change some colors, add a second checkout button above the,
Speaker:product not just down below where you know, whatever it might be.
Speaker:And go watch your analytics.
Speaker:And did you increase things.
Speaker:Great.
Speaker:Keep it live.
Speaker:Did things stay flat?
Speaker:Great.
Speaker:Keep it live.
Speaker:Did you negatively impact things?
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Maybe go back and and take that out.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And see if that thing that you did was the actual cause of the negative impact.
Speaker:If.
Speaker:If you rebound or things stay low or whatever, maybe it wasn't right, like
Speaker:you can go lo-fi on your science and, and kind of like just, just test and iterate.
Speaker:Welcome to the e-Commerce podcast with me, your host, Matt Edmundson.
Speaker:The E-Commerce Podcast is a podcast all about helping you deliver e-commerce.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:And to help us do just that, I am chatting with today's guest, Matt
Speaker:Ranta, from Nimble Gravity, about how to navigate the complexities of
Speaker:generative content and copyrights.
Speaker:A bit of a hot topic right now.
Speaker:But before Matt and I dive into our conversation, Let me share
Speaker:with you a podcast pick, a previous episode that I think you're gonna
Speaker:enjoy around this whole topic.
Speaker:Uh, very recently I chatted to Max Sinclair about the
Speaker:possibilities of generative AI.
Speaker:Do check out that episode.
Speaker:You can access our podcast pick and our entire podcast archive on your free,
Speaker:on our, not your free website, my free website, uh, ecommercepodcast.net.
Speaker:Plus, if you sign up to our newsletter, you'll have all this
Speaker:information winging its way to you.
Speaker:Uh, the podcast pick, the notes, the links from today's show, they all get
Speaker:sent straight to you, to your inbox at no cost to you, which is pretty amazing.
Speaker:So if you haven't signed up to the newsletter yet, what are you waiting for?
Speaker:Head over to ecommercepodcast.net and join us now.
Speaker:Talking of Max Sinclair.
Speaker:Max Sinclair was recently on the e-commerce cohort, which
Speaker:you would've heard me talk about if you're regular to the show.
Speaker:Basically, the e-commerce cohort is a, is something that we do.
Speaker:It's a, it's a monthly mastermind, a monthly membership, a monthly, it's just
Speaker:a monthly group where we all get together and think about e-commerce and uh,
Speaker:yes, it's called the e-commerce cohort.
Speaker:And to help businesses like yourself deliver exceptional customer experiences.
Speaker:Um, We've got a course for you, a free course, a free resource that you can take.
Speaker:Doesn't take long, uh, called E-Commerce Cycles.
Speaker:It's a mini course.
Speaker:It walks you through my proven framework for building a
Speaker:successful e-commerce business.
Speaker:I'm gonna show you the specific steps we take as a team in our own
Speaker:e-commerce companies so you can see exactly how to put these concepts
Speaker:into practice in your own business.
Speaker:And like I say, the good news is it is completely free, uh, and
Speaker:you can find out more information about that at ecommercecycles.com.
Speaker:That's ecommercecycles.com, which is brought to you by our monthly
Speaker:mastermind e-commerce cohort, which of course is today's show sponsor.
Speaker:Now that's the show sponsor.
Speaker:Let's talk about our guest, Matt Ranta, uh, who is a digital dynamo,
Speaker:which I just, Matt, I dunno.
Speaker:I just, just sounds like an awesome title to me.
Speaker:He's the head of practice at Nimble Gravity which revolutionizes digital
Speaker:transformation, e-commerce and strategy for clients ranging from
Speaker:startups to billion dollar giants.
Speaker:Oh, we've got the billion dollar giants in the Oh, yes.
Speaker:Uh, tackling dive diverse industries like healthcare, DTC clothing, and endangered
Speaker:species protection, which is just awesome.
Speaker:Uh, Matt's expertise propels businesses into the future with data science, a
Speaker:great term, which those guys have coined and explained very well on their website.
Speaker:Uh, they do cutting edge e-commerce.
Speaker:Uh, his team at Nimble Gravity, they sort of redefined success by transforming
Speaker:the way organizations operate and excel.
Speaker:So great bio that Matt.
Speaker:Great to have you on the show.
Speaker:Thanks for joining us, man.
Speaker:How are you doing?
Speaker:I'm doing well.
Speaker:Thanks for having me on the show, Matt.
Speaker:I really appreciate it.
Speaker:Great name by the way, and looking forward to a fun conversation.
Speaker:It's funny you can't see my diary, but, um, we d if you've not figured it out yet,
Speaker:listener, we, we, we, uh, we batch record.
Speaker:So we record like two episodes at a time just so we can, uh, stay on top of things.
Speaker:And our next guest is also called Matt, but he's just had to reschedule.
Speaker:And I was like, this is, this is the easiest day in the world for me.
Speaker:I don't have to remember anybody's name.
Speaker:I'm just gonna call everybody Matt, and it's awesome.
Speaker:That's perfect.
Speaker:It's a beautiful name too.
Speaker:Absolutely beautiful name.
Speaker:You know what?
Speaker:This is not related to e-commerce, Matt, in any way, but.
Speaker:Last weekend, a friend of mine called Rich Rising was over from Dallas.
Speaker:I was celebrating quite a milestone birthday and bless
Speaker:him, he flew in from Dallas.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:And uh, we had a, a big, he was just, he was here for just like three or four days.
Speaker:I mean a hell of a way to fly just for three or four days.
Speaker:And we happened to go watch an England football game and they were
Speaker:playing near where my mum lives.
Speaker:And so I didn't see my mum on my birthday.
Speaker:So I said to Rich, I said, let's just go to my mum's
Speaker:house and pop in and say hello.
Speaker:And he said, oh, that'd be great.
Speaker:So we went over to my mum's house and Rich said to my mum, he asked her the
Speaker:question that I've never thought in all my years of living to ask my mum.
Speaker:And that question was this, why Matthew?
Speaker:Why did you name him Matthew?
Speaker:And I thought, I just assumed it's cuz it was like the first book of the
Speaker:New Testament Do you know what I mean?
Speaker:It's like I, I assumed that that was probably, cause it definitely
Speaker:wasn't a family name, but I never thought to ask my mum that question.
