that have changed or
Speaker:indeed has anything really changed to the print, the principles, the underlying
Speaker:principles, they're still the same.
Speaker:You know, in going back to the COVID time, there were a lot of assumptions
Speaker:about how things would change.
Speaker:Work from home would become permanent for everybody.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:This would be the way that we would interact.
Speaker:People would move away from big cities.
Speaker:In some cases they have, but that that would be a permanent
Speaker:shift, at least here in Americana.
Speaker:Uh, questions about what industries would survive versus which ones would
Speaker:fall, what restaurants would look like, delivery services being the new preferred
Speaker:channel for interacting with commerce.
Speaker:And what we really see is the more things change, the more things stay the same.
Speaker:There are some things that we've observed that are different.
Speaker:But by and large, when we look at consumer patterns, when we look at
Speaker:how people are working, there are some remaining parts of COVID that, that
Speaker:will change and will continue to change, but still there's those fundamental
Speaker:human behaviors that are the same.
Speaker:And actually, it was a good test to go through and to say, for these
Speaker:predictions we made pre COVID, let's take a look at airline.
Speaker:What happened with lifetime value?
Speaker:What happened to those relationships?
Speaker:And what you find generally is there was some value destroyed.
Speaker:People weren't traveling for a span of a couple of years and
Speaker:that money will not be recovered.
Speaker:But in most cases, your best customers pre COVID are still
Speaker:your best customers post COVID.
Speaker:The marketing interactions, if you're focusing on your great customers and
Speaker:ignoring some of the poor quality ones, those actions would have been the same.
Speaker:And so some differences within the data around how much exactly money we
Speaker:should make off these people, but by and large, what you should do remains
Speaker:the same, which gives you confidence today, even with something so disruptive.
Speaker:The principles still apply.
Speaker:But if you take a step back and have more of the macro lens, what
Speaker:you find is companies, I would say, are more uncertain than ever.
Speaker:I used to have a playbook and my time I've spent, uh, someone looked
Speaker:at my calendar and added it all up.
Speaker:I've spent over the past decade, more than 9, 000 hours meeting
Speaker:with sea levels and boards.
Speaker:And I can tell you that a large portion of those meetings were companies that said,
Speaker:our strategy is to do exactly what we did last year, assuming it's all working.
Speaker:Except let's just grow two or three or five percent or whatever the industry
Speaker:or Wall Street says we have to grow.
Speaker:Let's just do that.
Speaker:And of course there were some waves.
Speaker:Oh, well, we want to transform digitally or now we want AI.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But companies generally just fixate on saying, let's just
Speaker:keep doing what we were doing.
Speaker:We want to keep up with things.
Speaker:We want to modernize things, but we're not going to undercut the
Speaker:foundation by which we were built.
Speaker:And then they come out of COVID and those predictions no longer apply.
Speaker:They're not sure which direction the market is going.
Speaker:They don't, consumers are feeling more pressure on prices.
Speaker:Do they raise their prices?
Speaker:Do they lower their prices?
Speaker:Are their customers still there?
Speaker:What do their customers expect from them?
Speaker:And there's more openness towards thinking about different ways to engage with them.
Speaker:And so what I really see is more general willingness from companies to consider
Speaker:their business models in different ways.
Speaker:To almost use this as a moment to say, with all this uncertainty,
Speaker:let's stop planning for what we're doing over the next week or the
Speaker:next month, and let's take a step back and look at the big picture.
Speaker:How do we want to approach these changes as a business?
Speaker:And I would think, my hypothesis here is that it's driven by the fact that
Speaker:Companies don't believe things are going to return entirely to normal
Speaker:for their customer base and that this isn't something that they can wait out.
Speaker:Before it was an idea, let's just wait out this inflation and everything
Speaker:will be back to the way it was.
Speaker:But that's not the case.
Speaker:Their customers are still there.
Speaker:Their high value customers are still around.
Speaker:But they're trying to think about how they communicate with them.
Speaker:What that relationship looks like and how they drive value.
Speaker:For some, it's a risk.
Speaker:We want to be as conservative as possible, save as much cash as
Speaker:possible, and still wait it out.
Speaker:Others say, while the competition is doing that, now is my chance to
Speaker:excel and do something different.
Speaker:The world is unsettled.
Speaker:Some companies will rise, some will fall.
Speaker:Every organization has to figure out where they want to be in that spectrum.
Speaker:Super powerful and it's fascinating and I mean in life generally without getting
Speaker:too philosophical you know there are definite seasons aren't there there are
Speaker:definite things that you know there are ups and there are downs and the economy
Speaker:is in you know the downturn it's sort of down season um and you can you can
Speaker:do things that cause you to rise And, and emerge stronger from this, you know,
Speaker:because I think a lot of people are being uber conservative at the moment, um,
Speaker:especially with their cash, especially with interest rates being the way they
Speaker:are, the cost of money is in effect gone up, um, it's, it's not as, it's not as
Speaker:easy to go and get people to just say, oh, I'll give you, you know, a million
Speaker:bucks to go and do customer acquisition as it was, because, well, hang on a minute,
Speaker:there's a little, there's a, you know, I've got a little bit of hesitation.
