Hello and welcome to the eCommerce Podcast with
Matt Edmundson:me, your host, Matt Edmundson.
Matt Edmundson:This is a show all about helping you deliver eCommerce wow.
Matt Edmundson:And to help us do just that, today I am chatting with our special guest,
Matt Edmundson:Travis Zigler from Profitable Pineapple about lead generation and no doubt about
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Matt Edmundson:Before we jump into that, let me tell you that eCommerce
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Matt Edmundson:Let's meet.
Matt Edmundson:Today's guest, a doctor, Travis Zigler, a visionary in more ways than
Matt Edmundson:one, from optometrist to ecommerce whiz, Travis, alongside his wife,
Matt Edmundson:Jenna, soared to new heights with Eye Love, turning it into a success story
Matt Edmundson:before selling it in 2021, the same year I sold my business, ironically.
Matt Edmundson:Now, not just a business maven, He's a philanthropic hero as well, using his
Matt Edmundson:skills in Amazon PPC and Google Ads to support non profits and fuel his mission
Matt Edmundson:to bring vision to a billion people in need through the I Believe Foundation.
Matt Edmundson:Travis, welcome to the show, man.
Matt Edmundson:Great to have you.
Matt Edmundson:Loving the hat, loving what you guys are trying to do with
Matt Edmundson:reaching a billion people.
Matt Edmundson:It's really great to chat to you.
Travis Zigler:Matt, thanks for having me on and looking forward to giving
Travis Zigler:a lot of value to your audience.
Travis Zigler:And yeah, let's jump in.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, let's do it.
Matt Edmundson:Let's do it.
Matt Edmundson:Tell me about the, before we do jump in, tell me about the, I believe,
Matt Edmundson:thing that you've got going on.
Travis Zigler:Yeah.
Travis Zigler:So I'm pretty fortunate in the fact that I discovered my purpose and my passion
Travis Zigler:back in 2006 when I was still in school.
Travis Zigler:And I went on a mission trip in Ecuador to help people in rural Ecuador, people
Travis Zigler:that can't afford nor obtain eye care.
Travis Zigler:And I was a third year optometry student.
Travis Zigler:And just had some life changing experiences meeting people there.
Travis Zigler:And what we noticed is that you can put a pair of reading glasses on someone.
Travis Zigler:And these are reading glasses that you and I can just go to the
Travis Zigler:corner store and buy for a dollar.
Travis Zigler:these people don't have access to that.
Travis Zigler:And these are people that thought they were blind.
Travis Zigler:They couldn't read anymore.
Travis Zigler:It's been 30 years since they've read a book.
Travis Zigler:And you throw these reading glasses on them.
Travis Zigler:Their life changes forever, they start crying, they think you're like a miracle
Travis Zigler:worker, and really it's just a pair of reading glasses, it's just physics.
Travis Zigler:And I had that experience back in 2006, and when I first did that we saw about
Travis Zigler:1200 patients that week, and helped them get glasses, and I was forever changed.
Travis Zigler:And the I Believe Foundation was started back in 20, I want to
Travis Zigler:say 2017, as a result of we get donations, mostly from ourselves.
Travis Zigler:And then we get to tax deduct them when we donate to our own
Travis Zigler:foundation, but then we use that money to fund third world clinics.
Travis Zigler:And we've done about 14 clinics total in our life now, and about 60, 000
Travis Zigler:patients have been helped so far, as far as getting glasses, surgeries
Travis Zigler:that they need, cataract surgery.
Travis Zigler:Eye exams.
Travis Zigler:So I was lucky to find my purpose and my passion very early, and everything
Travis Zigler:I do now is to either help other people find their passion or their
Travis Zigler:purpose, or to help them realize that they're not in this for the money,
Travis Zigler:they're in for what the money can do.
Travis Zigler:And so I show that and we do it by action, and that's what the,
Travis Zigler:I believe foundation's all about.
Matt Edmundson:Fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:It sounds like a very noble cause and obviously something
Matt Edmundson:that you're deeply connected to.
Matt Edmundson:Is your wife connected into that as well?
Travis Zigler:Yeah, so we're both optometrists and she was on that trip
Travis Zigler:as well on that very first mission trip.
Travis Zigler:And we've done 14 mission trips together.
Travis Zigler:We've never done one separate.
Travis Zigler:And just to go into it one step further, what most people don't
Travis Zigler:realize is that there are 1 billion people, 1 billion with a B, people
Travis Zigler:that are blind due to lack of glasses.
Travis Zigler:Like I just saying that story, putting a pair of reading glasses on someone.
Travis Zigler:There are 1 billion people that are blind just because of that.
Travis Zigler:And so they just can't obtain eye care.
Travis Zigler:And so that's what we're trying to do is create more sustainability in these areas.
Travis Zigler:But right now we just do what are called like mash style clinics where
Travis Zigler:we jump in there, see two to 3000 patients, and then we're out of there.
Travis Zigler:We're trying to create more sustainability.
Travis Zigler:And so teaching people on those islands, how to fit glasses, how to fit readers.
Travis Zigler:And then if they have trouble and they can't figure it out, then they
Travis Zigler:can refer to a doctor if needed.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah that's great, man.
Matt Edmundson:That's great.
Matt Edmundson:I've come across a number of these charities where you can, and
Matt Edmundson:tell me what you think to them.
Matt Edmundson:I appreciate it's nothing to do with ecommerce, but I'm just genuinely curious.
Matt Edmundson:Where you wear glasses, you change your prescription or whatever it is.
Matt Edmundson:I've got a bunch of old glasses and cause I had the laser eye surgery done.
Matt Edmundson:So I had a bunch of old glasses in the drawer.
Matt Edmundson:Are they of use to anybody or is it not really of any use to anyone?
Travis Zigler:It is, so you can donate to the Lions Club and Lions Club is an
Travis Zigler:international organization, so it doesn't matter where you are in the world.
Travis Zigler:And what the Lions Club does is they clean them up and they organize them and
Travis Zigler:they tell us what the prescription is.
Travis Zigler:And then on some trips, we'll actually take a bunch of glasses with us
Travis Zigler:and then we'll look at somebody's prescription, figure it out, and then
Travis Zigler:we'll go try to find glasses for them.
Travis Zigler:Now, with our mission trips, we're a little more sophisticated than that, just
Travis Zigler:cause we've been doing it for so long.
Travis Zigler:We actually get labs in the U.
Travis Zigler:S.
Travis Zigler:to partner with us.
Travis Zigler:And so we'll actually do custom glasses for almost everybody.
Travis Zigler:We'll go back to the U.
Travis Zigler:S., we'll have all the glasses made, and then we'll go back down to the country,
Travis Zigler:wherever we saw the patients, and then we'll dispense all the glasses to people.
Travis Zigler:And you'd be surprised by, you'd think that we'd lose a lot of patients
Travis Zigler:in that regard, but we actually still see, probably dispense like
Travis Zigler:95 to 99 percent of the glasses.
Travis Zigler:Still, even though we're coming back at a later date,
Matt Edmundson:wow.