Speaker:Anyway, it turns out when it wasn't that religious at all, it was
Speaker:all to do with an actor from the seventies called Matthew Hudson,
Speaker:which my mom took quite a shining to.
Speaker:Oh, that's funny.
Speaker:So that's, uh, do you know why you are called Matt?
Speaker:Uh, I, I don't, uh, exactly.
Speaker:I do know that, um, My mother and father made a deal where if I was
Speaker:a boy, my mom got to pick the name and if I was gonna be a girl, my
Speaker:dad was gonna get to pick the name.
Speaker:And I'm very happy to have born, been born a guy, uh, not for any
Speaker:gender-based reasons or anything like that really, but just I didn't want
Speaker:to have the name that my father was gonna pick out, which was Ursula.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So, yeah, that, that's, um, Matt is definitely, is Matt calling, uh,
Speaker:every, all the Ursula's listening to the show gonna go, hang on a minute.
Speaker:Wait a second.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:Some lovely Ursula's actually, especially in the digital industry.
Speaker:So Ursula's, if you're listening, uh, we do love you.
Speaker:Um, but Matt is a very cool name, so you should, you should ask your mum.
Speaker:Go, mum, listen, where did the name Matthew come from?
Speaker:And then just let me know the answer, cuz now I'm really intrigued
Speaker:why Matthews are called Matthew.
Speaker:Um, and it maybe, it's, uh, it's worth finding out.
Speaker:So, Let's talk about generative ai, um, because it is a topic which is blowing up.
Speaker:It has been blowing up for quite a while.
Speaker:I say quite a while in digital terms.
Speaker:It's, we've been talking about it for more than a few weeks,
Speaker:so it feels like quite a while.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Um, so generative ai, things like chat gpt, um, and so on and so forth.
Speaker:So how, what's your experience here, Matt?
Speaker:How did you get involved with all of this?
Speaker:Yeah, same exact thing, right?
Speaker:Like it's been inescapable since probably December-ish or so, right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Uh, but we as a, as a group have been involved with, um, you know, open AI's,
Speaker:uh, GPT models since GPT two Okay.
Speaker:And have been actually trying to help folks create usable.
Speaker:Um, generative AI products from a standpoint of doing things like SEO work.
Speaker:Okay?
Speaker:Can you go in and have it create a, a huge number of SEO friendly content based
Speaker:products that surround your business?
Speaker:And at that point in time, it wasn't really capable of outputting much.
Speaker:You know, we kind of got some funny results, to be quite honest with you.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Uh, at this point in time, really, you can go in and say if you had a sister website,
Speaker:Right, and you wanted to rewrite content from your main primary site over to your
Speaker:second site where you were just trying to grab market share with a secondary brand.
Speaker:But you're selling essentially the same things.
Speaker:You could go through and utilizing the APIs rather than just the,
Speaker:you know, graphic user interface.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Utilizing the APIs you could.
Speaker:Put massive amounts of content into the engine, have it rewritten
Speaker:and output in a safe way, uh, as long as you're using good prompts.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:I think that that's a big key, is the, the prompt kind side of things.
Speaker:And we're seeing this topic explode not only from a written
Speaker:content standpoint, but.
Speaker:There are literally thousands and thousands of tools at this point,
Speaker:and they do everything from product photography to background imagery to ad
Speaker:campaigns, to, to you name it, right?
Speaker:And so I think businesses, who aren't starting to capitalize on this are gonna
Speaker:quickly see themselves left behind because it's like nitrous for a car, right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Like a business can start utilizing generative AI tools and accelerate
Speaker:their growth, accelerate their productivity, and do so unbelievably fast.
Speaker:And with high, high aptitude.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So, You mentioned this, I'm just writing notes, uh, Matt, hence the, hence the
Speaker:scribbling sounds in the background.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, so you talk about using, um, AI to accelerate growth.
Speaker:How would you, I mean, just from a pure practical sense, if I'm, I'm an
Speaker:e-commerce entrepreneur, I'm listening to it, AI is something that is becoming
Speaker:more bigger and more and more in my face.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:I can't escape it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So they we're, we're sitting there listening to you saying, well, you
Speaker:can use AI to accelerate growth.
Speaker:How, how could an e-commerce entrepreneur use AI to accelerate growth?
Speaker:What are some of the the key things that they could do,
Speaker:which is really gonna help them?
Speaker:Well, sure.
Speaker:I'll give you a couple of, of more concrete examples in
Speaker:that, in that scenario, right?
Speaker:Say, say you have to write blogs or articles, um mm-hmm.
Speaker:For, for your product, and this is something that from a content
Speaker:perspective, you should be doing anyway.
Speaker:That process, probably say you're a small business owner, right?
Speaker:That's an overwhelming process sometimes, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:I have to give up.
Speaker:Hours of time to be able to sit down and write an article or a blog and
Speaker:rewrite it and or I have to hire somebody and pay them, you know, a large wage
Speaker:in order to do that on my behalf.
Speaker:And now what you instead need to do is be able to write a short prompt, uh, that
Speaker:describes how you want something written.
Speaker:Uh, imagine you are an expert, uh, in the fashion industry, and you're talking
Speaker:about men's active wear, uh, and you're describing, uh, the new trends in, um,
Speaker:you know, top layers, whatever, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And you go on and describe exactly what you want.
Speaker:Almost like a creative brief, right?
Speaker:And then you say, please generate a 1000 word article, uh, to this, and
Speaker:that will happen in seconds from a platform like chat Gpt or jarvis.ai
Speaker:or any of the other written generative content platforms that are out there.
Speaker:My recommendation is that you don't just utilize that immediate output.
Speaker:You want to go back and edit it.
Speaker:You want to reprompt the engine in order to tweak and fix things for you.
Speaker:You might say, no, this tone is too serious.
Speaker:Can you please make it more lighthearted?
Speaker:You might go through as an individual and say, I would never use those words
Speaker:that turn or phrase, whatever it is.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And put it out and you've taken a process that takes hours
Speaker:down to taking minutes instead.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Here's another one.
Speaker:Another one would be there are product photography platforms that are out there
Speaker:right now that allow you to take a very small number of photographs of a product.
Speaker:Could be a sporting product, could be something like a basketball, it
Speaker:could be a clothing product, like a jacket, whatever it might be.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Then you can take those images and you can upload them into the AI platform.