Speaker:You may need that million at some point.
Speaker:You want to spend a million or if revenues drop and marketing's always been.
Speaker:This ties it all together with the book.
Speaker:Marketing generally for a lot of large companies is a percentage of revenue.
Speaker:We can only spend 8 or 10 percent.
Speaker:Anything more, that explains why we're doing great in
Speaker:sales and we can't have that.
Speaker:This is how they benchmark themselves, for better or worse.
Speaker:And then they come back and they say, well, wait a minute, we need
Speaker:to cut budgets because maybe revenue growth is slowing a little bit.
Speaker:And they'll just cut and they'll say, well, marketing has to be cut.
Speaker:By 10%.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And what's odd to me about it is that they cut that 10 percent from
Speaker:their best customers as well as they do their worst customers.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So wait a minute.
Speaker:So you're going to market less to the people that are going to drive
Speaker:60, 70, 80 percent of your revenue.
Speaker:Why would that make sense?
Speaker:Why would you not market less?
Speaker:To the customers, you know, aren't going to buy that are going
Speaker:to be hard cases to win over.
Speaker:And this is where it all comes together.
Speaker:Companies say, because I don't know the difference.
Speaker:I know how many times somebody bought from me, but I haven't put that together
Speaker:into, into a model or a prediction that says that this relationship will last
Speaker:and that I need these people and that I need to continue to message these people.
Speaker:And so, I just go across the board because everybody looks the same to me.
Speaker:And that was really what the core of the book was, just determining
Speaker:who are your best relationships.
Speaker:Who should you spend a little bit less time on?
Speaker:And now those lessons are even more relevant than ever.
Speaker:Yeah, I they are.
Speaker:And it's, it's an interesting one, isn't it?
Speaker:I, again, like you say, this was the core message of the book or one of the
Speaker:core messages that came through to me.
Speaker:Now hopefully this is what you intended.
Speaker:'cause I'm not, you know, I'm, I, I'm not always right.
Speaker:I appreciate that.
Speaker:But for me, I mean,
Speaker:no right or wrong answers.
Speaker:That's part of the fun of the book is that it's
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Everyone gets to view it through their lens
Speaker:Absolutely.
Speaker:And through their business.
Speaker:And so for me, one of the things that came out, um, was.
Speaker:Uh, what did you call it at that sub summit, the romantic persona, the belief
Speaker:that, uh, we can make all customers like us, um, and that all customers
Speaker:are the same, just given enough time and energy, uh, and again, in the book,
Speaker:it's very much a case of, and it's an obvious statement to make, I think,
Speaker:Neil, you know, it's, this is, and no disrespect, it's not rocket science.
Speaker:It's not like this is some new revelation.
Speaker:Not all customers are equal, you know.
Speaker:Um, and you, you give a, you sort of break customers down in the book, don't
Speaker:you, into sort of the percentiles, the sort of the five percentiles.
Speaker:And so the premise is treat your best customers with a little bit
Speaker:more, you know, and think about those and don't worry too much about the
Speaker:customers at the, at the other end.
Speaker:But so often in eCommerce, especially, we treat every customer the same.
Speaker:We send them all the same email, uh, the advertising.
Speaker:We spend across the board is exactly that.
Speaker:It's across the board.
Speaker:So why do you think we do that?
Speaker:Because of where eCommerce metrics came from.
Speaker:I mean, if you go back, and this is really going back 15, 20 years, it's
Speaker:in the early analytics platforms.
Speaker:Urchin was the one that eventually became Google Analytics through an acquisition.
Speaker:They captured data that they had.
Speaker:Not data that told a story.
Speaker:We can measure how many seconds somebody's on a web page.
Speaker:We will surface that metric.
Speaker:How many times somebody clicks on this button, we will give them that.
Speaker:How many times somebody orders, we will give them that.
Speaker:It didn't start from a business lens.
Speaker:Let's figure out how many customers they have and how valuable they are.
Speaker:It simply said we have this data and it left this nascent industry to
Speaker:kind of figure out, well, what does it mean and how do we craft a story?
Speaker:And they did the best they could at that time, but unfortunately it didn't become
Speaker:something that continued to evolve.
Speaker:It became something that became gospel.
Speaker:This is the way we will look at the world.
Speaker:And those habits are hard to change through industries and
Speaker:companies that built their entire business on those metrics because
Speaker:that's what they've grown to love.
Speaker:But then they struggle when they see entrepreneurial companies.
Speaker:Who can look at it from a fresh lens?
Speaker:Let's say I'm not going to target the number, a total number
Speaker:of orders like my competitor.
Speaker:I'm going to target the best customers and all of a sudden the best customers
Speaker:in that industry I'm thinking about Amazon here feel that love that they
Speaker:didn't feel when they were treated like a commodity product by the competitors.
Speaker:Yeah, and then they gravitate towards that direction and that's
Speaker:what moves industries over.
Speaker:Now, to give a little bit of a sense of calm for, for everybody that's
Speaker:listening to this, you mentioned before something that's interesting.
