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Welcome to the eCommerce Podcast.

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My name is Matt Edmundson, and we are chatting today about all

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things eCommerce, as you would probably expect, but specifically.

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We are talking to, uh, a, an absolute legend, uh, Jordan West about TikTok shop.

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We're gonna get into all of that and if you're new to the show very well and

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welcome to you, make sure you like and subscribe and do all of that sort of good

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stuff 'cause it's great to see you here.

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Um, and of course to stay right off the bat, you, if you haven't done

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so already, come connect with me on LinkedIn, connect with Jordan on LinkedIn.

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Jordan, you are perhaps one of the busiest men on LinkedIn.

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It seems you, you have been killing it recently.

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You know it's funny, I tried to hire somebody to help me.

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Um, and so I was like, okay, I'm gonna train you.

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I'm gonna give you the ideas and I'm gonna train you to write like me.

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And it was three months and I didn't publish a single one.

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And it took me so long.

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And I was like, and I realized, I'm like, now there's some things that

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you can, that you can outsource.

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People would argue, yeah.

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Yeah, go ahead.

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You can outsource your writing if you, if you want.

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I think that there's some things that really depends and so my reach actually

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interestingly, went down during that time as I was trying to go back and forth

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with him on this sort of stuff immensely.

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And I was like, oh yeah, that's right.

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There's some things you can outsource, some things that you

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cannot and that you should not.

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Right.

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And for me, I think that writing is one of the things that I love to do.

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Um, I was gonna call it a superpower.

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I don't know if it's a superpower.

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I wouldn't say I'm like.

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A, a great writer.

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I think I just, I love communicating and I love sharing things that come up

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throughout the day because I have so many different conversations, whether it's with

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like consulting clients or at our agency

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or, you know, uh, anything or with like really smart people like you where

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I'm like, Ooh, I need to share this.

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I need to share this now.

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That's, that's the only reason that I prolifically post on LinkedIn.

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it's that, but it's, I, I mean, I, I love it and I, I, you know, it's great to

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follow it and, and, and connect with it.

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And I think it's, um, the, the way you write, I'm, I'm always, I'm

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always drawn by how well you'd, I dunno if you do it intentionally,

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but the whole sales side of things.

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Like, Do you know what I mean?

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It's, you, you do the whole fear of missing out thing really.

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Well, you do the whole, I'm drawn in by the information and if I

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don't get involved in this or if I don't stay connected with you, then

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I'm like, I'm gonna be the biggest loser on the planet kind of thing.

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And, and it's like,

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I, don't mean to do that, Matt.

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no, I don't.

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And I, but I, I don't think it's intentional, but I think you do.

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It just comes across super well, you know, and I can, so I can

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see why your reach is growing.

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'cause I think that draws people in the way you do it.

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Hmm.

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Well that's super nice.

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It's, it's also interesting, and I know, you know, this is the, the

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e-comm podcast, the eCommerce Podcast.

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Okay.

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So don't worry, we're gonna talk about eCommerce here, but, but I think that

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there's something very interesting about you and me being non-Americans, right?

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And that, that we can.

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Like, I've often thought, why are Canadians specifically, and I think

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that, I think that British are similar to this, really good marketers to Americans.

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Like I, I find I can actually talk to Americans like we have, well basically all

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American clients at Social Commerce Club.

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All of my consulting that I do, it's all American brands

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and for some reason I think it's this outside the Jar approach, right.

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That you can see because I will see I've, I've had.

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American copywriters try and work for Canadian brands before,

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and I'm like, no, no, we don't.

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We don't go for that.

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We don't like go for those.

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No, we don't go for those little tricks.

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Right.

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Versus like, you know, you and I grew up watching faulty towers.

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Right?

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Like we

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yes.

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That's so true.

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Yeah.

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Yeah,

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Right.

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And like, like think about like the greatest comedies of all time.

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Canadian and British.

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Right.

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And the comedians of our day.

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Right?

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Like, like look at Schitt's Creek, right?

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For so long, right?

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This was like a Canadian show on CBC, our little funny channel that we have, right?

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And like we all watch Schitt's Creek 'cause we're like, oh, this is hilarious.

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And then the rest of the world sees it and it's like, oh, this is brilliant.

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I don't exactly know what it is.

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This is something I actually wanna do a documentary on you.

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You asked, oh, what are you up to these days?

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That's another thing.

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I wanna raise money for a documentary.

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On why there's so many outsized, there should be 10 x the amount

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of funny Americans as there are Canadians, but there's not, the

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amount of famous Canadians that are comedians is just crazy.

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Um, and I think it's very similar for, for the British.

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So anyway, big rant to say I'm pumped to talk about e-commerce today.

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Yeah, that's absolutely.

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And comedy.

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We should just do the comedy podcast.

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Yeah.

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Do you know a chap called Peter Murphy?

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Lewis?

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Oh man, sounds so familiar.

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And I, I'm, I'm, I'm blanking.

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Not to put you on the spot, but,

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um, Peter is brilliant at the whole documentary type stuff and he, um, he,

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he helps, he, he makes documentaries specifically about nursing homes and

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puts 'em on LinkedIn and, um, puts a story on LinkedIn and he, he just,

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Peter just fascinates me with the way that he thinks and, and stuff.

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So he, you don't want him to do a documentary connect with Peter because

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he would be an interesting chap to talk

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Well, you heard it here first, folks.

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yeah, yeah.

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when you see this happening and coming together, it's gonna be like, oh.

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It just happened here.