Speaker:And instead of going out and doing a photo shoot, uh, with a bunch of models
Speaker:and a long timeframe, in order to get everybody set up, take the photos, go
Speaker:process them, put them back, go through and pick out which ones you want.
Speaker:You tell the AI platform, Hey, put that jacket on a model of
Speaker:this ethnicity in this setting, and boom, you've got it right.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:All of a sudden your jacket is on a, you know, an African American female
Speaker:in New York City hailing a cab.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And you didn't have to go do that photo shoot.
Speaker:You didn't have to pay for the photographer, pay for the
Speaker:model, anything like that.
Speaker:You've saved thousands of dollars and hundreds of hours of time.
Speaker:It's interesting, isn't it that, um, uh, I mean, I was talking to, um,
Speaker:Literally just before we got into this call actually, um, I was talking to
Speaker:a friend of mine who's a copywriter.
Speaker:Um, she's bidding for some work and she's like, what do you
Speaker:think I should charge for this?
Speaker:And we were just sort of going back and forth and, um, she's
Speaker:been out of, out of the workforce for a little bit cuz of kids.
Speaker:So she's now doing, you know, she's becoming back part-time.
Speaker:And we had this really interesting conversation because when she, when
Speaker:she, cuz she used to work for me, Beth, when she left, it was a case of.
Speaker:Beth wrote everything from scratch, Do you know, what I mean, and would spend
Speaker:hours researching and thinking about blog posts and, and preparing arguments
Speaker:and thinking about sales funnels and the, you know, just the layout of
Speaker:the text and, and, and what's the, the route we want to take 'em down.
Speaker:And I was, I was showing her today how as long as she knows the prompts
Speaker:and can get that information, you know, that prompt written and, and
Speaker:teach chat Gpt Well, the, the thing is outputted inside of 30 seconds.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And so, You know, her skill now is not necessarily just in copywriting, it's in
Speaker:prompt writing, um, and exactly getting that copy out and then editing it.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:What, when you, um, here's a question for you, Matt.
Speaker:Um, we've got this thing now where, uh, I'm reading more and more where
Speaker:Google is, you go to say, chat gpt, you say, write me a blog post on
Speaker:men's activewear, or whatever it was you, you, you talked about.
Speaker:So write me that blog post and.
Speaker:Um, Google is starting to recognize now whether this is AI generated
Speaker:and it feels like, um, it's starting to penalize AI generated content.
Speaker:Now, is that just a mere rumor?
Speaker:Is that actually true?
Speaker:And if so, how do we mitigate against that?
Speaker:Well, yes.
Speaker:Uh, there are platforms out there, I'm sure Google's policing it.
Speaker:There are things like GPT Zero, uh, that can be utilized in order to,
Speaker:you know, put any piece of content in and say, what's the likelihood
Speaker:that this was written with ai?
Speaker:And it will come back and tell you, you can go test it.
Speaker:Write, write, write something in chat GPT.
Speaker:Go over to GPT zero and see what it tells you.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Then write something by hand.
Speaker:Go over and see what it tells you.
Speaker:And it's amazing that it can even do that.
Speaker:But yes, that is gonna happen and I think.
Speaker:I think that we as individuals are gonna have to get used to one.
Speaker:The fact that some portion of the content we have out there is probably generated
Speaker:by AI at some point in time, right?
Speaker:But then we also are gonna have to get that mix right of how much should you
Speaker:come back in and edit that and change it and make it unique and, and touch it up
Speaker:because, I think the search engines might go, they might overindex on a tendency
Speaker:early on to penalize against that, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Whereas businesses are going to probably overindex the other
Speaker:way and they need to not right?
Speaker:Of like, I'm gonna have 'em do everything.
Speaker:I'm gonna have 'em write all my content.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Like recently, I think it was maybe even back in November, um, uh, uh, CNET got
Speaker:penalized and had a bunch of articles called out for having in, in factual un.
Speaker:You know, incorrect information in them.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And it was like 75 articles that they had had done as a test, uh, as to
Speaker:see is, is AI good enough to do this?
Speaker:And they had to go back and, and recorrect those, right?
Speaker:That's a process problem that isn't necessarily an AI problem.
Speaker:That's, you never had sat somebody down, had them actually fact
Speaker:check what got put out, right?
Speaker:So there's probably gonna be some mix as we move forward in the future.
Speaker:And I think people need to.
Speaker:Become probably a little bit more accepting of that because those tools
Speaker:really do allow us to accelerate and I think that it also, Would then
Speaker:get fed back into the AI engines and their intelligence will increase
Speaker:and it will become more unique.
Speaker:And I do think it goes to that prompt writing you were talking about, right?
Speaker:That your, your former employee and, and colleague is now really good at.
Speaker:That's the challenge, right?
Speaker:Like are you coming in and asking a unique prompt?
Speaker:Are you telling the engine to write something unique that
Speaker:it hasn't written before?
Speaker:Or are you just asking a basic question like, is the sky blue.
Speaker:Yeah, give me 10 ideas for a 15 year old's birthday party.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Like, don't ask the basic question, augment it with a lot more information,
Speaker:and, and then you're gonna start to get much better content.
Speaker:Still fact check it, still rewrite it to be a little bit more like yourself, and
Speaker:then you're gonna have some kind of mix.
Speaker:It isn't that much different than you know, a copywriter and an editor
Speaker:at a magazine or a newspaper, right?
Speaker:It's a source of intelligence, outputting a first draft, and it needs to be refined.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:That's the way I would look at it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:From an SEO perspective.
Speaker:Yeah, same thing.
Speaker:It's really interesting because I, I, I was, uh, last week I had a,
Speaker:a, a a, well deserved, I would say, Matt week off, uh, week off work.
Speaker:And I spent the entire week, um, either in my wood workshop or
Speaker:playing around with chat GPT prompts.
Speaker:So the two things I was sort of, and um, I've got to deliver some talks,
Speaker:um, from the stage coming up and I'm like, I wonder how, cuz normally.
Speaker:I would spend probably 8 to 16 hours prepping, say a 30 minute talk.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You know, it's this, that kind of, uh, ratio.
Speaker:I'm like how can chat GPT?
Speaker:And there are obviously AI platforms out there.