Speaker:You said, well, this isn't rocket science and, and it reminds me of a story.
Speaker:This wasn't included in the book, but, um, there was a, a, a
Speaker:person I met in, inside Google.
Speaker:We have a whole bunch of interesting people with interesting backgrounds
Speaker:and some of our technical services team reached out one time and he
Speaker:wanted just to have, um, he wanted just to have lunch with me and you
Speaker:go into LinkedIn profiles cause you want to see who this person came from.
Speaker:And this person came, uh, with a PhD in physics.
Speaker:So he's reading through his paper, literal rocket scientist, and now
Speaker:he's at Google doing data integration.
Speaker:So when I sat down with him, I had to ask the obvious question, maybe this wasn't
Speaker:the most elegant way to frame it, but I said, look, you're a rocket scientist
Speaker:that now gets people to click on pictures.
Speaker:Explain this to me.
Speaker:What's the story?
Speaker:And he actually commented, and I think he was right on this, where
Speaker:he said, Advertising is harder.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:There's constants in rocket science, right?
Speaker:And you'll teach us at a hundred level university course.
Speaker:Gravity is a constant.
Speaker:Mass is hopefully a constant.
Speaker:You can figure those two out and say, look, you tell me how high
Speaker:you need something in orbit.
Speaker:And I can tell you how much energy you need to push.
Speaker:You get to those fundamentals, but try to say, well, how many
Speaker:clicks do you need someone to make until they're ready to buy?
Speaker:And is that a constant?
Speaker:No, it's going to change every day with every message,
Speaker:product, price, and promotion.
Speaker:And the interesting part, from an outside lens, was somebody looking at it to say, I
Speaker:don't know why marketers feel embarrassed that they don't have this answer.
Speaker:Now they come in and a CFO pushes them and says, you don't know
Speaker:exactly how much this is worth.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And you kind of look at it, and it's like, nobody knows this.
Speaker:And marketers are like, oh, sorry, we'll try harder.
Speaker:And he almost has this lens, which is to be like, no, you get
Speaker:in there and be like, do you know how difficult my job actually is?
Speaker:And this is grounded by the way, not just on speculation, but a research
Speaker:paper that came out earlier this year that looked at to say, well,
Speaker:why for some companies do CEOs have a difficult time investing in marketing?
Speaker:Is it that they look at marketing as an expense?
Speaker:And no, the the actual answer was they looked at marketing
Speaker:as being easier than it was.
Speaker:They didn't know how difficult it was to build a brand and
Speaker:to connect with customers.
Speaker:They thought it was, you flip a switch, turn on the switch, we reach more
Speaker:customers, turn it off, we reach fewer.
Speaker:Build a brand?
Speaker:Well, you spend on brand, and the brand appears.
Speaker:They didn't think about all how those accumulated actions,
Speaker:building those customer relationships, compound over time.
Speaker:And for the companies and the people that can master those
Speaker:interactions, that can be great.
Speaker:Let's call them digital people persons, alright?
Speaker:I can interact with these people and build these relationships,
Speaker:how valuable those traits are.
Speaker:And so in their mind, marketing was simple because marketers try to make it simple.
Speaker:And so for anyone listening here that thinks, wow, this is really complicated.
Speaker:No, nobody has an answer for this.
Speaker:Nobody has a perfect formula.
Speaker:And for those small business owners, what they have is something
Speaker:very special and very valuable.
Speaker:You have the ability to take a step back and really reflect
Speaker:on who their customers are.
Speaker:They're not buried inside a large organization where they'll never
Speaker:talk to these people, where they have millions of people that
Speaker:they can treat like a commodity.
Speaker:Oftentimes, small business owners will be directly into the numbers, will
Speaker:be contacting customers themselves.
Speaker:Sometimes they get postcards handwritten by owners because they take that pride.
Speaker:So, in effect, for all the money and resources large organizations
Speaker:have, It just separates them further and further from the thing that
Speaker:matters most, their customers.
Speaker:And I would take that small business angle any day of the week because they're
Speaker:starting from that point of goodness.
Speaker:Just, I always worry when they aspire to be like a large corporation, be like,
Speaker:I'm going to grind through all this data and have thousands of metrics.
Speaker:No, take a step back and stay as close as you can to those people.
Speaker:Yeah, that's super powerful advice.
Speaker:I think it's interesting, uh, the small business advantage isn't it, is, um,
Speaker:the analogy I've always been given is small businesses like riding in a
Speaker:speedboat, whereas the log Corp, large corporates is like a big cruise liner.
Speaker:You know, the speedboat can, you know, is much more nimble and can
Speaker:adapt and et cetera, et cetera.
Speaker:No, the analogy falls down.
Speaker:I appreciate that if you push it too far.
Speaker:But the, the advantage.
Speaker:The, the small, like the small eCommerce business.
Speaker:Um, I often get asked, how do I compete with Amazon?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So I'm, I'm, I'm here.
Speaker:I've got, you know, I'm turning over a couple of hundred grand a year, and then
Speaker:there's Amazon doing whatever Amazon, everything just sort of gets lumped
Speaker:under the Amazon name, doesn't it?