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So let's talk about e-commerce Jordan, 'cause that's what

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we do first and foremost.

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Um, social Commerce club.

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Let's talk about that.

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That's what you do.

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You've got your agency.

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Let's give people a little bit background about you.

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'cause this is the second time you've been on the show from memory or the

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third.

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It.

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is.

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And it was a long time ago, Matt, like you and I met a long

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and we met through your podcast.

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Yeah.

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We did.

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Um.

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So there was a time actually where I was growing a previous agency.

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It was called Mindful Marketing.

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And I, I was growing that agency and here were the two ways that I grew it.

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I went on podcasts and I had people on my podcasts and I would have

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like multiple people and I would just have brands come on, right?

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And that's how I grew.

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And then I would go, because I owned brands and I would go

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on other people's podcasts.

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And so I'm sure I just reached out to you.

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I think I went on something like a hundred podcasts in one year and it was crazy.

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The amount.

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Of conversations that I had and the amount of just like, just

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incredible, um, insight that I was able to gather from, from both sides.

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And so that's really where we met.

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And, and you know, from there, there was a couple iterations of the agency.

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I'm gonna be honest with you guys.

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I hate running an agency.

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I hate having

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and me both, bro.

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You and me both.

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I like, I, you know, Friday I had to have this emergency meeting with my team

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because somebody on our team was stealing.

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Like, I'm like, how?

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Like you are and, and of course it was an American, of course.

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You know, it's like only times I've ever been sued Americans.

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We would never do that.

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You know?

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yeah.

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No, we'll just have a conversation and just like normal people would.

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Yeah.

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Exactly.

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You'd just be like, oh, hey, should we just talk about it?

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Like, so, so I, I don't love, so what I love is growing something and, and.

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Envisioning something and then handing it off to people.

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What I don't like is the one to 10, right.

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I love zero to one.

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So my team hates me because I'm always coming up with new things.

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Right.

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And new, new ways to go.

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And so this social commerce club was an iteration of that, right.

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And what I saw was a new way that people shop and, and I'll tell you how I saw it.

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I watched my wife on her phone and I watched her scrolling.

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And I watched the steps that she would take while scrolling reels to then go

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over and straight to go buy things.

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And I was like, this is really interesting.

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And then I saw her on TikTok and I saw the same thing happening and I was

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like, oh, this is that on steroids.

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Then I started to watch other people on TikTok and the way that they were

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interacting, and I always thought to myself, why is TikTok so ridiculously

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bad at converting customers?

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Right?

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Because we, we all know from post, sorry, not from post purchase

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survey, from attribution, right?

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It's, it's virtually a zero.

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Like you can get, maybe get a one return on ad spend on TikTok maybe, right?

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Like with, with e-comm, it's very, very difficult.

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When TikTok shop came around, I thought, okay, this is kind of interesting.

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And at first when people told me about it, I was like, well, this is just, this is

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just like meta shops like big deal, right?

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Like one other place for people to check out.

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This does not change the game until I realized what they were doing.

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And when I realized that influencers on the platform, which I'm now going

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to from now on call creators, right?

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We're gonna call them creators, not influencers.

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I think they're like salespeople on the platform when they're incentivized

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to get, uh, they're incentivized to make a sale on the platform.

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I realized, oh my gosh.

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Affiliate marketing is finally here in e-comm, right?

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Because previously affiliate marketing just didn't really work in e-comm

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in the same sort of way, right?

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Like the, the attribution was so bad that it just didn't

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follow in the same sort of way.

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And I realized, oh my gosh, this, this changes everything.

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Yeah, it's um.

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It is interesting listening to you talk about, number one, I'm not a big

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fan of running agencies myself, right?

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So I just don't do it.

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Uh, just let, let other people do that.

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I used to be the zero to one guy.

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Um, but I don't do that anymore.

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Um, I'm much better at helping companies.

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Who are already well established.

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Do you know what I mean?

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And,

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and I'd, so we've started doing this whole acquisition thing.

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Um, so we'd, there's some big announcements come in.

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Some companies we've, we've, uh, one company in particular we, we've sort

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of acquired recently and, and, and, and, and invested in, which is great.

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So it's, it's interesting listening to the evolution of this, and I'm,

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I'm smiling because I just couldn't.

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You are watching your wife shop on TikTok.

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I don't even know if my wife knows what TikTok is.

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Right.

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So

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I think that just might be an age thing.

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I think you're a younger family than we are.

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Um, but I, I, I get what you're saying about affiliate marketing

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because apart from the, the outliers, you know, there's always a story

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of one person that did really well,

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you know, and every affiliate software company tells you that story and

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you think, well, I'm gonna kill it.

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And it's, it can be quite tricky.

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I'm curious.

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Um, then what you have, because this is going back to what you said about

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LinkedIn, a lot of what you post on LinkedIn is about killing it with, um,

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TikTok shop, um, social commerce is, you know, your social commerce club

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connected to that, changing it from, uh, to, to creators rather than influencers.

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are you seeing?

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So, here's the crazy thing that I'm seeing, right?

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Number one, so we work with a lot of big brands, right?

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So a lot of household names, uh, out there who are trying

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to get onto social commerce.

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Now, one of the main reasons that we are doing that is, is

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we're at Social Commerce Club.

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We just happen to be the adults in the room, right?

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There's a lot of agencies out there that sprung up from people who understood

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TikTok but didn't understand business.

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And so that was really difficult, right?