Speaker:I mean, you mentioned Jarvis.ai, I think it's now called Jasper ai,
Speaker:cuz I think wasn't Oh, you're right.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Somebody was gonna sue them from Marvel, I'm sure for calling it uh, Jarvis.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Um, and so, Uh, they now call it Jasper, which we used to use actually before chat,
Speaker:GPT four, which we predominantly use now.
Speaker:And I was playing around on these prompts and it took my prep time down from, for
Speaker:the latest talk that I've written, what would normally take me eight to 12 hours.
Speaker:Took probably 20 minutes, um, yes, just going backwards and forwards.
Speaker:And it just outputted a series of data, which I can then go back
Speaker:and I can now edit and change, feed it back into the system and
Speaker:see what it it comes out with is.
Speaker:It's incredible really.
Speaker:What it can do.
Speaker:So I guess one of the questions, and let's let's connect it
Speaker:to the title of the podcast.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Uh, I guess one of the questions in all of this is like, um, the same with
Speaker:the text, same with the image, right?
Speaker:So it's creating blog posts, it's creating product images, which are Max, max
Speaker:Sinclair's, um, stuff does at ecomtent.
Speaker:And so, Am I, am I breaking any copyright laws by using what
Speaker:chat GPT has put out there?
Speaker:What's the what?
Speaker:What usage rights do I have, I suppose?
Speaker:Is this, is this something Yeah, if I, I guess one of the big questions, one
Speaker:of the big debates is if I say, um, add this product, my men's active wear to a.
Speaker:To a guy which looks a little bit like Brad Pitt Do you know what I mean?
Speaker:It's like, and it, an AI goes and generates a sort of, you know, almost
Speaker:perfect version of, of Brad Pitt.
Speaker:It's all a bit gray, isn't it?
Speaker:Or are there some guidelines in this that we can follow?
Speaker:There's definitively some guidelines that exist in the end user license
Speaker:agreements for the products.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So that's step one.
Speaker:I think that this area, from a legal perspective, and I'm not
Speaker:a lawyer, nobody should take anything I say as legal advice.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Disclaimer.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But yeah, like from a, you know, from a legal area, this is gonna be muddy
Speaker:waters at best for a good while, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So here's what I can tell you from like an end user license agreement standpoint,
Speaker:and it's kind of, you know, Thought provoking at a minimum may be scary
Speaker:for companies at, at, at, at a maximum.
Speaker:So we did some research as a company back in February, right?
Speaker:So a lifetime ago in generative AI really at this point.
Speaker:But at that point in February, we, we researched and surveyed,
Speaker:uh, working professionals in the United States and, uh, elsewhere as
Speaker:well, but majority of them were in the United States and found that.
Speaker:Of full-time working professionals in the US.
Speaker:45% of the respondents who were familiar with generative ai, right, if they
Speaker:first had to pass a gating question of, are you familiar with any of these?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Of of which around 50% of people were.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And then from there, 45% of those respondents were taking generative AI
Speaker:outputs and claiming them as their own.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So they weren't saying, I did this with generative ai.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:They were saying, this is my work product.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:And okay.
Speaker:In that is a huge challenge.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So Jasper, uh, in their end user license agreement spells out very clearly,
Speaker:you may not utilize our content and claim it as being generated by a human.
Speaker:So any of the folks that had done that from Jasper are creating a scenario
Speaker:where they can't copyright that work.
Speaker:They can't actually claim it as their own.
Speaker:If they wrote an article and put a byline on it as well, you know, Matt
Speaker:Ranta or Matt Edmundson, uh, wrong.
Speaker:You know, it's, it's not theirs.
Speaker:It doesn't belong to them.
Speaker:If you get into open AI end user license agreement, You'll see
Speaker:some even more interesting things.
Speaker:Kind of where they go is if you output content that is a hundred percent unique.
Speaker:Uh, then you can, then you can start to utilize it.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Um, but if you and 50 other people ask it the same question and get the same output,
Speaker:that output is actually public domain.
Speaker:It is not individual, and it cannot be copywriting claimed as as your own.
Speaker:So that's where that prompt writing actually becomes even more specialized.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And more critical.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:If it's unique, prompt, if it's completely new and, and of, you know, Brand new
Speaker:thought process, then that content can start to look and become yours.
Speaker:Hmm, I haven't researched the end user license agreement of, you know, thousands
Speaker:of these ais, but here's what I, here's what I would recommend to people.
Speaker:You've gotta go read it.
Speaker:You've gotta understand, can I actually utilize the output of this as my own?
Speaker:Some of them are very good about calling it out, right?
Speaker:Like if you're buying a logo or something like that, that AI has generated, they're
Speaker:very good about saying you have, you know, Unrestricted use and perpetuity for this.
Speaker:You're buying it as as your brand mark, right?
Speaker:Yeah, go ahead and do it.
Speaker:Others are burying it in very, very deep places, right?
Speaker:So I would recommend go read it, go have somebody on your legal team if you're
Speaker:large enough to have one of those.
Speaker:Read it and understand that deeply.
Speaker:The second thing I would do from just if I were a company, Running a business
Speaker:where any generative AI could touch it is I would have a policy for my employees.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And I personally wouldn't make this policy restrictive in the sense of,
Speaker:Hey, you can't use generative ai.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:What I would say is you can use generative ai, but we have to know.
Speaker:Right, right.
Speaker:Like we as a company have to be aware of what's going on.
Speaker:You can't claim a work product that AI built as your own and
Speaker:then Right, have us going out and copywriting it, et cetera, et cetera.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:You're creating challenges for that organization, so you
Speaker:need to have something that acknowledges that AI is here.
Speaker:It's not going away.
Speaker:People are going to use it.
Speaker:People want to be more productive, but you've gotta have some level of
Speaker:transparency within your organization that allows you then to make decisions
Speaker:downstream from where that content was generated and how it's being used,
Speaker:that people are fully aware and not.
Speaker:You know, setting themselves up for a surprise six or eight
Speaker:months or a year from now.
Speaker:Yeah, that's really interesting.
Speaker:That's really interesting.
Speaker:So is that what you guys do at Nimble Gravity?
Speaker:You've got a sort of a policy on, on generative AI usage
Speaker:that your staff follow?
Speaker:Uh, we don't yet, quite frankly, and it's something that we're talking about.
Speaker:Um, and it, it.