Speaker:How do I compete with Amazon?
Speaker:And I think.
Speaker:The relationship with your customer and understanding your customer in a
Speaker:unique way and sort of understanding their story strikes me as still
Speaker:perhaps the biggest and best way to compete for want of a better
Speaker:expression with the likes of Amazon.
Speaker:Would that be right?
Speaker:Absolutely.
Speaker:In fact, I'll give you one of my favorite personal case studies and this goes
Speaker:back several years ago but there was a website and they're still around today.
Speaker:They're a great e commerce retailer.
Speaker:You could probably imagine what they do, although I don't think they ship abroad.
Speaker:They're, they're very popular here domestically.
Speaker:bodybuilding.com.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:I love this company.
Speaker:You can probably take a guess as to what they do in the eCommerce space.
Speaker:They sell nutritional supplements, proteins, amino acids, vitamins, all that.
Speaker:And back in the day, the way that I would summarize their business
Speaker:model was very straightforward.
Speaker:They sold the same products at Amazon, as Amazon, but cost
Speaker:more and took longer to ship.
Speaker:It's not a great way to win, but yeah.
Speaker:You're thinking about that in that question.
Speaker:How, to your point earlier, how do they possibly compete with Amazon?
Speaker:Now let's look at it from a customer lens.
Speaker:Let's get away from all the data that Amazon has and all the money Amazon has.
Speaker:They have their own planes to deliver stuff.
Speaker:We may only have FedEx to rely on.
Speaker:But if you think about the Amazon customer experience and you go to
Speaker:their website and you type in protein powders, you get 50, 000 plus results.
Speaker:Every product claiming to be better than every other product, having thousands
Speaker:of reviews, all four stars or higher.
Speaker:And as a consumer how do you make a decision?
Speaker:When you're overwhelmed by so much choice, now they probably realize the same thing,
Speaker:but I talked to that team and I said, well, how did you sort through this?
Speaker:And they said, it was actually a little bit serendipitous.
Speaker:One of our, one of our vendors came to us and said, I have a new
Speaker:product coming into the market.
Speaker:Can I educate consumers?
Speaker:All right, so they said they gave him a couple bucks and they hired somebody to
Speaker:write a bunch of content, not to sell the product, but to educate consumers
Speaker:about how to make a better decision.
Speaker:Filling in that gap that Amazon doesn't provide.
Speaker:Amazon is great if you know what you want to buy.
Speaker:But if you really are looking even for a TV, here are a million TVs.
Speaker:What is important to me?
Speaker:Most likely you're not going to Amazon to make that determination.
Speaker:You go to Amazon when you're ready to buy and you have that price.
Speaker:You will go to Consumer Reports, maybe the New York Times and
Speaker:say, what do you recommend?
Speaker:Because Amazon's not going to tell me.
Speaker:That was a niche that bodybuilding.com filled was that from that one article,
Speaker:I heard they had as many as 80 people at one time writing content, not designed to
Speaker:push people for sale, but to say how we're going to build this relationship with you.
Speaker:It's by building a community first, by educating you, by doing what
Speaker:our competitors don't do, which is treating you like a person, helping
Speaker:you learn about the product and the space, knowing that when it comes time
Speaker:to purchase, we're pretty confident that you're going to stay in this
Speaker:community and give us your business.
Speaker:Because we're working towards it, and that's how they built it.
Speaker:They built a community, and when you saw their customer journey,
Speaker:typically in eCommerce, you see three or four interactions.
Speaker:Get somebody in, somebody buys.
Speaker:Not only was their journey a lot longer, which meant that they had five, ten times
Speaker:more interactions with their customers.
Speaker:But they also were coming through organically.
Speaker:They were searching for content.
Speaker:They weren't searching for the name.
Speaker:They didn't have that brand yet.
Speaker:But they had unique content that other people didn't have.
Speaker:And oddly enough, after that transaction was completed, where we would walk away,
Speaker:you know that thank you page on Amazon.
Speaker:Alright, here, you gave us your money.
Speaker:Here's a confirmation number you won't write down.
Speaker:Off you go.
Speaker:They actually found that their customers were willing to continue
Speaker:to engage with them to continue learning more even between orders.
Speaker:So instead of having this weird sporadic thing where every six months they
Speaker:see their customers, their customers were coming back every day to engage
Speaker:with their brand and their community.
Speaker:And all it took was a differing point of view to say, yeah, we see value in this.
Speaker:Even if customers aren't buying right away, we want
Speaker:to connect with these people.
Speaker:We want to build their trust.
Speaker:We want to earn their business.
Speaker:And that's how we're going to compete against Amazon.
Speaker:Simple as that.
Speaker:Fantastic.
Speaker:I love the story.
Speaker:And I'll check out bodybuilding.com because I've not, full disclosure,
Speaker:I've not shopped on that website.
Speaker:Uh, as you can probably tell from the video, if you're watching, uh, but, um,
Speaker:yeah, that it makes sense, doesn't it?
Speaker:This is how you do it.
Speaker:This is how you compete well.
Speaker:You know your customer, you educate them, you form a
Speaker:community relationship with them.