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For a lot of, a lot of brands got burned by some small agencies and, uh, and not

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saying that, that these, some of these young guys couldn't do it, but it just

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wasn't the same as them coming to us.

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I think that the other thing too that we saw is everyone on Amazon wanted to

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hop onto TikTok shop because they're like, oh, this is the next big thing.

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The problem was the Amazon people actually didn't do very well because

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Amazon is a demand capture channel.

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TikTok shop is a demand gen channel, right?

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And so us that were in direct to consumer and started in direct to consumer.

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And remember, my brands that I've owned over the years are all

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basically in apparel and accessories.

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Right.

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Apparel and accessories in D two C is playing on hard mode.

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I, I never really realized until, until I, I went and played in some other

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industries and I was like, oh man, it'd be so nice to be able to do problem solution.

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Like, I would love that apparel and accessories do not do problem solution.

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That is not how it works.

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And so what, what I, what I realized is that TikTok shop.

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Was this whole new demand generation channel, and it was finally the way that

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we could create some virality around products and test products in the market.

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Now, I, I wanna talk about one, one brand specifically

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here, and this is a shoe brand.

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They came to us like about, you know, what was a little, little less than

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a year ago, they came to us, zero searches on the platform, right?

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This is a very well known shoe brand.

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Just so you guys know, like billion dollar brand.

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Yeah.

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They had zero searches on the platform whatsoever.

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They came to us and they said, Hey, look.

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We know you guys have this crawl, walk, run sort of approach.

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We just wanna run.

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We're like, okay, we can do that.

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Here's the budget.

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Right?

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And so we, you know, it was like a seven figure budget.

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We're like, this is what we're gonna have to do.

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And so we did, and we absolutely ran, and they went from zero searches.

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I think we started with them in August.

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It ended up being, and they went from zero searches to, in a two week period

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in December, 800,000 searches on TikTok.

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Wow.

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So think about that, right?

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They unlocked this entire new generation, right?

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This, these were boomer shoes, just so you guys know before, right?

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And they locked this entirely new generation.

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And on top of that, we were just testing a bunch of different shoe styles, right?

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So we would, we would sample out these different shoe styles to creators and

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just see what they did with them, right?

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Basically eliminating, this is the crazy thing, Matt, right?

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Completely eliminating the need for them to do any research because you,

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you seed the product out there and then see what people do with it.

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And so there, there was one shoe in particular that they, that

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they thought was just a dog.

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And they're like, yeah, sure.

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Go ahead and sample it out.

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What ended up selling?

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It ended up completely selling out because it went viral on TikTok shop.

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Lo and behold, they ended up doing a collab with Sydnee

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Sweeney after on that shoe.

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And Sydnee Sweeney is, you know, having her her day.

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Right.

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And it, it was just incredible.

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So like, it went from like nothing.

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To Sydney Sweeney level, which I think would kind of be at the peak

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of, of pop culture right now, right?

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That's how insane TikTok shop is and how, how much power there is in TikTok shop.

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Now, the reason why I think that shop in particular is very interesting is because

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people, the, the kinds of posts that people make are about the product, right?

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There's no like.

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This is not like general brand influencer marketing.

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I have always hated working with influencers.

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I'm gonna be honest with you.

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Like the majority of influencers I just hate working with because it's

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very like, you know, mean and a bikini, like having this thing here, right?

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Like, oh, here's the product, right?

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But really what you're selling is your bikini, you know, like, or your body.

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And that to me just isn't, isn't great marketing versus TikTok shop.

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I will tell you.

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These people are trying to sell the product, right?

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I call it the MLM, the multi-level marketing of our generation, right?

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Because these people, all that they are incentivized to do is sell the product.

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And so what they have to do is get really, really creative and start to

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think like, okay, what is gonna work?

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And sometimes, sometimes it has to be non-salesy and sometimes they just

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kind of slip it in, or sometimes they tell a long story meandering and then

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be like, Hey, by the way, if you like this, click the link in my, in my.

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Here on this TikTok.

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Um, that's why it's so cool that like, that's why I'm obsessed with it.

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Yeah.

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And it's, it's, it is crazy, isn't it?

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That this is what's happening.

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But I'm curious, Jordan, I, I mean, I love hearing your stories and I, I, I

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love the stories that you tell on TikTok.

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Um, how do I, how do I think about TikTok, Ben, if I'm not

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a billion dollar shoe brand?

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That knows Sydney and has got seven figures to spend.

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Um, is this something that is purely reserved for the billion dollar brands

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or is this something actually with very little money you can actually

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do some really interesting things?

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So it's both, right?

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So the reason I bring up big brands is because big brands are

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actually the ones that are scared to go on the platform, right?

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They're really scared that they're going to get that.

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There's.

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Yeah, that, that there's gonna be content out there, right?

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The big brands are really scared that there's gonna be content out

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there that they don't approve of, and they wanna approve everything.

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The problem is they can't, right?

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Like if there's any marketing execs listening to this, it's like.

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In the world of social commerce, you cannot approve everything, right?

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You need to be okay with people going out there and holding your product and

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saying some things about it, right?

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It's just, it's just the way, it's Matt.

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Let's talk about smaller brands, because I think that's where things

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get really, really interesting.

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So let's talk about what it was like before to seed product.

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Okay, so this is what seeding looked like before.

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I'm going to randomly reach out to a bunch of influencers, right,

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using whatever tools are out there.

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Um, you know, Shopify collabs is one.

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Uh, social snowball is another one.

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Um, ral.

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Um, these are good, these are great tools that are out there, right?