Matt Edmundson:So you're still involved with this?
Matt Edmundson:You're still doing this on a regular basis?
Travis Zigler:we try to do two to three trips a year.
Travis Zigler:The organizations that I work with, we do four trips a year.
Travis Zigler:My wife and I try to do two a year.
Travis Zigler:We have two young kids though, so it makes it very hard.
Travis Zigler:So right now in our young kids stage, we are just doing one trip a year.
Travis Zigler:And so we lead for Todos Santos in about three months or so.
Travis Zigler:And that's in Mexico.
Matt Edmundson:Fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:Keep up, it sounds very cheesy, doesn't it?
Matt Edmundson:Or corny maybe is the right word, but keep up the good work.
Matt Edmundson:Sounds amazing, to get involved in something like that and using the
Matt Edmundson:skills that you've got for good.
Travis Zigler:I get to see the world, so it's selfish too.
Travis Zigler:I get to see parts of the world that no one will ever see.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, that's true.
Matt Edmundson:You get to see different parts of it.
Matt Edmundson:And I suppose it's a beauty of mission trips, isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:And aid trips and things like that.
Matt Edmundson:And getting off the beaten track a little bit and seeing maybe a different
Matt Edmundson:side to people, a different side to the world that you don't see in the
Matt Edmundson:tourist brochures, which is always quite.
Matt Edmundson:But alas, let's carry on the conversation about ecommerce,
Matt Edmundson:and let's start with that.
Matt Edmundson:So we're talking about lead generation.
Matt Edmundson:This is what you guys do.
Matt Edmundson:And I know in the prequel to the show, you talked Sadaf about the sort of the
Matt Edmundson:five step process that you guys have.
Matt Edmundson:So why don't we start there and jump in.
Matt Edmundson:Bearing in mind, obviously, we're all ecommerce dudes, or dudettes,
Matt Edmundson:or, I call myself an ecommerce dinosaur, Travis, I'm not going to
Matt Edmundson:lie, I've been around a little while.
Matt Edmundson:So I'm really keen, really curious to hear what your process is for lead generation
Matt Edmundson:and then I'm just going to ask you a bunch of questions as we go through it.
Matt Edmundson:No doubt.
Travis Zigler:Yeah.
Travis Zigler:So the mistake I see that most common like ecommerce entrepreneurs make is they build
Travis Zigler:a business based on product selection.
Travis Zigler:They say, that product looks like a great opportunity, so now I'm going to
Travis Zigler:build a business around that product, and that's the wrong way to look at it.
Travis Zigler:And I constantly beat this.
Travis Zigler:Every show I go on, every video I make, it's not about product selection.
Travis Zigler:It's about people selection.
Travis Zigler:People is where it's all about.
Travis Zigler:And when you focus around a problem that maybe your product will solve,
Travis Zigler:and you build your business around a problem, a very specific problem,
Travis Zigler:that's how you build a real business.
Travis Zigler:That's how you build a real audience.
Travis Zigler:But if you don't have a problem to base your business around, it's going to
Travis Zigler:be very hard to build that audience.
Travis Zigler:And this is the case for any business.
Travis Zigler:It's not just an ecommerce business.
Travis Zigler:I've grown a brick and mortar store.
Travis Zigler:To multi six figures, we got that to about 600 before we sold it.
Travis Zigler:I've built a physical products ecommerce store to multi millions.
Travis Zigler:I've built an agency to multi millions, and now I'm building a software.
Travis Zigler:We're only at about 60, 000 in annual recurring revenue right now,
Travis Zigler:but we just started it in June.
Travis Zigler:And every theme for all these businesses is the same theme.
Travis Zigler:I focus it around a very specific problem to a very specific person and
Travis Zigler:all my messaging is towards that person.
Travis Zigler:And that is step one of lead generation, that is step one of business startups,
Travis Zigler:that is step one of building a business and scaling a business, is
Travis Zigler:focus everything around a problem.
Travis Zigler:My ecommerce business was all around dry eye.
Travis Zigler:Everything we did is we spoke to the post menopausal female that's suffering
Travis Zigler:from dry eye due to hormonal changes.
Travis Zigler:And then we came out with products that she used on a daily basis
Travis Zigler:for her dry eye and for her face cleansing, eyelid cleansing routine.
Travis Zigler:So we had a face wash, we had an eye cream, and then more
Travis Zigler:specifically, we had eyelid cleansers.
Travis Zigler:We had eyelid wipes.
Travis Zigler:We had warm compresses.
Travis Zigler:These are all things that a person that is a postmenopausal
Travis Zigler:female that has dry eye uses.
Travis Zigler:And so we identified the problem being dry eye.
Travis Zigler:Our YouTube channel was called The Dry Eye Show.
Travis Zigler:Our podcast was called The Dry Eye Show.
Travis Zigler:Everything was dry eye.
Travis Zigler:And people are like, dry eye, like, why would you do it around that?
Travis Zigler:It's a very specific problem that gets a lot of searches a month.
Travis Zigler:And that's what we dove into.
Travis Zigler:And we were optometrists as well.
Travis Zigler:And the funny thing is we moved from Ohio working for someone else to South
Travis Zigler:Carolina to start our own practices.
Travis Zigler:And we wanted to be a pediatric clinic, a clinic for kids.
Travis Zigler:And God had other plans for us.
Travis Zigler:And he threw all geriatrics at us.
Travis Zigler:Like it was old person after old person.
Travis Zigler:And it took us down this path of okay, we need to do a dry eye and a glaucoma
Travis Zigler:clinic because it's very common to see that in that post menopausal
Travis Zigler:female, older geriatric crowd.
Travis Zigler:And then one day we were selling a bunch of products on our shelf.
Travis Zigler:And someone was, I was at a, I was actually at a conference and there was
Travis Zigler:a doctor on stage and they were drilling him with questions and he was talking
Travis Zigler:about his practice and how he was selling these products and this product.
Travis Zigler:And someone was just like, you're the expert, sell your own products.
Travis Zigler:And that's when a light bulb went off that I'm selling all these other people's
Travis Zigler:products, building other people's brands.
Travis Zigler:I need to build my own brand.
Travis Zigler:And that's how the dry eye product business started was I started just.
Travis Zigler:Literally everything that we sold on a shelf for dry eye, we started coming out
Travis Zigler:with it and that's how we started it.
Travis Zigler:And then we started selling it online, but it all started going
Travis Zigler:back to step one, the problem.
Travis Zigler:What was the problem?
Matt Edmundson:So the, it's interesting, isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:Because I was talking about this on a previous show, where we're just
Matt Edmundson:talking more about entrepreneurship than ecommerce, but how entrepreneurs are very
Matt Edmundson:good at spotting problems and fixing them.
Matt Edmundson:I don't know if we're very good.
Matt Edmundson:At marketing the problem, if that makes sense, as in telling people this is the
Matt Edmundson:problem that you are suffering with.
Matt Edmundson:And I'm gonna show you how we solve it.
Matt Edmundson:I'm curious though, 'cause you said for you this is the number one mistake
Matt Edmundson:everybody makes, so it becomes product focused rather than problem focused.