Speaker:I guess if I'm starting out an eCommerce, or if I'm sort of a young
Speaker:eCommerce business where I feel like I'm rushing around, we have
Speaker:this expression in England, I'm rushing around like a blue arse fly.
Speaker:Just basically means I'm, you know, I'm just, I'm all over the place.
Speaker:How do I approach this idea then of building the relationship,
Speaker:building this community?
Speaker:Um, because I, I, I, just from various conversations I have with
Speaker:people, it feels like overwhelm.
Speaker:It's just another thing to do.
Speaker:Do you know what I mean?
Speaker:And so
Speaker:it's a lot, it's a lot.
Speaker:And as a small business owner, you're wearing multiple hats.
Speaker:Marketing is one thing that you have to do through the course of the day.
Speaker:Here's, I would give two pieces of advice.
Speaker:One is, remember the goal is to be better, not to be perfect.
Speaker:Now in a marketing area that I live in, we live in auctions where
Speaker:people are not rewarded with the top position in the auction because
Speaker:they have the best information.
Speaker:They're rewarded because they have better information than everybody else.
Speaker:And so the goal is always just to be incrementally better than the other small
Speaker:businesses that you're competing with.
Speaker:To be better to your customers.
Speaker:And that's a gradual process, but I always look at it as a term
Speaker:goes, 1 percent improvement every day is better than sitting around
Speaker:for a year, two years, trying to figure out how to get to a hundred.
Speaker:I don't think anybody can get to a hundred.
Speaker:So sometimes I always follow that rule to say, is it better for my business?
Speaker:Did I change my business for the better today?
Speaker:And that's enough for me.
Speaker:The second is when we think about, you know, businesses as a whole,
Speaker:here's something interesting that, um, I think Silicon Valley
Speaker:honestly has lost over the years.
Speaker:Uh, one of the more popular.
Speaker:Uh, terms around here, especially with business models is all about scale, right?
Speaker:How do you take this and scale it out to a billion people?
Speaker:It's a great idea.
Speaker:And often lost in there is, is because of a great compromise, which is, well,
Speaker:we can't write individual content for a billion products, so we won't
Speaker:write individual content and we can't service customers one to one, so we'll
Speaker:introduce chatbots, which are miserable.
Speaker:But, but then we can reach a billion people.
Speaker:And there's this great compromise to say, in order to reach everybody, these
Speaker:are all the things we can and can't do.
Speaker:And I was talking to a restaurant owner in New York City.
Speaker:And I was like, what does scale mean to you?
Speaker:And he said, here's what scale means.
Speaker:And this is where we find success.
Speaker:And he's been very successful over the course of his career.
Speaker:He says, I look at what an experience could be if I was
Speaker:the only person working in that restaurant and one customer came in.
Speaker:And they were the only customer I was going to see that day and how great I
Speaker:could make that experience for them.
Speaker:I could learn who they were, what they wanted.
Speaker:I could prepare food for them.
Speaker:And then a second customer comes in.
Speaker:Now how do I make sure that both customers receive the same great experience,
Speaker:the best I can possibly deliver?
Speaker:And then how do I do that for five or for 10 or for 50?
Speaker:And effectively it's letting your values of what great looks like
Speaker:of the business you want to build.
Speaker:Drive more than the technology.
Speaker:It's not saying, Oh, I can build a chat bot.
Speaker:I don't need to talk to my customers.
Speaker:I can give them a QR code.
Speaker:I don't need to print menus.
Speaker:It's saying really what's the experience you want to deliver
Speaker:and being uncompromising in getting that to your customers.
Speaker:Whereas other companies are simply saying, what's the cheapest way
Speaker:to service millions of people.
Speaker:Because customers feel that way, and that's a unique advantage
Speaker:of small businesses, is that they can look at that lens.
Speaker:Whereas other businesses, you realize how you feel.
Speaker:I'm a number, right?
Speaker:I'm a CRM ID.
Speaker:I'm a loyalty program number.
Speaker:They have no idea who I am or what I want.
Speaker:Once a company is able to do that, and just to give them a little bit more
Speaker:attention and learn who they are and what their interests are, to personalize
Speaker:to their needs, it's a lot better.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So I love one of the companies out here, Chewy.
Speaker:They send handwritten cards to their, their customers.
Speaker:And at first I got this and I thought this exact question
Speaker:from a Silicon Valley mindset.
Speaker:I'm like, how the hell does this scale?
Speaker:I'm like, you can't possibly do it.
Speaker:And you start thinking from a technology lens, you're like, they must be printing
Speaker:all these cards and handwriting, right?
Speaker:So you're holding it up to the light.
Speaker:You're like, do I think somebody actually read it and wrote this card?
Speaker:And then you, you start Googling it and people have all these conspiracy theories.
Speaker:They're like, and someone actually pointed out, you know, here's a machine that holds
Speaker:a real pen and will draw on handwriting.
Speaker:And so I reached out, I reached out to Chewy and I said, you have to
Speaker:explain to me, how does this work?
Speaker:And they said, here's how it works.
Speaker:Everybody in the organization, all the way up to the CEO has a certain
Speaker:amount of time every week where they write cards to our customers.