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Uh, the problem is I'm going to randomly reach out to these people.

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Mm-hmm.

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Right that I don't have any sort of connection with and are not

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incentivized whatsoever to post for me and say, Hey, can I send you a gift?

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Mm-hmm.

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And then you send them a gift and you're like one of a hundred people

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that are sending them a gift.

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They have no reason to post for you.

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Right.

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Nor do they even have like, if anything, here's what you're gonna get.

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You're gonna get like, oh my gosh, thanks so much.

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Blank blank, whatever your, your brand is, thanks so much

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for sending this over to me.

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Um, and it's gonna be in their Instagram story and like 50 people are gonna see it,

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right?

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That's about as much as you're going to get from, from an influencer.

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And then what you can do after that is start following up and trying to

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nurture them and, and all of that, right?

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So that's, that's what seeding was like before and, and still is, right?

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Like there's still a lot of

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Still can be that way.

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Yeah.

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Yeah, yeah.

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A absolutely.

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And I'm not saying that that's terrible.

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I think that there's some really, there's some ways that work a lot better, right?

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Uh, I'm, I am all about building relationships, like actual relationships

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with people in that and white listing and all of that kind of stuff.

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But that's this side.

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Now let's talk about what that looks like on TikTok shop.

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Well, on TikTok shop each.

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Uh, each creator has to, they're incentivized to post for you, not

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just because they're making money, but because if they don't post for

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you, it goes against their score.

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Right.

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As a creator.

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Right.

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And so when we go to reach out to creators, we're only reaching

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out to creators who have an 80% plus fulfillment rate.

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So that means eight out of 10 packages that they get, they make content for.

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We're always aiming for every, every sample that we send out to get five

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pieces of content out of them as well.

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Right?

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So think about that, right?

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These are real.

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Life videos, TikTok videos that are going out there that have

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the chance of virality, right.

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That are going out that we know that eight out of 10 of them for

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sure we're going to get right.

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Whereas like usually it's nine outta 10, right?

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That we're, that we're actually getting that many videos.

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But we could, for those 10 samples, potentially get between 40 and 50 videos.

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That's the wild thing, right?

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We're getting that many, that many potential pieces of content that is

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like, that is life altering for a brand.

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When they can get that many pieces of content, then we use

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other tools out there, right?

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So there's some great social listening tools.

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I love Funnel, um, for this.

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So funnel then comes and takes all of that content.

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It does the social listening and it finds, and it's one of the only

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ones that can actually capture TikTok shop content for some reason.

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Don't ask me why.

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I have no idea.

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I'm not a technical guy, nor do I want to be.

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Um, every time I think about like I'm gonna start a software

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company and I'm like, no I'm not.

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No, no, no, I'm not.

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done that.

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You don't want to do that?

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Yeah, yeah.

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Just move on.

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Yeah.

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Um.

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For,

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But, uh, uh, all of that aside, um, what FU does is it actually listens

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for that content and then you can actually download that content now.

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Well, what we do at Social Commerce Club is very, very sneaky.

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When somebody becomes a, an influencer in Social Commerce club, or sorry, a

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creator, I dunno why I said the I word

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yeah,

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Um, when they.

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to go.

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When they become, uh, a creator, uh, WIS with Social Commerce Club, we actually

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ask them if we have permission to use any of their content across other channels.

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The majority of them say Yes, so we can then download that piece of content

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and use it wherever we want, as long as they've given us permission to do that.

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So that's why we win at Social Commerce Club because we can then take that

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content and we try to work with all the brands that we work with.

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And the way that we've set our pricing up at Social Commerce Club is that we, we.

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We incentivize them to work with us on all channels, right?

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Not just TikTok shop, because we really believe that TikTok shop is a, is an

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integrated platform with all of it.

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It's an incredible awareness channel, the best awareness channel that you can

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possibly have right now for a small brand.

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Right?

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So that's what I'm obsessed with right now when it comes to social commerce.

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It is really interesting, isn't it?

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And I.

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There is something about TikTok.

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I mean it being constantly in the press because of our American friends

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and, and you know, the Chinese connection and all that sort of thing.

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Um, there is something about TikTok, wait, you don't have to have any real

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major followers and you can post a video and 2000 people will see it.

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Whereas if I post a reel on my personal Instagram account.

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A hundred people might, 200 people do.

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I mean, it seems

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that tiktoks has, at this moment in time, they have totally captured, um, help.

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I, I don't, I dunno how they do it and how and why Instagram

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don't, Do you know what I mean?

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I don't understand why you don't get the same sort of impact on

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Instagram that you get on TikTok.

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There's something about that algorithm, there's something about that audience

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who is, who are watching those videos.

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Well, it's the point.

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It's the point of the platform, right?

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Like, like Instagram is still a follower driven.

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Algorithm.

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Right?

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And so it still is using your followers as part of that algorithm.

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Now you can get virality on Instagram, right?

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Like it used to be where you, you would never even be able to

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show up in somebody else's feed.

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Somebody had to follow you to be able to see you.

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Um, whereas now things are, it's more of like a half and half versus.

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TikTok is a fully content driven algorithm.

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Let, let me tell you just like a quick story here.

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One of our creators, uh, at Social Commerce Club, she has less than

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10,000 followers and she generated $250,000 for a brand last month.

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Less than 10,000 followers.

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Like that is wild.

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She's probably making 15 to 20% commission on that.

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Just do the math.

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It's wild what these creators are making comparatively, right?