Matt Edmundson:Does starting with the problem of dry eye.
Matt Edmundson:then coming up with a product differ from going, this is a really
Matt Edmundson:interesting product for dry eye.
Matt Edmundson:I'm going to take that.
Matt Edmundson:I think there's a community over here, which I think I
Matt Edmundson:can reach if that makes sense.
Travis Zigler:Yep.
Travis Zigler:So it does make sense.
Travis Zigler:And the key differences are you looking for an opportunity to sell and make money?
Travis Zigler:Or are you looking for?
Travis Zigler:Something that you can become passionate about and go into that, because products
Travis Zigler:come and go, problems usually don't.
Travis Zigler:The problem is always going to be there, and it's how you solve it.
Travis Zigler:Products will come and go, and usually when you have, and I'm talking about
Travis Zigler:a very specific physical product.
Travis Zigler:Let's, actually let's zoom out a little bit and talk about a big
Travis Zigler:problem right now, is the lack of education in the AI space.
Travis Zigler:There's all these AI tools out there, but we don't know how to use them.
Travis Zigler:And so what you're seeing pop up are all these courses on how to use AI.
Travis Zigler:That is an opportunity.
Travis Zigler:That is a very specific prop, product for a problem right now.
Travis Zigler:But when you focus on just the product, it's only going to be
Travis Zigler:around for about 18 to 24 months.
Travis Zigler:And then it's going to be so diluted because you're going to be able to
Travis Zigler:find anything you want on YouTube to be able to educate yourself on
Travis Zigler:whatever AI software you want to use.
Travis Zigler:I don't know how I can take this to a problem, but if we focus it over to a
Travis Zigler:problem, the problem's always there.
Travis Zigler:So let's say I want to learn lead generation.
Travis Zigler:There's always going to be problems in lead generation and people are always
Travis Zigler:going to be seeking that specific problem
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Travis Zigler:And so if we just focus around that problem, we can come out with
Travis Zigler:different products for whatever comes up.
Travis Zigler:So four years ago, I had a system around how to build an audience.
Travis Zigler:And I still use that same system today, but the solution has changed slightly.
Travis Zigler:The system is basically the same, but how I utilize the system has changed a lot.
Travis Zigler:I don't have to go out and hire writers anymore.
Travis Zigler:I can use Chad GPT.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Travis Zigler:I don't have to go out and think anymore because I can use Chad GPT.
Travis Zigler:No, I'm just kidding.
Travis Zigler:But it's
Matt Edmundson:only you were.
Travis Zigler:But the point is like, when I focus my business around a
Travis Zigler:problem, I adjust the products for what's new and what's coming out.
Travis Zigler:So my lead generation system used to take four weeks to come out with an
Travis Zigler:article and I'm sure we'll get into it here in just a little bit, but it used
Travis Zigler:to take me like four weeks to write an article, start advertising for it
Travis Zigler:and start generating leads for it.
Travis Zigler:I can do it now in 30 seconds.
Travis Zigler:Because of ChatGPT, and I don't have to hire people.
Travis Zigler:I don't have to manage people.
Travis Zigler:It's all through ChatGPT.
Travis Zigler:And so the problem remains the same.
Travis Zigler:The product has changed.
Travis Zigler:So when you focus on product, you're focusing on an opportunity.
Travis Zigler:When you focus on problems, you're building a real business
Travis Zigler:that's focused around that.
Travis Zigler:And you can be flexible and change.
Travis Zigler:And I'll give one more quick example.
Travis Zigler:Were you in the physical products space?
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:I still am.
Matt Edmundson:Yes.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Travis Zigler:Okay, so you still are, so most people teach how to select the
Travis Zigler:perfect product, like I talked about earlier and source it and sell it.
Travis Zigler:The problem is everybody finds that product and everybody sources it
Travis Zigler:and everybody starts to sell it.
Travis Zigler:So it's a race to the bottom.
Travis Zigler:That was great back in 2014 and 2015 when I first started, you could throw up a
Travis Zigler:product, you could buy a hundred reviews and sell a bunch and make a lot of money.
Travis Zigler:What I noticed in 2017 though, is that it wasn't sustainable
Travis Zigler:because my products would shoot up.
Travis Zigler:12 months later, they'd start to drift down and I was
Travis Zigler:like, this isn't sustainable.
Travis Zigler:I'm just selling a piece of plastic on Amazon.
Travis Zigler:I need to focus on something real.
Travis Zigler:And so we came out with what was called the dry eye syndrome
Travis Zigler:support community on Facebook.
Travis Zigler:We just went live every week nobody, by the way.
Travis Zigler:And eventually after about six months, people started
Travis Zigler:showing up and we built that.
Travis Zigler:I think it's 22, 000 people now.
Travis Zigler:We don't own it anymore or anything, but it's still going, but we
Travis Zigler:didn't have anything to sell them.
Travis Zigler:We just wanted to serve a person.
Travis Zigler:We saw it a lot in our practice.
Travis Zigler:And we just wanted to say, Hey, we're going to focus around dry eye
Travis Zigler:and we're going to treat it a little differently than what most doctors do.
Travis Zigler:Cause we had something happen in our life where Western medicine failed
Travis Zigler:us and Eastern medicine succeeded.
Travis Zigler:We were told we could never have kids.
Travis Zigler:And then we tried Eastern medicine.
Travis Zigler:We got pregnant in six months.
Travis Zigler:And so I was like, why can't we do this for dry eye?
Travis Zigler:And so we found the dry eye problem.
Travis Zigler:We took a little bit of a different approach to it.
Travis Zigler:Taught people just simple, replace your breakfast with a green smoothie.
Travis Zigler:And drink more water.
Travis Zigler:That was it.
Travis Zigler:That was more effective than all prescriptions out there.
Travis Zigler:We actually did a study on it.
Travis Zigler:It was crazy because it was this different mindset, and
Travis Zigler:that's what drew everybody in.
Travis Zigler:But we were focusing on the problem, and our solution changed
Travis Zigler:as we came out with more products.
Travis Zigler:But at the beginning, we didn't have any products.
Travis Zigler:We were just focusing on the problem.
Travis Zigler:And there's something powerful about being able to focus on a problem
Travis Zigler:without having to sell a product.
Travis Zigler:It's actually fun.
Travis Zigler:Because a lot of your listeners probably listen to Alex Ramosi
Travis Zigler:and he says it all the time.
Travis Zigler:I have nothing to sell you.
Travis Zigler:Cause he doesn't.
Travis Zigler:He knows his demographic.
Travis Zigler:He wants somebody that's, what is it?
Travis Zigler:Like 5 million in EBITDA or higher, or 1 million in EBITDA, I think, either
Travis Zigler:that, and that's his target demographic.
Travis Zigler:And he knows that one out of every.
Travis Zigler:Probably a hundred thousand people that listen to his podcast are
Travis Zigler:going to be his target demographic.
Travis Zigler:So he has nothing to sell them.
Travis Zigler:And it's very powerful when you can solve a problem when you have nothing to sell.