Speaker:It's something that we utilize, um, fairly regularly too.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Like that research process that you're talking about where you're, where you're
Speaker:going in, uh, and doing, you know, prep for a speech or prep for understanding
Speaker:what are the differences between software platforms or anything like that.
Speaker:You can do that in chat, GPT, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Uh, you need to go fact check that.
Speaker:Can you help put together a presentation?
Speaker:You bet you can.
Speaker:Can you put together a blog post?
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:You can.
Speaker:Can you put together materials that go inside of, uh, a, a
Speaker:client facing presentation?
Speaker:You, you sure could, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:But how much do you want to edit that?
Speaker:And so I, I think that we, we need to practice what we're preaching for one,
Speaker:uh, and, and two, um, it's ever evolving.
Speaker:And so that's one of those things like a privacy policy.
Speaker:But you're gonna have to go back and revisit, right?
Speaker:Like so, okay.
Speaker:Gdpr.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Brexit, no UK's own thing.
Speaker:Uh, yeah.
Speaker:California's, CPRA, uh, Colorado that I live in now all of a
Speaker:sudden has a policy, right?
Speaker:Like, and they just keep piling on each other and.
Speaker:You're gonna have to figure this out as a business.
Speaker:Yeah, it's crazy.
Speaker:Uh, part of me, I'm, I'm sort of sitting here wondering, I wonder if I said
Speaker:to chat GPT write me a policy whether it would actually create the policy.
Speaker:It probably would, uh, if I put the right prompts in.
Speaker:Um, one of the things I found actually with Chat GPT, um, and again, it, I
Speaker:guess it's the same with the other platforms, is if I give it copy.
Speaker:Of, um, copies of, or chunks of content that I have previously written in
Speaker:my sort of style, my tone of voice.
Speaker:Yeah, it can mimic that quite well.
Speaker:When it's output in the content, it can sound quite, quite like me.
Speaker:Um, which minimizes my editing, which I'm assuming will make it a bit
Speaker:more unique cuz it's, it's sort of.
Speaker:My Do, you know what I mean?
Speaker:My tone of voice.
Speaker:And I can, I can exactly throw that in there, which is, which is quite handy.
Speaker:And it's quite nice because you can do that with brand as well, can't you?
Speaker:You can throw brand voice in there and brand values and it
Speaker:tends to output it in that way.
Speaker:Um, which i, I quite like.
Speaker:So what are some of the, the creative, I mean you guys are
Speaker:using it a nimble gravity?
Speaker:I'm, I'm, do you use it on behalf of your clients?
Speaker:Uh, what are some of the surprising ways you've seen, I guess, uh,
Speaker:uh, generative AI being used?
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:so you know, the example that I called out previously of, you know,
Speaker:rewriting, um, SEO friendly content from, uh, one site to another, uh, is
Speaker:something that, that we've, uh, worked with and, and created models around.
Speaker:Uh, and I would say that written generative AI content
Speaker:is probably the largest area.
Speaker:Right now.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Uh, some of the, uh, photography based kind of stuff is
Speaker:still a, a little bit new.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:We, we don't do graphic design or anything like that, so we're not
Speaker:necessarily looking at some of those, um, you know, brand or campaign
Speaker:level kind of AI that allow you to create a, a whole bunch of templates.
Speaker:Um, but it seems like written content is, is the largest thing
Speaker:that's happening right now.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It's for real applicable use.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker:And that goes to, that goes to code too, Matt.
Speaker:So I just wanna throw that in there, like actual programming
Speaker:code that goes live in websites.
Speaker:So
Speaker:Yeah, I, I know one or two of our developers, they've started to use
Speaker:chat gpt to generate code for them, which is quite fun, quite funny.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And what what's fascinating, I mean obviously they still
Speaker:need to understand the code.
Speaker:My, uh, my friend who was a copywriter still needs to
Speaker:understand is this copy right?
Speaker:Is it good?
Speaker:It still needs that human interaction.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Um, but the interesting thing, cuz when I was talking to my, talking to Beth, a
Speaker:copywriter friend, at first you kind of go, well chat GPT's gonna take over my
Speaker:job, it's people aren't gonna need me.
Speaker:And I'm like, well, not, no, not yet.
Speaker:Not quite.
Speaker:Um, and actually what I think you can do is probably put your fees up quite a bit,
Speaker:um, for what you were charging by throwing the fact in there that you're gonna use
Speaker:chat GPT and actually you're now prompt engineering to get the best out of it.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, because that's a highest skillset, I think, because there
Speaker:are fewer and fewer people who, who know how to write the prompts.
Speaker:It seems for AI to get the stuff out of it.
Speaker:And so, yeah, it's a, it's a fascinating one, this whole world of
Speaker:where do you think it's gonna go to?
Speaker:Because like you've now got Elon Musk coming out and saying, oh, we need to stop
Speaker:everything and throw, slam the brakes on.
Speaker:Um, where do you think it's all gonna go to?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It's interesting, right?
Speaker:He, he wants to write his own thing and he's also promoting, putting
Speaker:the breaks on everybody else's.
Speaker:Interesting.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:Elon Musk for president.
Speaker:Yeah, sure.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, You know, where is it gonna go?
Speaker:It's ra, it's so rapidly advancing, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:I do think, I do think prompt engineering is gonna be an actual skill.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Probably an actual job, right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And.
Speaker:You're not necessarily gonna be able to be a good, prompt engineer for production
Speaker:code, as well as be a good, prompt engineer for written, readable content.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:As well as like, right.
Speaker:Like this is almost like you're the director of a movie.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And you're trying to tell the entire crew what you want out of it.
Speaker:And some people are great at directing westerns and other people mm-hmm.
Speaker:Are great at directing sci-fi.
Speaker:And some people do really well with documentaries.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:But you can't take a documentary director and say, all right, we're gonna put
Speaker:you in this tent pole, blockbuster, uh, you're directing the fifth Avengers film.
Speaker:Go like they're going to, they're gonna fail at that.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So becoming a prompt engineer is gonna be.
Speaker:The job, and I think your education is gonna have to shift
Speaker:in order to do that, right?
Speaker:Like this is causing unbelievable upheaval in school boards
Speaker:and all kinds of stuff too.
Speaker:Oh my gosh, my students are cheating.
Speaker:What's going on?
Speaker:Like, how is this gonna happen?
Speaker:Stop that.