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And people are like, well do their, do their followers wanna

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see sales content all the time?

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It's like, doesn't matter.

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She doesn't care, she doesn't have followers.

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She's just selling stuff online and doing a really, really good job of it.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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That's really interesting.

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So in effect, there's two i there's two route we could go down almost, isn't it?

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I could, I can hear my teenage daughter saying, Matt, uh, dad, dad, ask

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Jordan how I become a creator, right?

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And there's the, there's all the other people listening to the

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show going, well, this is great.

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So how do I, how do I get started with this?

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If I, I mean, I know people have been talking about it, it's

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probably the question I get asked.

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More than any other question about marketing at the moment

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is how do I do TikTok shop?

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And to be honest with you, Jordan, I just go, listen, this is, this

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is a guy he needs to talk to.

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Here's Jordan's number.

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Just, you know, just uh, follow him on LinkedIn and, and

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connect and see what goes on.

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I was talking to a pharmaceutical company.

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Uh, two weekends ago, they're like, I think we're gonna try and do TikTok shop.

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I'm like, have you got a budget?

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And they're like, yeah.

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I'm like, go give Jordan a ring because I don't think you know what you're doing.

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Just listening to them talk.

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I mean, bless them.

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But it's, it's one of those where

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it's in everybody's minds.

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But I think if, I still think a lot of people are confused

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by it, if that makes sense.

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Like where, where do people actually start with TikTok shop?

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It's a, it's a new muscle, right?

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It's a new muscle that they're exercising.

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It is nothing like.

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Facebook ads, right?

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So first of all, uh, but before I tell you sort of like where to

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start, what I wanna tell you is the massive amount of mistakes.

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That we have made right when it comes to TikTok shop, and this is why I think that

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we succeed when it comes to this, right?

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And, and actually understanding what this channel is exactly.

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So I've been using this analogy a lot lately, uh, of a Roomba, um, in business.

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And the reason why is because we are working with iRobot, uh, and with

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Roomba, uh, which is really fun.

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And so when they came to us, I was like, oh, yeah.

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And I, I was thinking about this analogy, so I got a Roomba, um, because I was like.

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I dunno.

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I just wanted one.

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After they, they, we had a meeting with them and I was watching the

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Roomba in the, uh, the way that it maps, uh, uh, a, a place, right?

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The way that it maps a house and all of it does is it just

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like keeps hitting into things,

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right?

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It's like, oh, not there.

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Oh, not there.

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Oh, not there.

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Not there.

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Oh, perfect.

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We're gonna go here.

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In business, the best founders are Roombas.

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Right.

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They are the ones that are, that are like, oh, that didn't work.

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That didn't work, that didn't work.

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That didn't work.

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You cannot have ego if you are a Roomba,

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you can't, you have to like get rid of your ego.

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And so if you're gonna onto to TikTok shop, you have to get rid of

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your ego because 99% of the things that you do are not going to work.

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Even if you work with some of the biggest creators that are

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out there that are producing all this money, it might not work.

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Right?

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And then most people give up and so.

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What it is, is it's the reps that you're putting in.

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And so let, let me, let me start and I'm gonna give you like a

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really simple framework to use here.

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So number one, right?

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You need to get samples out there into the hands of creators, right?

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And I'm

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you charging creators for the samples or are you sending them free?

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no, you are sending them free at first.

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You have zero leverage at first.

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I don't care if you're Nike, you have zero leverage.

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Like the creators until you have GMV on your store.

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So until you have sales on your store and specifically on the SKUs that

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you're sending out, creators don't care because their only thing that

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they want, they don't wanna look cool.

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They're not influencers.

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They just wanna make money on your product.

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They wanna know, is this a product that I can sell a ton of if I can, awesome.

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Right?

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Like the amount of supplement brands that go on there that people are like,

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well, I can't sell the supplement.

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Right.

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If they see that other people have Right, have purchased the supplement,

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then they're more likely to take that sample and be like, okay, well I'm gonna

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make at least one video out of this.

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Right.

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Again, our goal is five at SEC, so like we're trying to get as much out there

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as as much content out there as we can.

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So my recommendation is to sample 200 samples in the first

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Mm-hmm.

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So the reason being it is the 80 20.

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Of the 80 20.

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And so let me explain exactly how the math works, right?

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So we're gonna send out.

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200 samples.

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Actually, let's go with a hundred just so I can do the 80 20 really simply here.

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So, so we're gonna send a hundred samples, right?

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So for every a hundred samples, 20 of them, 80 of the videos

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are going to be garbage.

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Yep.

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80 of those people, you're just like, they're not gonna talk to again.

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20 of them are gonna do something right?

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They're gonna drive a meaningful amount of traffic, they're gonna drive

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a meaningful amount of something.

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I'm not saying revenue yet.

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Out of those 20, we're gonna take the 80 20 of those.

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Now that's down to four, right?

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If I, if I did my math

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you did.

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Yeah, we're good.

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and four of those are going to potentially go viral and produce a ton of sales.

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Of those four, you're probably gonna have one that is going

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to be the absolute winner.

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Okay.

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but maybe not.

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And so maybe you have to actually go to the next a hundred, right?

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This is why I recommend 200 a month for the first while.

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And so that's a lot of samples out there, right?

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And the way that I mitigate against the idea of like, oh, man,

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that's a ton of samples, is you're going to get a ton of content.

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And so making sure that you ask for rights to that content right away

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is really, really important so that you can use it across channels.

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Um, I like to think of TikTok.