Travis Zigler:And that's the difference.
Travis Zigler:And I rant a lot.
Travis Zigler:So if you need to cut me off, just cut me
Matt Edmundson:Why?
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, I'm no, it's good.
Matt Edmundson:That's good.
Matt Edmundson:This isn't a lot of things you said there, Travis.
Matt Edmundson:I'd love to jump in and ask you about.
Matt Edmundson:Firstly, let me, you mentioned that you did a podcast, so you livestreamed
Matt Edmundson:a new podcast, and you livestreamed for six months and nobody turned up.
Matt Edmundson:Now recently we had Sarah Williams on the show who mentioned something
Matt Edmundson:similar, and I am curious why podcasting, why livestreaming,
Matt Edmundson:and would you still do that today?
Travis Zigler:I do still do it today.
Travis Zigler:And but the mechanism has changed slightly.
Travis Zigler:And so back then we did long form.
Travis Zigler:And so we focused on long form content.
Travis Zigler:It was usually like an hour livestreaming.
Travis Zigler:We loved going live because it was authentic and real
Travis Zigler:and people love authenticity.
Travis Zigler:They don't love, you don't have to have perfect videos.
Travis Zigler:You don't have to have great editors.
Travis Zigler:They want authenticity.
Travis Zigler:That's why TikTok took off because it was all this raw video footage
Travis Zigler:that was edited by people that didn't know what they were doing.
Travis Zigler:And that's what made it fun and real.
Travis Zigler:And that's what people loved and it was entertaining.
Travis Zigler:And so it's, I still do it today.
Travis Zigler:I actually do it slightly different.
Travis Zigler:So we can talk about that a little bit.
Travis Zigler:But back then we usually focused on 30 minutes to one hour show once a
Travis Zigler:week, we got it up to three times a week, but we didn't notice anything
Travis Zigler:different as far as lead generation.
Travis Zigler:So we just went back to once a week and now the way I've changed it is.
Travis Zigler:So we built our audience up to about maybe 150, 000 people across YouTube,
Travis Zigler:across email lists, across Facebook.
Travis Zigler:And now what I do differently is we now do content.
Travis Zigler:I do one long form every Monday.
Travis Zigler:And so I go live every Monday on my channel, and then we
Travis Zigler:just do two shorts a day.
Travis Zigler:And so short form video is the way to get your reach out there.
Travis Zigler:But people say long form is dead.
Travis Zigler:Long form is not dead.
Travis Zigler:People do not have short attention spans.
Travis Zigler:You're just too boring.
Travis Zigler:Not you specifically, but it's more like if people aren't paying attention
Travis Zigler:to you, you're just too boring.
Travis Zigler:You're not giving them content they want to tune into.
Travis Zigler:So what we're doing now with YouTube is we're doing this.
Travis Zigler:It's one, not, it's like usually like 10 to 30 minutes of live every Monday,
Travis Zigler:all our short form videos, two a day.
Travis Zigler:And then we do this across TikTok, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and
Travis Zigler:YouTube, but we do one mashup every month.
Travis Zigler:And what a mashup is we take a bunch of our videos that are similar topics.
Travis Zigler:We'll put them all together and we'll come out with a three to four hour long video.
Matt Edmundson:Wow.
Travis Zigler:And those are crazy.
Travis Zigler:And they, what YouTube loves is when you have a three hour plus video, and this
Travis Zigler:is something that an expert taught me.
Travis Zigler:I just met with the YouTube expert.
Travis Zigler:He said three hour plus videos are killing it right now.
Travis Zigler:And this is, his name is Drew Hitchcock.
Travis Zigler:So shout out to Drew.
Travis Zigler:He's great.
Travis Zigler:He's an amazing person.
Travis Zigler:And I did my first one and my average view hours, cause I'm in a very specific
Travis Zigler:niche, Amazon PPC was 10 to 20 hours.
Travis Zigler:10 to 20 viewing hours of YouTube, and it spiked all the way up to 360 hours a day.
Travis Zigler:And so we more than, I think 20X'd our watch hours just by
Travis Zigler:doing one three hour video.
Travis Zigler:So now we're doing one three hour video or longer every single month.
Travis Zigler:And if you can do more, kudos to you, but it's exhausting
Travis Zigler:because I still do it live.
Travis Zigler:I still do it live.
Matt Edmundson:So you do the whole three hours live.
Travis Zigler:So what I do is I do a mix.
Travis Zigler:So I pick my best videos in that topic and I'll go live and I'll
Travis Zigler:talk and then I'll go into a video and I'll play the recorded video.
Travis Zigler:And then once that recorded video is over, I'll talk and
Travis Zigler:then we'll play the next video.
Travis Zigler:So I preview what's coming up in between and just answer any questions
Travis Zigler:that come up in the comments.
Travis Zigler:As we go, and that shoots up your viewership, which then the more people
Travis Zigler:watch you, the more they're going to trust you, the more they're going to like you.
Travis Zigler:And that's why a podcast is so effective.
Travis Zigler:And what you're doing is because you're in somebody's ear every single day.
Travis Zigler:And that intimacy is huge.
Travis Zigler:And so they learn to trust you and they learn to know you and they know more
Travis Zigler:about you than you sometimes, because when they meet you in person, they bring
Travis Zigler:up all this stuff and you're like, I don't know who you are, they've been
Travis Zigler:listening to your podcast for years now.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:It happens quite a lot now, actually.
Matt Edmundson:It's quite funny.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, really quite funny.
Matt Edmundson:And three hour long videos is quite an interesting idea because, and
Matt Edmundson:you're right, long form is not dead.
Matt Edmundson:Andrew Huberman show, which is one of the best listened to podcasts is normally
Matt Edmundson:two and a half hours, three hours long.
Travis Zigler:Tim Ferris, Joe Rogan, all
Matt Edmundson:yeah, all of those guys.
Matt Edmundson:And it's just them chatting away.
Matt Edmundson:But you're right, it's got to be interesting, right?
Matt Edmundson:And the temptation on this show has always been, should we go to 20 minutes?
Matt Edmundson:Because everyone was talking, short form, you've got to get
Matt Edmundson:it down to the commute time.
Matt Edmundson:And no, we don't, we like where we're at.
Matt Edmundson:I feel like actually we're a short form show now when we're an hour long,
Matt Edmundson:when all the other ones are like two, three hours, but yeah, interesting.
Matt Edmundson:So we've got phase one Identify the problem.
Matt Edmundson:Where do we go from there?
Travis Zigler:So I'm going to speak specifically, actually no, you can
Travis Zigler:use this for anything, but I'll speak specifically on like dry eye just
Travis Zigler:because that's the example we've been going off of what I do then, and this
Travis Zigler:is a very specific tactic now, is I'll take, I'll think of a list of all
Travis Zigler:the problems that my product solves.
Travis Zigler:And so dry eyes, blepharitis, It's just inflammation of the eyelids,
Travis Zigler:styes, which is a bump on your eyelids.
Travis Zigler:And I'll think of all the problems that my products can solve, or all the
Travis Zigler:problems that I'm focusing on, and I'll put them into Google Keyword Planner.