Speaker:Like stop it now, and start teaching them how to be prompt
Speaker:engineers and start teaching them how to be subject matter experts.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Because regardless of of whatever happens, you are gonna have to
Speaker:be a subject matter expert to be.
Speaker:Good at being a prompt engineer.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Can you use AI to help you become a subject matter expert?
Speaker:You bet you can, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Like you can go do research like we were talking about, but
Speaker:again, it goes down to prompts.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So teach people how to use it versus being afraid of it and thinking it's
Speaker:gonna steal and plagiarize everything.
Speaker:Right, right.
Speaker:Like teach them how to be good, curious, inquisitive humans that
Speaker:find a passion around something and then turn that passion into becoming.
Speaker:Somebody who can write fantastic prompts and direct these tools to your advantage.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So that's what I would say.
Speaker:That's such a powerful point, Matt, and I think it's very well said.
Speaker:And, um, I'm smiling because I remember, you know, when I was back
Speaker:at school, uh, and they just invented electricity, um, they were, they
Speaker:were, they were like, well, you know, you, you, you've got calculators now.
Speaker:We had scientific calculators and I remember when the first calculators
Speaker:came out that could draw graphs.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And they're like, well, you can't take those into the exam cuz
Speaker:that's, you have to figure out how to draw the graph for yourself.
Speaker:And it's, I think education when it, when it realizes this is where
Speaker:technology is, how do we help our kids utilize the technology to be
Speaker:smarter rather than try and stop them?
Speaker:Um, right.
Speaker:Because they're kids.
Speaker:I mean, you know, adults are using it all the time to make their life easier.
Speaker:And we expect our kids to go, well, I can't do that.
Speaker:That's just not right for my exams.
Speaker:It's just this ludicrous, isn't it really?
Speaker:In a lot of ways.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So, uh, it's fascinating.
Speaker:Fascinating.
Speaker:So you've got, um, Let's just start.
Speaker:I'm curious, uh, in the, in the last few minutes of this show, uh, Matt, yeah.
Speaker:If I can dig into, I did look at your, um, website, which is nimblegravity.com,
Speaker:and I was really curious by this phrase, data science, which I, it is quite
Speaker:a generic phrase, but you use it in quite a specific way in the sort of
Speaker:the, the junction of the three circles.
Speaker:Um, mm-hmm.
Speaker:What, what do they call that graph?
Speaker:Uh, a Venn diagram.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:This is where I, I should have paid more attention in Math rather than looking
Speaker:at the, the, the, the sine wave on the calculator, uh, the Venn diagram.
Speaker:So just explain that and how did you come up with this?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So you know, it.
Speaker:We talk about pragmatic data science, right?
Speaker:And that's, you know, understanding what you're trying to do From a, a
Speaker:general business hypothesis, what can you do to test quickly, to be iterative,
Speaker:to, you know, extract something in a very short period of time to then, Be
Speaker:intelligent about that and move on from there, from whatever you learned and
Speaker:create the next phase and, and you know, kind of creating this iterative cycle.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Just like you would in an agile programming environment.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:But doing it with data science tests.
Speaker:And projects and moving quickly and, and forward and, uh, iteratively.
Speaker:And, you know, the venn diagram that you're referring to on, on
Speaker:the site kind of shows, you know, artificial intelligence, machine
Speaker:learning, math, and one circle, it talks about technology in another.
Speaker:And then, you know, brings in business and industry acumen into the other.
Speaker:And, you know, that's subject matter expertise, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And then that center overlapping area is, Where data science
Speaker:actually happens, right?
Speaker:So you're, you're taking the knowledge of the folks within the industry, within
Speaker:the business and their, their specialized subject matter expertise over years.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And you're combining that with technologies that allow you to move and
Speaker:analyze huge, large quantities of data.
Speaker:And then you're applying, you know, uh, Mathematics, algorithms and equations
Speaker:with machine learning and AI on top of that, and, bringing it all together
Speaker:into, into the world of data science.
Speaker:And then you're able to output insights from an organization
Speaker:through their data that they might not have really seen before, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Like.
Speaker:They might have had gut feelings that, you know, that the long-term
Speaker:employees that that really understood the business in, in total might
Speaker:have been expressing these things.
Speaker:But you can actually put out the goals and the percentages and, and
Speaker:these kinds of things you can do.
Speaker:Creation of propensity models, how likely is a customer gonna be to buy from us?
Speaker:How likely are they gonna be able to buy a second time?
Speaker:You can output, you know, actual, um, modeling around, you know, people
Speaker:who interact with your business and footfalls and what's going on there.
Speaker:Any number of things really.
Speaker:Um, and.
Speaker:It's, it's a lot of fun.
Speaker:You can take alternative data sets and understand, um, you know, what are, what
Speaker:are people doing in their day, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:From foot traffic and stores and, you know, where else are they going?
Speaker:Um, that we might be able to, you know, modify our marketing
Speaker:messaging and placement in order to capture these people.
Speaker:And you can unlock these kinds of super interesting approaches to interacting with
Speaker:your customers that you probably wouldn't have done through traditional tools.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Yeah, that's really interesting, isn't it?
Speaker:And I, I, I, I get sucked into it, Matt.
Speaker:I do.
Speaker:Because it, you just get drawn into all the, all the, all the possibilities that
Speaker:this sort of technology and thinking now brings to you really, and the, and
Speaker:the possibilities that are out there.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I guess one thing, um, that sort of springs to mind in all this is, It
Speaker:sounds expensive and complex, so if I'm just starting out in e-commerce.
Speaker:Um, I'm curious to know your thoughts on this, cause obviously you're dealing
Speaker:with companies doing billion dollar turnovers and so it's kind of like mm-hmm.
Speaker:If you are starting out and you're sitting there and you're listening to
Speaker:people going, well, we can, you know, do this data and all, and all these sort
Speaker:of propensity models and all that sort of wonderful stuff, but you're like,
Speaker:dude, I've got like a thousand people coming to my website a year at the
Speaker:moment of which 15 are buying and I'm trying to build the business, I think.
Speaker:It, it feels, I think it can feel quite overwhelming for a
Speaker:startup Do you know what I mean?
Speaker:An entrepreneur to think, oh, I've gotta have this, I've gotta have this,
Speaker:I've gotta have this, and, and, and all these tools that the big guys
Speaker:have got, how am I even gonna compete?