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As a Rubicon, right?

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So a Rubicon is a door that you can go through one way,

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but you can't go back through,

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right?

Speaker:

And so tiktoks content can go anywhere.

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It can go to Snapchat, it can go to YouTube shorts, it

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can go to Instagram, right?

Speaker:

It can go to Pinterest, but their content can't go onto TikTok.

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If you've ever tried launching Instagram content on TikTok,

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you'll realize it doesn't work.

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Right.

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Whereas tiktoks content can kind of go anywhere, which is why, again,

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I'm obsessed with TikTok content.

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I would say the only content that I'm, that I'm as equally obsessed with right

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now is Creator ad reads on YouTube.

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Right?

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These are like the opposite end of it, right?

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So this is like the the high end social commerce, right?

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Where it's like, Hey, we want to pay for Mr. Beast, right?

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To, to do an ad read an in platform ad read versus.

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These smaller creators over here, and this is why I love the

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entire spectrum of all of it.

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Um, it's just very interesting to me.

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So, uh, yeah.

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So that's where you get started, right?

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Um.

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The, the problem is, at first your listing is probably not gonna convert

Speaker:

because you need to understand the pricing.

Speaker:

You need to understand where exactly you are, where are your competitors?

Speaker:

How are you going to differentiate?

Speaker:

What's your image stack look like right?

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At first, just use your Amazon image stack, but that's probably not gonna

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cut it at the end of the day, right?

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Um, there's a lot that goes into it, Matt.

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No, it sounds like a, a, a real big site.

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Do you use software to help you or are you doing this all in a Google sheet?

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Yeah, so we use, we use multiple different software.

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So I'll, I'll shout out a few of them.

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So Cdata is a really good one.

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Cdata or Fast Moss?

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I don't have an allegiance to either one of those.

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Um, CDATA is, uh, going to help you find all of your competitors, right?

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And understand sort of like what people are doing out in the space.

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Um.

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Reacher, uh, is my bot of choice.

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Um, so they're a CRM, an AI powered CRM for TikTok shop.

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Uh, so there is a lot of manual work.

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Um, we use Reacher on every single account.

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Reacher has some really cool AI integrations as well.

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I just happen to be an advisor of them as well, um, and love them.

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So everything that I tell them to build, they build.

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Mm-hmm.

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And, uh, and really, really enjoy what they're doing over there.

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Um, so those are definitely like the two big ones that, that we are using.

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And then I have to say a ton of what we're doing is we, we don't

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use sheets, but we use Airtable.

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Um, the reason why we love Airtable, uh, specifically is that Airtable, you

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can build so much AI off of Airtable.

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Yeah, I can.

Speaker:

It like if you guys are not like, if there's agency people in here, just stop

Speaker:

everything you're doing and go build on Airtable because this is the future.

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Like everything plugs into Airtable as well.

Speaker:

Like it's this beautiful central hub of all of your info and um, yeah,

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def definitely recommend Airtable.

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Yeah, I, I've been playing around.

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This is not related to anything.

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Jordan, I, you may or may not found this interesting at all.

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Uh, I've been playing around with Airtable and N eight N Have you come across,

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is it N eight?

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Is it eight N eight?

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No.

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N

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eight 10, isn't it?

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Dot io?

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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That thing is insane.

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Yes, yes.

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So there's a lot like that out there too.

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Like there's a ton of these different apps that are, that

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are helping build agents, right?

Speaker:

Like these agentic apps.

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Um.

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But you have to have a source of truth somewhere, right?

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You have to have a source of all of your data somewhere.

Speaker:

That's why Airtable is so good, because you're like, where?

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Exactly.

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Like, like you can get it to build all this stuff, but unless you've

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got the data, it's kind of hard.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Super true.

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Super true.

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No, I very much a fan.

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Very much a fan.

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And even for a Luddite like me, I can get my head around it, which is quite helpful.

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I am becoming more of a Luddite these days.

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Matt, like I use this app called Opal on my phone that blocks basically

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every app that I love to use.

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Um, and then I also put my phone to, uh, grayscale throughout the day.

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So like even on business days, I don't have Slack.

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I can't get into Slack, I can't get into like anything on my phone.

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LinkedIn, nothing.

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And so I have to come to my computer if I wanna do something because

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it was just, it was just becoming too much.

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I was like,

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It just sucks your life out the yeah.

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Yeah.

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yeah.

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Like who wants to do that?

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Like, like Matt, you and I are old enough to remember the days when like you just

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picked up the phone and called someone and you had to go out, you know, you had to

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go and see people and liking their posts on Instagram was not equivalent to you

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actually, you know, being their friend.

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Yeah,

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heaven forbid.

Speaker:

It's, um, no, it is totally just, totally true, isn't it?

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I, Sharon and I, we went camping this weekend.

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My wife and I went, glam the first time I'd ever done glamping.

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Oh, okay.

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Nice.

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loved it.

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Absolutely loved it.

Speaker:

Big shout out to the guys, James and Sarah at Lonning, who, who, who set us up.

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They're amazing company.

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If you're in the UK and you need a bell tent that connects to

Speaker:

your van, go check out Lonning.

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Just quick shout out to them.

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They're awesome.

Speaker:

Um, but yeah, we, we, we went over to this festival and I felt very old.

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I felt like I, I bought the average age up and it was, do you know what was lovely?

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Um.

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Jordan was they?

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They had this stage called forest school and all the young families, all

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the kids were in there like with axes and learning how to build campfires.