Speaker:I was like, how do you prove the ROI?
Speaker:They're like, we don't know.
Speaker:We just know that our customers love it and it connects with our customers.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Sometimes art comes before the science.
Speaker:Eventually we'll prove the ROI of these interactions but what we know
Speaker:is there are thousands of threads online where customers are posting
Speaker:pictures of the cards they received.
Speaker:And we don't go back and say, well this is worth exactly 15 cents.
Speaker:We say, with this is the relationship we want to have with our customers.
Speaker:And the same thing carries forward.
Speaker:If you have an automatic subscription.
Speaker:And you cancel it because, unfortunately, maybe your pet died.
Speaker:They could say, oh, customer churned, off they go.
Speaker:They take a step back and they say, look, the customer's gone, there's
Speaker:no more revenue from this customer.
Speaker:We're still going to write a card with our condolences.
Speaker:We're going to spend the time to do that because we want that type of relationship.
Speaker:Just the same.
Speaker:If you had an individual mom and pop pet shop on any business street, and you
Speaker:knew something happened to one of the customers that came in every day, that
Speaker:may be the same way you approach it.
Speaker:And small business owners, whenever I talk to them, they feel reinvigorated.
Speaker:This is the passion that brought them into the business that they
Speaker:felt was lost in technology.
Speaker:The real message is to keep that passion and force technology to find ways to
Speaker:deliver that to your customers or not.
Speaker:I remember as you talked, One, in the early days of one of our
Speaker:beauty businesses, uh, which I sold a couple of years ago, but we had
Speaker:this, this beauty business and we did all the email marketing internally.
Speaker:We had our own email server, which we will just, and so we got all the bounce backs,
Speaker:which you don't get if you use like Aweber and Klavio and all of those kind of guys.
Speaker:You get the, you try to reply to a message and you get the no reply ad.
Speaker:It's like, how hard is this to go to somebody's inbox?
Speaker:You send something to mine.
Speaker:I can't respond back.
Speaker:Yeah, it's fascinating, isn't it?
Speaker:But we would get all the bounce backs.
Speaker:And the thing that we got that we noticed was, um, because we
Speaker:were a beauty brand, we would get quite a few emails from customers.
Speaker:Um, you know, the sort of the out of office emails going,
Speaker:I'm on maternity leave.
Speaker:And we were like, After a while, it took a little while for the light bulb to come
Speaker:on Neil, I'm not gonna lie, but after a while the light bulb came on, and so
Speaker:all we did was we sent out a free care package to anybody, because we knew their
Speaker:address, and we put in there some like, you know, beauty products and stretch
Speaker:cream, and we even had little baby grows, you know, sort of little designs.
Speaker:We put it in a box, it cost like a few pounds, you know, like
Speaker:less than five bucks to make each box, and we sent those boxes out
Speaker:with no agenda, just sent it out.
Speaker:Um, all because technology at that time could tell me if
Speaker:they were on maternity leave.
Speaker:Well, I can't begin to tell you how much good will that That
Speaker:one act gave us, you know, yeah,
Speaker:it's, it's what, it's, it's what we talk about.
Speaker:It's taking those hints from customers, what they're sharing with you and
Speaker:thinking about in a personal context, what you would do if a customer comes
Speaker:into your store, a good customer says, Hey, I'm not going to be around.
Speaker:I'm having a baby.
Speaker:Wouldn't it be bizarre?
Speaker:You get that information, you get that hint, just as you did that auto
Speaker:reply and you're like, Hey, Okay.
Speaker:You just walked away.
Speaker:No, congratulations.
Speaker:No, that's wonderful.
Speaker:I'm not trying to engage him on that subject, but just thinking
Speaker:about yourself, oh, all right.
Speaker:Uh, I guess we'll suspend your account for 90 days.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Is that cool?
Speaker:You automatically resumed.
Speaker:That, that is, and here's, I want to be clear because it's not to say
Speaker:for some companies that have been successful, some companies have been
Speaker:successful with this very mass market Efficiency driven approach and for the
Speaker:companies that decide to pursue it.
Speaker:So be it really.
Speaker:I think the revelation, this ties back to those early comments is that.
Speaker:Now that we're in this very different economic condition and things are
Speaker:uncertain, a lot of companies are saying, I need a strategy that's different
Speaker:than my competitors to be successful.
Speaker:I can't fight over pennies and clicks.
Speaker:I want something where I find customers that ideally will stick with me
Speaker:through this difficult time, that will pay more money for my products,
Speaker:that I will have better relationships for, that I don't need to, and I'll
Speaker:be honest even as a marketer, that I don't need to continue marketing to.
Speaker:In order for them to come back or that no matter how much my competitors send
Speaker:the messages, they say, I don't care going back against that bodybuilding.
Speaker:com example.
Speaker:I'm happy to pay a higher price.
Speaker:I'm happy to wait longer for shipping.
Speaker:Because I feel connected with this company.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And to think that's the foundation by which you want to build your business on.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Fantastic.
Speaker:So how would you, uh, and I, I mean, I kind of know the answer.