Travis Zigler:And I just search for those keywords and, Google Keyword Planner comes up with
Travis Zigler:a bunch of different keywords for you.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Travis Zigler:what I look for on there is words that have a high search volume.
Travis Zigler:It can be anywhere from 50, 000 and above a month to 300, a million a month.
Travis Zigler:But the higher, the better with low competition score.
Travis Zigler:And so Google Keyword Planner gives you a competition score and that competition
Travis Zigler:score and it gives you the bids as well.
Travis Zigler:But that competition is how competitive is it on Google Ads and
Travis Zigler:how expensive is it on Google Ads?
Travis Zigler:And the key thing here is when you focus on product based keywords,
Travis Zigler:everybody's going after those.
Travis Zigler:And so your bid is going to be a lot higher when you focus on problem based
Travis Zigler:keywords, your bids are a lot lower.
Travis Zigler:And so the last year I was with my company in 2022, cause I still work
Travis Zigler:for them for a year and a half.
Travis Zigler:We drove millions of clicks to our blog, an average of 6 cents a click.
Matt Edmundson:Okay.
Matt Edmundson:That's pretty
Travis Zigler:because it's very cheap.
Travis Zigler:It's because we focus on the problem versus the product.
Travis Zigler:And so we'd write an article, three steps to eliminate a sty.
Travis Zigler:We target STI and the solution was our product.
Travis Zigler:Now you have to be careful with FDA structure function claims.
Travis Zigler:So I'm not giving you advice on that, but it's problem
Travis Zigler:number one or step number one.
Travis Zigler:Clean your eyelids.
Travis Zigler:Use this.
Travis Zigler:Step number two, spray your eyelids.
Travis Zigler:Use this.
Travis Zigler:And it was just this problem based keyword going to a blog
Travis Zigler:post, an advertorial, if you will.
Travis Zigler:And it talks about the problem first and then the solution second.
Travis Zigler:And then your product is in the solution.
Travis Zigler:So we're getting six cent clicks to our blog, and then we're converting them to
Travis Zigler:buy over on Amazon, on our Shopify store.
Travis Zigler:We mostly push to Amazon because Amazon loves external traffic,
Travis Zigler:and so it boosts you up in the organic rank when you do that.
Travis Zigler:And so you're sending millions of clicks to your blog, and that blog
Travis Zigler:article is almost like it helps increase your conversion rate on Amazon.
Travis Zigler:Because not everybody's going to click through.
Travis Zigler:But here's where the magic happens.
Travis Zigler:When people come over to your blog, and they sit on your blog and they
Travis Zigler:read it for a long time, we usually put a video at the top too so they can
Travis Zigler:watch a video about the same topic, and when they sit on your blog for a long
Travis Zigler:period of time, your SEO increases.
Travis Zigler:And so you have these six cent clicks going over to your blog, but then as
Travis Zigler:your SEO increases, You're going to start getting organic traffic as well.
Travis Zigler:And then your ROAS goes through the roof.
Travis Zigler:Your return on ad spend just shoots up because you're now getting organic
Travis Zigler:and paid to these blog posts, plus we can get further into the strategy.
Travis Zigler:Plus we have pop ups where we're trying to get their email address as well.
Travis Zigler:So then you can further market to them as well.
Travis Zigler:I'm going to stop there just to kind of
Matt Edmundson:I'm making lots of notes, Travis, as we go through.
Matt Edmundson:I'm intrigued by this because you're right.
Matt Edmundson:We sell on our site, and we sell on Amazon, and Amazon
Matt Edmundson:loves it if we send traffic.
Matt Edmundson:Using something like Google.
Matt Edmundson:It's problematic in a lot of ways to send from Google direct to Amazon
Matt Edmundson:for a whole bunch of reasons I won't bore people with right now.
Matt Edmundson:But this idea of sending them to the blog and then using the blog to send
Matt Edmundson:them to Amazon is actually, is an idea that's been around for a while.
Matt Edmundson:And I think it's one of those things that people have forgotten about for a little.
Matt Edmundson:Time they years ago, we did the blogs and it's let's do the blogs.
Matt Edmundson:And then all this other stuff came along like TikTok, and Instagram.
Matt Edmundson:And it's we'll forget about the blog over here.
Matt Edmundson:And we'll focus on over here.
Matt Edmundson:And actually what I like about the strategy is it's a bit old
Matt Edmundson:school if you don't mind me saying but we all know it works right.
Matt Edmundson:And the simple stuff works.
Matt Edmundson:What I'm curious about is.
Matt Edmundson:You're sending, say, a million people to your blog post.
Matt Edmundson:How many of those million people are then going over to Amazon?
Matt Edmundson:Do you, is it a bit like I know that if I send to my landing page on my website for
Matt Edmundson:that product, I'm going to send how many, 7 percent of people going to click through
Matt Edmundson:and out of those 35 percent of people are going to buy, whatever the stats are.
Matt Edmundson:Did you notice that it was significantly lower or higher when you did the
Matt Edmundson:blog post to Amazon strategy?
Travis Zigler:So conversion rate stays anywhere from that one to 5 percent range.
Travis Zigler:Just like it would whenever you drive to your website, if you get up to 5
Travis Zigler:percent that's great as but the reason we send to Amazon is because our
Travis Zigler:conversion rate on Amazon is so high and frictionless buying experience.
Travis Zigler:Amazon has just perfected the buying experience, makes it very
Travis Zigler:easy for the person to buy it.
Travis Zigler:Now going back to something that you were concerned with, sending Google
Travis Zigler:ads direct to Amazon, we still do that a lot for product based keywords.
Travis Zigler:Just to get them right over there, and your concern was conversion rate.
Travis Zigler:It decreases your conversion rate, but, however, it does not penalize you.
Travis Zigler:So Amazon wants you to send that external traffic.
Travis Zigler:So if you're sending Google ads direct to Amazon and it's only
Travis Zigler:converting it like one to two percent.
Travis Zigler:That's okay, because you're sending Amazon a customer and they love it, so they
Travis Zigler:will still boost you in the organic rank, even if your conversion rate is lower for
Travis Zigler:those and it will take that into account, it won't penalize you in that regard,
Travis Zigler:and same thing here, when you go to the blog and you're sending external traffic,
Travis Zigler:it's just another source of external traffic, another outside signal, I call
Travis Zigler:it my moat around your Amazon listing, so we have Google Ads Direct, we have
Travis Zigler:Google ads to a blog post, then to Amazon.
Travis Zigler:Then we do Facebook ads to Amazon.
Travis Zigler:And even though these are lower converting things, and then TikTok ads now to Amazon.
Travis Zigler:Even though they're lower converting, Amazon still rewards you because they
Travis Zigler:know their lifetime value of the customer.
Travis Zigler:They're going to get them on Prime, they're going to sell them videos,
Travis Zigler:they're going to sell them products, they're going to sell them everything.
Travis Zigler:And so they won't penalize you because you're sending them a customer.