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Not a single one of them had a mobile phone, not a single one of them was

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trying to Snapchat their friends or capture content for Instagram.

Speaker:

I mean, these are 8-year-old kids, maybe 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, kind of eight.

Speaker:

But it was lovely to see.

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They just weren't on the phones.

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They were actually outside just doing fun stuff.

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I, uh, I was out with my kids, um, 'cause I let my, my kids roam free a lot and

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they were up a tree and they were up like, I don't know, 20 or 30 feet up a tree.

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And there was this, this old couple that walked by.

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And he's like, I am so happy to see your kids up so high in the tree.

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He's like, you know what?

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We don't see enough of these days broken arms.

Speaker:

so true.

Speaker:

Yeah.

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He's like, we just don't, there's not enough broken arms, which

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tells me kids aren't trying.

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Right.

Speaker:

And if anyone's read the anxious generation, just every parent

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must read the anxious generation.

Speaker:

And I think you'll parent differently.

Speaker:

Like I, I saw a kid at my daughter's school the other day.

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She's in grade four.

Speaker:

Grade four or five, something like that.

Speaker:

She had a phone and I was like, in five years, that is going to be the equivalent

Speaker:

of her having a cigarette in her mouth.

Speaker:

It is that harmful.

Speaker:

Like I was like, get off your phone.

Speaker:

Get off like, mom, do you not realize the damage that you're doing with this girl?

Speaker:

And lo and behold, she's the one who has like the biggest attitude, right?

Speaker:

And I'm like, well, chicken or egg, because poor girl has to defend

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herself against all of this stuff

Speaker:

Oh

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at her online,

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

right?

Speaker:

Like I, I will refuse for my kids to have screens before they're 16.

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I just refuse it.

Speaker:

I'm like, I don't care.

Speaker:

I don't care if all the kids make fun of you in school.

Speaker:

It doesn't matter.

Speaker:

It's not gonna be nearly as.

Speaker:

Detrimental as you being on social media.

Speaker:

I, I have like zero doubt that we're gonna look back on this time

Speaker:

of, of this, all this experiment that we're doing and be like, oh,

Speaker:

this is why no one's having kids.

Speaker:

Right?

Speaker:

This is why our like, like no one's happy and we've never seen such like

Speaker:

SSRI use and all of this stuff, right?

Speaker:

Like, of course.

Speaker:

No, I'm, I'm with you, bro.

Speaker:

I think recently the Australian government banned mobile phones

Speaker:

and they for, um, kids under 16.

Speaker:

Um, oh, no, no.

Speaker:

They didn't ban mobile phones.

Speaker:

They, they, social media I think is

Speaker:

Fan social media.

Speaker:

Okay.

Speaker:

Yeah,

Speaker:

Until you're 16.

Speaker:

And I think Well, good on you because

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I think it's coming everywhere.

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yeah, I, think it has

Speaker:

it has to.

Speaker:

It does.

Speaker:

We sound like the two grumpy old men from the Muppets.

Speaker:

And we, as we, as we should, as we should, maybe they had,

Speaker:

maybe they knew more than we

Speaker:

Maybe they had a point.

Speaker:

Yeah,

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starting to like them actually.

Speaker:

Yay.

Speaker:

More and more.

Speaker:

We should go back, bring back the, the wisdom of the grumpy old men.

Speaker:

Uh, and I love that.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

Jordan, listen, if people wanna find out more about the social commerce

Speaker:

club, maybe connect with that.

Speaker:

Um, figure out if it's a good fit for them.

Speaker:

What, what's the, what's the, what's the plan there?

Speaker:

So they can go to socialcommerceclub.com or, uh, even better, they can

Speaker:

reach out to me on LinkedIn.

Speaker:

Now I try to be good in my inbox on LinkedIn.

Speaker:

I do try to check every message, but sometimes I look and they look spammy, so

Speaker:

then I, then I don't actually open them.

Speaker:

The problem is.

Speaker:

Sometimes they're actually great messages and I go back later because

Speaker:

they're like, Hey, just following up.

Speaker:

And I'm like, oh yeah, another sales follow up.

Speaker:

And I look and I was like, oh, you're a great brand that wants to work with us.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

Speaker:

Awesome.

Speaker:

Um, so, uh, try me on LinkedIn too, but, uh, or you, or you can even just reach

Speaker:

out at jordan@socialcommerceclub.com.

Speaker:

Um, that is my email address as well.

Speaker:

So,

Speaker:

um, yeah, see if, see if we're we're a fit, we're, you know,

Speaker:

obsessed with all things.

Speaker:

Again, we come at this from a D two C perspective, right?

Speaker:

D two C first because D two C is all about demand gen, right?

Speaker:

Demand generation is so much harder than demand capture.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

But we've all seen what happens with Amazon brands when that's

Speaker:

all that they have, right?

Speaker:

Is this capture of not a huge market and um, yeah,

Speaker:

I think it's a painful road, but that's just me.

Speaker:

Uh, it's the reason why I don't acquire or invest in, uh,

Speaker:

Amazon, pure Amazon businesses.

Speaker:

Uh,

Speaker:

there's better people out there that do it than me.

Speaker:

I never did either when I was doing acquisitions yet.

Speaker:

Yeah, just not a fan.

Speaker:

Not a fan.

Speaker:

Um, and tell us a little for those that maybe are new to the show and didn't

Speaker:

hear the very first episode that we did.

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Um, I don't even think TikTok was, I don't even know if mobile phones were a

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thing when we did our first recording.