Speaker:And I wonder what your thoughts were on that, because it, I mean,
Speaker:in some respects, it's not actually a million miles away from the guy
Speaker:that's starting up right now, but I, I can understand that it, it feels
Speaker:like a massive world out there.
Speaker:And so I just wondered what your, your thoughts were on that for the little guy.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So a couple things that I'll say around that.
Speaker:There's a lot of platforms that have been, that are data, data science platforms
Speaker:that have been productized, right?
Speaker:That allow you to do things like, um, price testing and
Speaker:creating pricing models, right?
Speaker:And so as a smaller guy or gal running a business, right?
Speaker:Um, it you don't necessarily have to, um, Have a huge data science budget and hire
Speaker:a bunch of people and, you know, have this massive team, or go to an agency and
Speaker:have them do that on your behalf, right?
Speaker:You can utilize some of these, these tools that are out there.
Speaker:Uh, and you know, like the pricing model that I'm talking about, um, there's
Speaker:a platform called Intelligence, uh, that, you know, we've been talking
Speaker:with and, uh, they do this right?
Speaker:And, um, there, there's some interesting things out there like that.
Speaker:But here's the other one, right?
Speaker:Like being a data scientist, I would argue, right?
Speaker:Like I think we think of it as folks who are, they have math degrees,
Speaker:they have computer science degrees, they're working, you know, with
Speaker:huge data sets and environments like Snowflake or whatever, and Right.
Speaker:Like those people are professionally labeled as data scientists.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:A true data scientist is somebody who is curious, who's willing to test and
Speaker:experiment and try things and create a hypothesis and go out and execute against
Speaker:that and see what the results were, and then come back and iterate on that.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And you know where you can do that Excel.
Speaker:And Google Sheets, right?
Speaker:Like on the low, low end of things, uh, you can go back and do
Speaker:regression studies in Excel, and there are a thousand tutorials on
Speaker:the internet about how to do this.
Speaker:It's built into Excel.
Speaker:You can understand what happened with your data in the past through a regression
Speaker:test, and you can even compare this to.
Speaker:Data sets that are freely available from, say, the government, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Uh, I did this back in, oh gosh, I wanna say it was 2008, with, uh, a
Speaker:couple super smart business analysts.
Speaker:They were data scientists, but at that point in time they
Speaker:were called business analysts.
Speaker:Um, and, you know, we did the, the bulk of it, um, in, in Excel and.
Speaker:What we found at, at this point in time is we were doing a regression analysis of
Speaker:appliance sales, uh, and comparing that to housing starts, uh, which are available
Speaker:government metric here in the United States that you can download for free
Speaker:off of, uh, off of government websites.
Speaker:And we were looking to understand, um, how the correlation between housing
Speaker:starts in the areas we, we looked at.
Speaker:Met up with appliance sales.
Speaker:Right, right.
Speaker:Like that makes sense.
Speaker:You're building a new house, you gotta build, you know, you gotta buy appliances.
Speaker:What's the gap?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Like that's really what we wanted to understand and, and know when we should
Speaker:really be going to market and talking to contractors and, and trying to mm-hmm.
Speaker:To land large sales deals.
Speaker:And that's a hundred percent doable in Excel.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:And I think it's more.
Speaker:Go figure out what your hypothesis is.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And then figure out the environment that you ha, you know, kind of need to utilize
Speaker:in order to do that and get yourself, you know, somebody curious and, and
Speaker:smart and good with manipulating data in multiple types of platforms and places.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:That's top advice.
Speaker:So let's start small.
Speaker:Just start doing it, I think, um, totally.
Speaker:Because e-commerce is both art and science, right?
Speaker:It's not, and you, the, the sooner you can get your head around understanding
Speaker:some of these things, the better, I think.
Speaker:Uh, yeah.
Speaker:And, uh, and, and if Excel can help you, and Google Sheets can help you have at it.
Speaker:I mean, I've spent many an hour in a Google spreadsheet.
Speaker:That should almost be a t-shirt slogan.
Speaker:Um, listen, uh, Matt, uh, I'm aware of time, man, and, and I feel like we're
Speaker:just starting to scratch the surface.
Speaker:So let me ask you one final question, if I may.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So you're a data scientist.
Speaker:You've got this company which is helping, you know, all manner
Speaker:of different size organizations.
Speaker:You've seen a lot, you've experienced a lot.
Speaker:What's the one opportunity you think that e-commerce entrepreneurs are not taking
Speaker:advantage of on the whole, that they probably should be doing right now to
Speaker:have the biggest impact on their business?
Speaker:From your point of view, from a data science point of view, what, what do
Speaker:you, what do you see in all of this?
Speaker:Oh, wow.
Speaker:Um, That's, that's a great question and obviously a big challenge, and I think
Speaker:it's kind of one of those overwhelming things for, for e-commerce folks, but
Speaker:I'm gonna go back to a, a tried and true standard that I unfortunately
Speaker:don't see enough people executing well enough on a consistent basis.
Speaker:And that's AB testing.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:And this is a surefire way to increase the outputs of your
Speaker:e-commerce operation, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Uh, yes.
Speaker:Sometimes that requires a, a good amount of traffic, uh, and, and you
Speaker:need, you know, a certain number of, of visits, uh, per year to utilize
Speaker:platforms that are gonna do that.
Speaker:And I think that that's where people get a little bit scared too,
Speaker:from an AB testing perspective.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:So if you can utilize a platform, if your website has enough traffic, uh, in order
Speaker:to be able to, to really get impact, uh, from an AB testing platform, uh, a
Speaker:hundred percent you should be doing it.
Speaker:You should have a team around it.
Speaker:You should be working iteratively.
Speaker:You should be, you know, studying the results and pushing live new features and
Speaker:functionality and layouts and user flows.
Speaker:All year long, like do as many tests as you can.
Speaker:If your traffic isn't large enough to support a platform like, you know, an
Speaker:optimizly convert.com, whatever it might be, uh, I'm gonna go lofi again, right?
Speaker:And just be like, be brave.
Speaker:Start track what you're doing, like.
Speaker:You know, write it down somewhere, put it in Jira, put it back into
Speaker:Excel, or a Google sheet of mm-hmm.
Speaker:You know, this is my theory, here's my test.
Speaker:I launched it on this.