Speaker:I've read the book.
Speaker:I've, um, and I, I enjoyed the, some of the, one of the things you said at Sub
Speaker:Summit, but let's, how would you build relationships with your customers using.
Speaker:You know, in an eCommerce setting, specifically, I guess, this is a
Speaker:bit of a loaded question, Neil, so let me just get straight to it.
Speaker:The thank you page, one of the things you said at SubSummit was, uh, and you,
Speaker:you alluded to it earlier, on the Amazon thank you page, you're given a number
Speaker:which you never write down and that's it.
Speaker:Um, what can we do there specifically, I'm just thinking of a simple tactic here,
Speaker:Neil, you know, what can we do there which helps us to start build relationships?
Speaker:Well, I mean, one of the cornerstones of relationships is being able to
Speaker:exchange information and thoughts.
Speaker:If you and I were talking here, and you were asking questions, and I
Speaker:wasn't responding That wouldn't be a great conversation and and oftentimes
Speaker:that's what happens with e commerce players because there's that well worn
Speaker:understanding That is if we ask a lot of questions, they're not going to buy
Speaker:our product Mm hmm people know if I add additional questions on to my checkout
Speaker:flow, they may not buy and that's really what my thing is At the moment.
Speaker:Let's keep them focused.
Speaker:No distractions at all for future value.
Speaker:Keep them focused at the task at hand And so what we have to find are
Speaker:where are there other ways where we can carve out time to understand more
Speaker:about our customers and their needs that aren't going to directly compete
Speaker:with maybe the short term goals that we need to keep the lights on.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And so that's where the thank you page is actually an interesting area because
Speaker:at least for eCommerce, the height of trust is relatively speaking for any
Speaker:transaction is after they give you money.
Speaker:I really hope you deliver the product I just purchased and
Speaker:I hope it's what I expected.
Speaker:Because there it goes.
Speaker:I just handed it over.
Speaker:I handed over my money to you.
Speaker:And what does that do?
Speaker:At the end of that, this is where it becomes really short sighted.
Speaker:It was like, I got exactly what I needed.
Speaker:Off you go.
Speaker:Like imagine just how bizarre that might be.
Speaker:You meet somebody, can I have your phone number?
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:Here it is.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Bye.
Speaker:And then they walk over and start talking to someone else.
Speaker:It's like, no, we had a great conversation going on.
Speaker:You got what you wanted and then off you went.
Speaker:And so what I encourage eCommerce companies to do is, first of
Speaker:all, never turn away a customer.
Speaker:I don't care where they are in that process.
Speaker:If they just spent money with you, it doesn't mean the
Speaker:transaction or that moment is over.
Speaker:And so you have that thank you page, which is where the basic place to start,
Speaker:which is to say, all right, you just got captured a whole bunch of money.
Speaker:What next?
Speaker:Do you let them go until next time they need to buy?
Speaker:For some companies, they use it to say, I'm gonna use this time to share
Speaker:more about what's going to happen.
Speaker:Domino's Pizza does this great, where they say, all right, you just
Speaker:placed your order for your pizza.
Speaker:Here's who has the order.
Speaker:Here's the steps it's going through.
Speaker:They'll tell you every step of the way, the person who has your order.
Speaker:eCommerce companies will sometimes say, You just ordered a sweater.
Speaker:Let me give you the process of how that sweater is going from a sheep
Speaker:all the way to your front door.
Speaker:We're going to show you pictures of the factory, that process.
Speaker:Why?
Speaker:Because it turns out that when people understand what's going
Speaker:on behind the scenes, they value the quality of that product.
Speaker:They value that company higher and are more likely to return.
Speaker:Others use it as a moment to deepen the conversation.
Speaker:They say, instead of giving you that blank page, can I ask
Speaker:you three or four more things?
Speaker:How did you find us?
Speaker:Who else do you buy from?
Speaker:Again, you just, you completed the conversion.
Speaker:So you're not going to worry about them going someplace else.
Speaker:The worst that can happen is they go back to what you've been doing all the
Speaker:time, which is they close the window, but you're surprised as to how many people
Speaker:actually want to respond and provide data.
Speaker:What can we do better as a company to service you?
Speaker:What did you like the most?
Speaker:That's the best time to ask for more information because it's
Speaker:just otherwise the alternative is you're sending them away.
Speaker:The only thing that I offer to people is sometimes people
Speaker:become very procedural about it.
Speaker:They'll put net promoter score on a zero to ten scale, how likely are
Speaker:you to recommend this to a friend?
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:And that's all they ask.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Can you write a review on Trustpilot for us before?
Speaker:You actually get our product, you just got our money, you
Speaker:haven't seen our product, but tell everybody we're a five star company.
Speaker:Keep that area fluid.
Speaker:Ask questions, not so that you can get a nice chart that benchmarks
Speaker:it, but ask questions that inspire and develop your curiosity.
Speaker:What else could we do?
Speaker:Hey, what do you think about this creative we're thinking about running?
Speaker:Hey, here's a product we haven't released yet.
Speaker:Change those questions up.