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Jordan.

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I don't even know if we did.

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I think we did that one in person.

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I think I flew to the UK for that

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Yeah, I think we did with a, with Agram phone in the middle and someone

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was, didn't have to record in it.

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Um, tell us a bit about your podcast.

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People might wanna come Listen,

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yes.

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I.

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listen to it.

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I'm, I'm one of your regulars.

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Oh, you are.

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Oh, thank you, Matt.

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Thank you.

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You know, I'm always surprised when I look and see our download numbers and

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because I have done this podcast for so many years that, uh, it's, I think

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we're close to episode 650 right now.

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And, um, it's funny, you'll, for anyone who's listened to it

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for a while, it's called Secrecy Scaling, or e-Commerce brand.

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Um, we just hit a million downloads, which is fun.

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Um, I know after 650 episodes you're probably doing the math and being

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like, wow, it's not that good,

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It's for each episode, but well done.

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Yeah.

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Um, but I have, I have now been, uh, putting them out on YouTube

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finally, which is hilarious 'cause I always had video content.

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I just didn't ever put it out on YouTube.

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And we're getting like thousands of views in episode, which is really fun.

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And, um, and it's, it's just great to see.

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I'm, what I'm trying to do, I'm actually doing a new thing right now.

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Uh, and they're called, it's part of Secrecy Scaling Your eCommmerce brand,

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but I'm releasing my first one this week.

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It's called eCommerce os Fast Track Sessions.

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I am, uh, the first time I'm serving smaller eCommerce

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brands right at our agency.

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It's really difficult to do.

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We just, we can't resource it properly, the costing and all of that.

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And so, uh, I am launching a new program called eCommerce Os.

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You can go check it out at eCommerce os.co.

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Um, and I'm launching this new program and so alongside of it, I'm doing

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these shorter episodes where I bring an E-commerce founder on and I consult with

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them for 20 minutes and we solve one big problem, and it has been so much fun.

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Every single time.

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So the first one, a guy came on who's running a brand for Selena Gomez.

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Um, and he is just having a huge issue besides when SEL

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posts going from zero to one.

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Right?

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And, and so we talked through the strategy because it's, it, it's an, uh, an ice

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cream brand and so they can't ship.

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So it can't be direct to consumer.

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They can't do TikTok shop.

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So we just talk through what to do and, uh, and so it's very consultative

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and I'm having a blast doing it.

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And, uh, it is definitely my, my, I've, it's renewed my passion in podcasting

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and my, my episodes for the last three months, you know, I've really been trying

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to get my content guy to help me out.

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And I just gotta say it's my superpower.

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I can't let anyone else do it.

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It's the thing I'm good at, not

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Yeah.

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Yeah, yeah, yeah.

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No, absolutely.

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We should do a whole episode one down.

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Why every eCommerce branch should probably have their own podcast.

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Uh, it's just, it's a personal pet thing of mine.

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But I did let save that maybe for another day, uh,

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yes.

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We don't have the time today, Matt.

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yeah.

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Well, you've got four minutes before you need to bugger off, so,

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I do.

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so I figure is this it will be, it needs to be,

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And, and can I say why I have to leave in four minutes?

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Yeah.

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Go for it.

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Okay.

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So the reason why, and, and Matt was like, why, how long can we talk for?

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And the reason why I have to leave in four minutes is because I

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have an hour where I'm gonna talk to my best friend on the phone.

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And it's nothing to do with business.

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And I recently read the, the book, the Five Types of Wealth And By Sahil

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Bloom, highly recommend if, if anyone hasn't listened to it and realized,

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I'm like, I only ever cared about the one kind of wealth, which is money.

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And I didn't even really understand what that was like.

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You know, I really actually thought that was just piling up cash

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and, and that actually wasn't it because it didn't help me sleep at night no

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matter how much money I had or how little, it just didn't even matter.

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Right.

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Until I realized the five types of wealth.

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And one of them is relational wealth.

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And I'm like, oh my gosh, I have, I have not.

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Um, I've not prioritized that.

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So even like today, you know, I had a meeting at 12 o'clock, uh, and

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I realized that my wife was free for lunch and I was like, well,

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I'm canceling that meeting 'cause.

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Lunch is way more important with my wife than, than some rando meeting.

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I'm sorry.

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Like, it just is, and I'm not going to like be on my deathbed and be like, I'm

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so glad I took that meeting with James.

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Right.

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I'll be like, oh, I'm so glad I made time for you

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and, and for lunch and for slow things.

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Right.

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Um, anyway, that's what I wanted to tell you.

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Well, we should do an episode on that as well.

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Geez.

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So many more episodes to come.

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Jordan, listen.

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Thank you so much, brother.

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Always fun doing these, uh, podcasts and uh, and just

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chatting the breeze with you, man.

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And it's a shame I won't see you at Subs Summit this year.

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Uh, but are you going subs, summit?

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I am not, we're having a fourth child and moving, uh, in the next little while.

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So

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What kind of random excuse is that?

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she would kill me if I went to Dallas right now.

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So,

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enough.

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Fair enough.

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Well, we'll hook up at some point in the future, no doubt.

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But, um, if I don't speak to you before, I hope it goes well with

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your fourth child, no doubt it will.

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Um, but Jordan, you're a legend.

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Thank you so much for coming on, man.

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And thank you everybody for tuning in and listening to the show.

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Make sure you like, subscribe, do all of that good stuff, but from

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me and from Jordan, that's it.

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Liked it.

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Uh, and bye for now.