Speaker:And go watch your Google Analytics.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Or your free analytics platform.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Change, change some colors, add a second checkout button above the, you know,
Speaker:the, the product not just down below where you know, whatever it might be.
Speaker:And go watch your analytics.
Speaker:And did you increase things.
Speaker:Great.
Speaker:Keep it live.
Speaker:Did things stay flat?
Speaker:Great.
Speaker:Keep it live.
Speaker:Did you negatively impact things?
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Maybe go back and and take that out.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And see if that thing that you did was the actual cause of the negative impact.
Speaker:If.
Speaker:If you rebound or things stay low or whatever, maybe it wasn't right, like
Speaker:you can go lo-fi on your science and, and kind of like just, just test and iterate.
Speaker:And in that scenario, I wouldn't be doing a whole bunch of tests,
Speaker:but I'd be doing some tests and I'd be being brave about it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:No, it's very good, very good.
Speaker:I, I love that, especially your product page.
Speaker:Um, I don't feel like people product test, uh, split test their product page
Speaker:enough and you can run different ads to different versions of your product page.
Speaker:You know, you can, there's all kinds of ways to play around
Speaker:with that and, and definitely do that and get involved with it.
Speaker:Um, Uh, I like that.
Speaker:I like the simplicity of that.
Speaker:Matt, I'm not gonna lie, I was kind of expecting you to say something in
Speaker:ai, but actually going back to split testing makes an awful lot of sense.
Speaker:And then as you were talking, I'm going, that's, that's actually the right answer.
Speaker:Uh, I I thought that was, uh, very well said, sir.
Speaker:Very well said.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:So, uh, no, listen, um, Matt, listen.
Speaker:How do people reach you?
Speaker:How do they get a hold of you?
Speaker:If they want to connect with you guys, ask you some more questions,
Speaker:what's the best way to do that?
Speaker:Yeah, you, you already mentioned the website, nimblegravity.com,
Speaker:so that's definitely a great way to, to get ahold of us.
Speaker:The other easiest place right, is LinkedIn.
Speaker:Uh, feel free to to reach out to the company or follow us there
Speaker:or reach out to me directly.
Speaker:Uh, I'm on there, Matt Ranta.
Speaker:Uh, and happy to connect with folks and chat with them about any
Speaker:of their e-commerce, digital AI challenges, whatever it might be.
Speaker:Fantastic.
Speaker:Absolutely do go connect with Matt on LinkedIn.
Speaker:I need to check, see if we are LinkedIn, LinkedIn Linked, linked on LinkedIn.
Speaker:I know it's not easy to say connected on LinkedIn.
Speaker:Um, uh, we we should definitely do that.
Speaker:Listen, we will of course link to Matt's info in the show notes, which
Speaker:you can get along for free along with the transcript at ecommercepodcast.net.
Speaker:Or it will be winging its way into your inbox.
Speaker:If you've signed up for a newsletter, Matt, listen, genuinely really
Speaker:appreciated the conversation.
Speaker:I'm loving this stuff right now.
Speaker:Um, I, I said at the start, the show sponsored by the
Speaker:e-commerce cohort, which it is.
Speaker:And in the cohort, which is our sort of monthly mastermind group,
Speaker:uh, we've just done a whole thing.
Speaker:I run, I, I do this thing on, on chat GPT, on how to start an e-commerce business.
Speaker:How to use chat GPT to come up with the name of the company, the products
Speaker:that we're gonna sell, what's gonna differentiate it, how we do customer
Speaker:research, how we write product copy.
Speaker:We had a, we had a bit of a laugh actually with that.
Speaker:Nice.
Speaker:And so, Yeah, if this is something which has perked your interest, dear listener,
Speaker:do check out ecommercecohort.com.
Speaker:There is like a, a sort of a freezed trace.
Speaker:It's like a dollar trial, I think, or something like that.
Speaker:Check it out, uh, on the, on the, the chat thing that we do.
Speaker:It was great fun actually, but Matt, genuinely appreciate it.
Speaker:Love this stuff, love learning lots of stuff about ai.
Speaker:I think it's a really interesting thing.
Speaker:So thank you so much for joining me, man.
Speaker:Thanks for having me.
Speaker:Great conversation.
Speaker:Really enjoyed it.
Speaker:No, it's been great.
Speaker:Great.
Speaker:So thanks again to Matt and also, again, a big shout out to today's
Speaker:show sponsor, the e-commerce cohort.
Speaker:Uh, the free training is at ecommercecycles.com that I mentioned.
Speaker:And if you want to check out more about the, uh, chat GPT training that we did.
Speaker:That's at ecommercecohort.com.
Speaker:A lot of domains, but they're all linked on the website.
Speaker:Now, be sure to follow the e-commerce podcast wherever you get your podcast
Speaker:from because we've got yet more great conversations lined up, and we
Speaker:don't want you to miss any of them.
Speaker:And before we wrap up today's episode, let me take a little moment to invite
Speaker:you to become a part of the show now.
Speaker:If you're an e-commerce entrepreneur or an expert and would like to share
Speaker:your insights with our audience, we would love to hear from you.
Speaker:Or maybe you just know someone who would make a great guest.
Speaker:Do send 'em our way.
Speaker:Just head over to the website, ecommercepodcast.net
Speaker:and get in touch with us.
Speaker:All the information is on there, and in case no one has told
Speaker:you yet today, you are awesome.
Speaker:Yes, you are.
Speaker:Created awesome.
Speaker:It's just a burden you have to bear.
Speaker:I have to bear it.
Speaker:The other Matt has to bear it.
Speaker:And just about every Matt on the planet has to bear it.
Speaker:And if your name's not Matt, you've also gotta bear it as well.
Speaker:Now, the e-Commerce podcast is produced by Aurion Media.
Speaker:You can find our entire archive of episodes on your favorite podcast app.
Speaker:The team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon, Estella
Speaker:Robin and Tanya Hutsuliak.
Speaker:Our theme song was written by Josh Edmundson, and as I mentioned, if
Speaker:you would like to read the transcript or show notes, head over to the
Speaker:website, ecommercepodcast.net, uh, where you can also sign up for our
Speaker:weekly newsletter and get all of this good stuff direct your inbox.
Speaker:That's it from me.
Speaker:That's it from Matt.
Speaker:Thank you so much for joining us.
Speaker:Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world.
Speaker:I'll see you next time.