Travis Zigler:And we've done it through countless clients and shown the data it's
Travis Zigler:crazy how fast you can rank something by sending that external traffic.
Travis Zigler:Now, with regards to the blog post, I love how you called it old school.
Travis Zigler:And that's what I love about it, is because Every entrepreneur gets
Travis Zigler:distracted by the new shiny object
Matt Edmundson:Signing objects.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Travis Zigler:Shiny object syndrome is just you realizing what you're doing
Travis Zigler:right now is too hard to keep going.
Travis Zigler:So you're going to jump over here to try this over here because it's brand new.
Travis Zigler:It's fresh.
Travis Zigler:It's shiny.
Travis Zigler:And most entrepreneurs are quick starts.
Travis Zigler:So they hate the monotony of doing the same thing over and over again.
Travis Zigler:And they want to jump over here to do this because this is now getting too hard.
Travis Zigler:So I'm going to jump over here and start doing this and I've been
Travis Zigler:doing this strategy since 2017.
Travis Zigler:And like I said, I've built a practice with it, a brick and mortar store.
Travis Zigler:I built our ecommerce physical products brand, I built our agency,
Travis Zigler:and now I'm building my software with the same exact philosophy.
Travis Zigler:It's so old school, so awesome, and it works so well, but the cool thing is.
Travis Zigler:You can add TikTok to this strategy.
Travis Zigler:Like I said, you can add a TikTok video to the top of your blog, and
Travis Zigler:then you can have a little follow me on TikTok right below that video.
Travis Zigler:And then you can gain subscribers with this.
Travis Zigler:You can use it to gain subscribers on social media.
Travis Zigler:You can use it to build your email list.
Travis Zigler:You can build it, use it to sell digital products.
Travis Zigler:It works for absolutely anything.
Travis Zigler:You could do it for a restaurant.
Travis Zigler:I could do it for a restaurant down the street and we could make the five best
Travis Zigler:places to have dinner in Columbus, Ohio.
Travis Zigler:And then you can target just the people in the five mile radius with
Travis Zigler:that article and you're number one.
Travis Zigler:It's so easy to use this strategy.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, absolutely.
Matt Edmundson:I'm sold, man.
Matt Edmundson:I'm sold.
Matt Edmundson:So we've got the problem.
Matt Edmundson:We've made a list of our problems, we've created posts, we're sending
Matt Edmundson:traffic left, right and centre.
Matt Edmundson:Is there anything else to this strategy that you have that we need
Matt Edmundson:to think through or think about?
Travis Zigler:Yeah.
Travis Zigler:So when we've talked about it briefly, but like when we're on the blog post,
Travis Zigler:we then want to get their email address.
Travis Zigler:We're going to get them as a lead, and once you get them
Travis Zigler:into your email sequence, you then have a welcome sequence.
Travis Zigler:Most people will do short form email, then just welcome them and try to sell them.
Travis Zigler:I like to do longer emails in the welcome sequence to really go
Travis Zigler:and hit and agitate the problem a little bit more and show them, tell
Travis Zigler:them my story on how I fixed it.
Travis Zigler:So Amazon PPC, I was frustrated with it.
Travis Zigler:I hired, I had six different softwares.
Travis Zigler:I hired four agencies, they all sucked.
Travis Zigler:And so what did I do?
Travis Zigler:I came out with my own agency.
Travis Zigler:And it was because the problem just was irritated more and more to the point where
Travis Zigler:I was just like, I know how to do this.
Travis Zigler:I just need to do it.
Travis Zigler:And so then I hired my best friend.
Travis Zigler:We became co founders in the agency.
Travis Zigler:We onboarded 10 clients.
Travis Zigler:And the rest is history.
Travis Zigler:Now we have a team of 13 and we're not a big agency or we still are
Travis Zigler:very small, but we're a little higher price because we do a little bit more.
Travis Zigler:We do this whole process for
Travis Zigler:But getting them on that email sequence, they read my story, they learn the
Travis Zigler:problems I had and why I came out with it.
Travis Zigler:I do that over the course of seven emails and those long emails are
Travis Zigler:the same as your long form content.
Travis Zigler:60 minutes in someone's ear, 20 minutes of them reading an email.
Travis Zigler:If they read every single word of that email, they're yours for life.
Travis Zigler:Dry eye.
Travis Zigler:My wife had dry eye.
Travis Zigler:This is what we did to solve it.
Travis Zigler:We tell people the story of our fertility journey.
Travis Zigler:People know everything about our lives because we share intimate details.
Travis Zigler:It's authentic.
Travis Zigler:It's real.
Travis Zigler:And I don't do it to sell more products.
Travis Zigler:I do it because people want genuine connection.
Travis Zigler:We're going to be talking about email marketing with the people
Travis Zigler:they're doing business with.
Travis Zigler:People want to do business with people, not businesses.
Travis Zigler:We actually, we don't do a lot of email marketing for
Travis Zigler:clients, but we do for a couple.
Travis Zigler:And the one was like, Hey, I want to switch it.
Travis Zigler:So instead of saying my name at the end of emails, I want you
Travis Zigler:to start saying the brand name.
Travis Zigler:And we're like, absolutely not.
Travis Zigler:And I was like, we are not doing that.
Travis Zigler:This brand is personal.
Travis Zigler:This is
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Travis Zigler:the business name.
Travis Zigler:And that goes the same thing with like your channels.
Travis Zigler:So if you guys go to follow me on social media, If you look up
Travis Zigler:Profitable Pineapple, you'll find me, but you're not going to find
Travis Zigler:many channels around Profitable Pineapple because it's around Dr.
Travis Zigler:Travis Zigler.
Travis Zigler:You look up on YouTube, LinkedIn, TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, it's Dr.
Travis Zigler:Travis Zigler.
Travis Zigler:I have made the brand me personally, and that does two things.
Travis Zigler:It makes it personal, like we just talked about, but when you're ready to pivot.
Travis Zigler:And maybe move into something else, like with me with software, I have the agency
Travis Zigler:still, and that's not going anywhere, but I'm pivoting to the software.
Travis Zigler:I can use my personal brand to help with that.
Travis Zigler:And let's say in 10 years, I don't know if I'll be doing what I'm doing
Travis Zigler:now, I still have my personal brand.
Travis Zigler:To pivot to that.
Travis Zigler:And a great example of this is Mike Dillard.
Travis Zigler:If anybody follows him out there, he's gone from magnetic marketing
Travis Zigler:to a list grow list building course to a health because he battled for
Travis Zigler:his life and he told everything he learned from that for three years.
Travis Zigler:He almost died and now he's doing richer every day.
Travis Zigler:And then he's back to audience growth.
Travis Zigler:And so like through all those pivots, I bought every single one of his products.
Travis Zigler:Because I trust him and he's a great person and great human.
Travis Zigler:So that's a great example of personal branding.
Travis Zigler:Another one, Elon Musk has 160 million followers on X, whereas
Travis Zigler:in Tesla and Tesla has I think 22 million, SpaceX has 32 million.
Travis Zigler:Tesla is the second most valuable company in the world at over a
Travis Zigler:trillion dollar valuation market cap.