Speaker:Because you want the answers not to be used for more methodology,
Speaker:but to inspire what you say next to that customer in that relationship.
Speaker:Imagine if you're launching a new product or thinking about a product.
Speaker:Hey, what would you think about this?
Speaker:And now having a signal to say, I can go back to this customer in the future
Speaker:because I've already indicated interest in something that I was building.
Speaker:That's what you want to do.
Speaker:Again, bringing it back to the physical store metaphor.
Speaker:Somebody comes in, Hey, do you want to see something we're working on?
Speaker:What do you think?
Speaker:Do you think we should bring these types of products in?
Speaker:Would you be interested in that?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Then you get to give them a call later on to say, hey, we took your
Speaker:advice and we're bringing in it.
Speaker:How great that must be.
Speaker:And even in the, in most rudimentary sense, it's still better than
Speaker:saying, thank you for your money.
Speaker:Off you go.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And so sometimes it's just directing us to say there's opportunities to
Speaker:engage these customers at parts of the funnel that we didn't think about.
Speaker:So if you bring that awareness, if the only change you make today is you go to
Speaker:your thank you page and you ask a survey question that you change every week.
Speaker:And you look at the results just as an owner to say, how
Speaker:can I improve this business?
Speaker:And that's enough value to start because so few companies do it.
Speaker:Yeah, it's, I've, when I heard you talk about this at Subsummit, I'm
Speaker:like, why have, we've, we've tried various things on the thank you page.
Speaker:Um, uh, educational stuff.
Speaker:We do videos and we, we do seasonal videos and they're quite, um, Quite unpolished.
Speaker:It's me holding my iPhone, you know, in quite a selfie format or
Speaker:whatever and they're good and we get good interaction with them.
Speaker:But then this idea of taking the conversation further, asking a few
Speaker:questions, I thought was super powerful.
Speaker:And, um, so thank you for that.
Speaker:That was my, uh, one of my key takeaways from, uh, Subsummit, uh, that we
Speaker:implemented in, uh, the business.
Speaker:Um, listen, Neil, I'm aware of time.
Speaker:I'm aware you're a very busy man.
Speaker:If people want to reach out to you, if they want to connect with
Speaker:you, if they want to find out more, what's the best way to do that?
Speaker:I mean, you can put my name into Google and one of the first
Speaker:results are going to be either my LinkedIn profile, which is fine.
Speaker:I certainly answer messages there to the best of my ability.
Speaker:It also allows you to access just Random content I have nothing to sell
Speaker:or promote, but that seems to be, that is the mass market approach.
Speaker:But also if, if you, there's a message, you know, the message
Speaker:function, or if you want to send me an email, it's just hello at neilhoyne.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:I'm happy to answer those messages.
Speaker:Only thing that I generally tell people is that in answers, if it's something
Speaker:valuable, I always try to figure out a way to bring it out to the community.
Speaker:And so oftentimes those messages, and I always get permission first, but I like
Speaker:to have those conversations say, How do we all learn from each other together?
Speaker:I learn as much from the people that reach out to me as people say they
Speaker:may learn from me in my lectures or my books or what have you.
Speaker:And so it's always part of that conversation.
Speaker:I always invite people that are listening to this one to continue it on other
Speaker:mediums wherever it's helpful to them.
Speaker:Fantastic.
Speaker:Fantastic.
Speaker:Well, listen, Neil, I really appreciate you taking the
Speaker:time to come on the show, man.
Speaker:And, uh, Oh, it's been great.
Speaker:Loved, loved, loved the conversation.
Speaker:And again, Neil, I have copious amounts of notes here on my,
Speaker:uh, on my note taking device.
Speaker:Uh, it's been, it's been fantastic.
Speaker:So thank you so much for coming on.
Speaker:Well, that's it.
Speaker:That's another fantastic conversation finished up.
Speaker:A huge thanks to Neil again for joining me today.
Speaker:Also, a big shout out to today's show sponsor, the eCommerce Cohort.
Speaker:Remember to check them out at eCommerceCohort.com and be sure to follow
Speaker:the eCommerce Podcast wherever you get your podcasts from because we've got yet
Speaker:more great conversations lined up and I don't want you to miss any of them.
Speaker:Oh, no, I don't.
Speaker:Now If no one has told you yet today, let me be the first person to tell you,
Speaker:you are awesome, yes you are, created awesome, it's just a burden you have to
Speaker:bear, I've got to bear it, Neil's got to bear it, you've got to bear it as well.
Speaker:Now the eCommerce Podcast is produced by Aurion Media, you can find our
Speaker:entire archive of episodes Episodes on your favorite podcast app.
Speaker:The team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon and
Speaker:Estella Robin and Tanya Hutsuliak.
Speaker:And our theme song was written by Josh Edmondson.
Speaker:And as I mentioned, if you would like to read the show notes and
Speaker:transcripts, she can find all of that, all the links, everything on the
Speaker:website at www.ecommerce podcast.net
Speaker:. That's it from me.
Speaker:That's it from Neil.
Speaker:Thank you so much for joining us.
Speaker:Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world.
Speaker:I'll see you next time.
Speaker:Bye for
Speaker:now.