Travis Zigler:Apple, I think is more right now, but I think they'll swap soon.
Travis Zigler:But Elon has 160 million followers, almost eight times more than Tesla, the
Travis Zigler:second most valuable company in the world.
Travis Zigler:So think about that when you're creating this is make it personal.
Travis Zigler:And so when you're building that email list out, don't be afraid to share.
Travis Zigler:Your struggles, your wins.
Travis Zigler:I was open and honest about what we went through in Q4.
Travis Zigler:Last year we fired our COO and five other people.
Travis Zigler:The COO was one, one of my best friends from college, and it was
Travis Zigler:probably one of the hardest decisions I made, but it was necessary and
Travis Zigler:I shared that with my audience.
Travis Zigler:Yes, our agency was in turmoil.
Travis Zigler:We had to let go of five people, but we were fine.
Travis Zigler:We're better off now than we were then.
Travis Zigler:And we were honest and people are like, that's what I love about you
Travis Zigler:is because you're so authentic.
Travis Zigler:You're so real and you're so transparent.
Travis Zigler:And so you're going to get trusted listeners.
Travis Zigler:The more personal you go.
Travis Zigler:So to answer your question, email list is the next step.
Matt Edmundson:bringing it back round.
Matt Edmundson:I'm curious on the personal brand, I'm aware of time, Travis, so I don't want
Matt Edmundson:to monopolise all the time, but you talk about building the personal brand, and
Matt Edmundson:there's always this interesting dilemma, I think, because you take someone like
Matt Edmundson:Elon Musk who is a classic example.
Matt Edmundson:He is, like you say, is You know, there's Elon Musk, but he is in sort of some
Matt Edmundson:ways inseparable from Tesla, right?
Matt Edmundson:And Tesla is built off the back of Elon Musk.
Matt Edmundson:Would Tesla have been as profitable without Elon Musk?
Matt Edmundson:I don't know.
Matt Edmundson:And so you there's sort of these questions, isn't there?
Matt Edmundson:But if I bring it into the fact that we're not all Elon Musk and probably the
Matt Edmundson:circle of people we'll influence will be hundreds, not millions in a lot of ways.
Matt Edmundson:If you How do you balance building your personal brand?
Matt Edmundson:So let's go back to your e-commerce site that dealt with.
Matt Edmundson:Try eye that you sold.
Matt Edmundson:So if you build that around you and your wife, the people coming in to buy it
Matt Edmundson:have then got a problem, haven't they?
Matt Edmundson:Because it's built around your personality and your wife's personality.
Matt Edmundson:But of course you are exiting the bus, the business.
Matt Edmundson:So how did you manage that?
Travis Zigler:Yeah.
Travis Zigler:Great question.
Travis Zigler:So if your plan, everybody's plan maybe is to exit eventually.
Travis Zigler:And if you build it around you personally.
Travis Zigler:That part of the business is gonna be less valuable, and that
Travis Zigler:is true than if you did a brand.
Travis Zigler:But if you build it around your personalities, it's gonna grow faster.
Travis Zigler:So what you can do is as you start to grow and as you're getting ready
Travis Zigler:to pivot out of it, maybe sell it, plan for that, and then you can start
Travis Zigler:bringing in other doctors into the space.
Travis Zigler:So what I'm doing right now is bringing other people on my
Travis Zigler:channel that are on my team.
Travis Zigler:So people are getting used to seeing other faces on my channel.
Travis Zigler:It's still branded towards me, but if I were to ever pivot, I would
Travis Zigler:just change the name to the brand name or whatever you want to do
Travis Zigler:and start bringing other people on.
Travis Zigler:And that's what I would do.
Travis Zigler:I never build a business to sell it.
Travis Zigler:I build a business because I love to build that business.
Travis Zigler:I fall in love with the process versus the end goal.
Travis Zigler:And that's, I think, one of the biggest problems entrepreneurs have is they're so
Travis Zigler:focused on the end goal and getting there.
Travis Zigler:There Payout and their exit that they forget to fall in
Travis Zigler:love with the whole process.
Travis Zigler:And then they're miserable the whole time I love what I'm doing.
Travis Zigler:I love coaching entrepreneurs.
Travis Zigler:I love agency life, like it's very hard to manage lots of clients only
Travis Zigler:because when something's wrong, they come to me when something's not wrong.
Travis Zigler:They stay with the account manager, but it's.
Travis Zigler:No matter what you do for them, they're never happy.
Travis Zigler:And that's the we've, we have some very happy clients, but
Travis Zigler:like we had a very happy client.
Travis Zigler:We grew them over 300 percent over the course of a year and a
Travis Zigler:half, and they almost dropped us.
Travis Zigler:And it was just like, I got on the phone and I was like, what's going on?
Travis Zigler:And he told me everything.
Travis Zigler:And I was like let's just fix that.
Travis Zigler:And no matter what you do, you're building other people's brands.
Travis Zigler:And if you don't continue to do that, they'll turn on you like that.
Travis Zigler:And that's what the agency life is hard.
Travis Zigler:I don't know what I was getting at with this.
Matt Edmundson:We were talking about personal brand and swapping
Matt Edmundson:over, and bringing other people in,
Travis Zigler:Yeah.
Travis Zigler:So that's what I would do is just switch my channel to my brand and
Travis Zigler:then have other people on it if you're going, getting ready to sell.
Travis Zigler:But yeah, going back to how I make a business.
Travis Zigler:I don't look to sell it.
Travis Zigler:When I sold Eye Love, it was a strategic sell.
Travis Zigler:It was to somebody that was already in 6, 000 doctor's offices.
Travis Zigler:They're in 6, 000 eye care doctor's offices.
Travis Zigler:They didn't know how to do direct to consumer.
Travis Zigler:So they brought us on to do all their direct to consumer.
Travis Zigler:They have nine brands and we scaled all their brands direct to consumer.
Travis Zigler:And then they took our products to wholesale.
Travis Zigler:That was the dream.
Travis Zigler:didn't work out that way.
Travis Zigler:But that was the whole dream of what we were trying to create.
Travis Zigler:And 18 months later, they ended up, we ended up parting ways.
Travis Zigler:And unfortunately the brand's on the downswing, like always.
Travis Zigler:But it's one of those things like build a brand you love so much that
Travis Zigler:you never think about selling it.
Travis Zigler:That's just my
Matt Edmundson:It's a really interesting point because, again,
Matt Edmundson:I'm going old school here because when I started in entrepreneurship.
Matt Edmundson:There was a chap that everybody was raving about called Michael Gerber.
Matt Edmundson:He wrote the book called The E Myth and the whole premise of that book
Matt Edmundson:at the time, which everybody read was you build a business to sell it.
Matt Edmundson:And if you're going to build a business to sell it, you need to systemize the
Matt Edmundson:crap out of it because it needs to work really well in the hands of a teenager.
Matt Edmundson:And he used the Grey Croc McDonald's example, as a, as.
Matt Edmundson:And how you've built a business around teenagers which someone
Matt Edmundson:could then come and buy.
Matt Edmundson:So he's a big fan of franchising and all kinds of stuff.
Matt Edmundson:But the basic premise was, you build a business to sell it because if
Matt Edmundson:you don't sell it to someone you're in effect buying it with your time.
Matt Edmundson:And I love what you've talked about there because that's
Matt Edmundson:actually, it's the opposite spirit.
Matt Edmundson:It's no, just focus on doing something that's gonna solve a great
Matt Edmundson:problem for people that you can be passionate about and you'll And
Matt Edmundson:just deal with that, and face that.
Matt Edmundson:I think it was it's quite an interesting, thing.
Matt Edmundson:Flip to the script for one to a better expression.
Travis Zigler:it.
Travis Zigler:So you are out of it.
Travis Zigler:You're out of the system the day to day and build it.
Travis Zigler:So it cash flows for you.
Travis Zigler:Build it so that you love it and then it spits out cashflow as much as possible.
Travis Zigler:We worked with a brand for a while.
Travis Zigler:They eventually brought their advertising in house because they got so big,
Travis Zigler:but we were with them when they were doing about half a million a year.
Travis Zigler:They're now doing close, they'll hit like 12 to 15 million this year.
Travis Zigler:And we just trained their in house team and then they took it.
Travis Zigler:And I was like, so what's the goal with this?
Travis Zigler:And they're just like, we're having too much fun.
Travis Zigler:We don't care about selling it.
Travis Zigler:We're just trying to create so much cashflow that it pays us all.
Travis Zigler:And they're spitting out a ton of EBITDA because it's a consumable.
Travis Zigler:It has high profit margins.
Travis Zigler:They're buying it for a dollar, selling it for 15.
Travis Zigler:It's just absurd what they're doing with this brand.
Travis Zigler:And it's so cool.
Travis Zigler:And they don't want to sell it because they're having so much fun.
Travis Zigler:It's four best friends.
Travis Zigler:They met at the beach like five years ago and started this brand.
Travis Zigler:And something might happen eventually, it's spitting out
Travis Zigler:so much cashflow, it's like.
Travis Zigler:Why sell it?
Travis Zigler:And if it's spitting out that much cashflow, hire yourself out of
Travis Zigler:the position, which I think is the scariest thing for most entrepreneurs.
Travis Zigler:But it's something that I'm working on hiring an operator for
Travis Zigler:my agency because I want to get the agency work going without me.
Travis Zigler:So I can focus on the software and I want to be the dancing
Travis Zigler:monkey on stage like here.
Travis Zigler:And I want to be the CEO
Matt Edmundson:to see the dancing.
Travis Zigler:and I want to be the leader and not the day to day guy.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:That's very good stuff.
Matt Edmundson:And on that bombshell, Travis, we'll end the conversation there because.
Matt Edmundson:I'm aware of time.
Matt Edmundson:How do people reach you?
Matt Edmundson:How do they connect with you?
Matt Edmundson:How do they find out more about Profitable Pineapple or get a cool hat
Matt Edmundson:like you're wearing if they want to?
Travis Zigler:Cool Hat is compliments of Amazon, so just
Travis Zigler:type in Cool Pineapple Hat, Amazon.
Travis Zigler:But thanks for allowing me to do this, number one I'm on all the
Travis Zigler:socials, except for Snapchat, but I'm on YouTube, Facebook, Instagram,
Travis Zigler:LinkedIn, TikTok just look up Dr.
Travis Zigler:Travis Zigler and you should be able to find me, I think there's
Travis Zigler:only one channel that I'm not that name, I think it's TikTok.
Travis Zigler:Yeah, so you can find me there, follow me on any socials we do have a free
Travis Zigler:Amazon pay per click masterclass that, absolutely free, no strings
Travis Zigler:attached, it's at ProfitablePineapple.
Travis Zigler:com and yeah, feel free to message me, any of those platforms, it comes to me,
Travis Zigler:I don't have an assistant that checks all that stuff, so feel free to message
Travis Zigler:me and it comes to me and then on the masterclass, when you get the emails,
Travis Zigler:you'll see our sequence and if you reply back, that comes to me as well.
Matt Edmundson:Fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:We'll check it out.
Matt Edmundson:We will of course link to all of those Links on social media for Travis and for
Matt Edmundson:the free Amazon training on the website as well They'll be in the show notes If
Matt Edmundson:you're listening to this on your favorite podcast app check out the links in the
Matt Edmundson:show notes and of course if you've signed up to the email Check out your inbox
Matt Edmundson:because they are going to be in there.
Matt Edmundson:Travis, listen, thanks, man, for coming on the show.
Matt Edmundson:Really enjoyed talking to you and just hearing your heart and passion
Matt Edmundson:for what you do and real interesting journey, that you guys have gone
Matt Edmundson:on from doing the iCharity to the business to now the agencies and
Matt Edmundson:all the things that you're doing.
Matt Edmundson:Really fascinating.
Matt Edmundson:And thanks for sharing your insight and value with us.
Matt Edmundson:It's been fantastic.
Travis Zigler:I appreciate you having me on, thanks Matt.
Matt Edmundson:No problem.
Matt Edmundson:No problem.
Matt Edmundson:Brilliant, eh?
Matt Edmundson:Also, remember to check out eCommerce Cohort, the amazing membership
Matt Edmundson:group that enables us to bring you things like this podcast.
Matt Edmundson:Do check them out, ecommercecohort.
Matt Edmundson:com.
Matt Edmundson:Be sure to follow the eCommerce Podcast wherever you get your
Matt Edmundson:podcasts from because we've got yet more great conversations lined up.
Matt Edmundson:And of course, if no one has told you yet today, let me be the first
Matt Edmundson:person to tell you, you are awesome.
Matt Edmundson:Yes, you are.
Matt Edmundson:Created awesome.
Matt Edmundson:It's just a burden you have to bear.
Matt Edmundson:Travis has got to bear it.
Matt Edmundson:I've got to bear it.
Matt Edmundson:You've got to bear it as well.
Matt Edmundson:Now the eCommerce Podcast is produced by the team at Aurion Media.
Matt Edmundson:You can find their entire archive of episodes on your favorite podcast app.
Matt Edmundson:The team that makes this show possible is the beautiful, talented, wonderful, and
Matt Edmundson:amazing Sadaf Beynon and Tanya Hutsuliak.
Matt Edmundson:Theme music was written by Josh Edmundson.
Matt Edmundson:And as I mentioned, if you'd like to read the transcript or show notes,
Matt Edmundson:just head over to the website.
Matt Edmundson:ecommercepodcast.
Matt Edmundson:net.
Matt Edmundson:They're all there.
Matt Edmundson:They're all there.
Matt Edmundson:You know where it is.
Matt Edmundson:Go there.
Matt Edmundson:ecommercepodcast.
Matt Edmundson:net.
Matt Edmundson:So that's it from me.
Matt Edmundson:That's it from Travis.
Matt Edmundson:Thank you so much for joining us.
Matt Edmundson:Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world.
Matt Edmundson:I'll see you next time.
Matt Edmundson:Bye for now.