Transcript
WEBVTT
00:00:00.561 --> 00:00:03.690
Welcome everyone to the Brand Fortress HQ Tactics Tuesday.
00:00:03.690 --> 00:00:06.730
This is going to be our last Tactics Tuesday for 2024.
00:00:06.730 --> 00:00:27.085
And, as a result, what we want to look at is some of the lessons learned, what things at the beginning of the year that we talked about, that a lot of Amazon sellers and a lot of Amazon brands thought were going to have a big impact, what did really have a big impact and everything that we've kind of encountered in 2024, kind of the highlights of that as we record this last Tactics Tuesday for the year.
00:00:27.085 --> 00:00:30.109
So I know we talked a little bit before we hit record on this.
00:00:30.109 --> 00:00:36.521
Matt, you know, as you think about 2024, maybe you want to kick us off and you know anything that comes to your mind.
00:00:36.521 --> 00:00:44.790
As far as you know, what prediction really fizzled this year or what came true, or what you see when you think about lessons for 2024?
00:00:44.810 --> 00:00:48.340
or what came true, or what you see when you think about lessons for 2024?
00:00:48.340 --> 00:00:55.374
I think one of them that has been the case for the last couple of years now is our margins keep getting compressed by different types of things.
00:00:55.374 --> 00:01:03.590
I think the biggest theme, or what was a big part of 2024 for me, with my brands and the brands that we work with, are like the new fees.
00:01:03.590 --> 00:01:06.954
Inbound placement fee is one that we've struggled with a lot.
00:01:06.954 --> 00:01:09.859
That added a lot of complexity.
00:01:09.859 --> 00:01:12.149
It added a lot of cost where there wasn't.
00:01:12.149 --> 00:01:27.849
So I mean, that's really the biggest thing for us is figuring out, you know, how to be competitive in these categories where you have especially when you have Chinese manufacturers that are selling direct and bringing the price points down.
00:01:27.849 --> 00:01:32.069
Just protecting margins really is the biggest thing for me in 2024.
00:01:32.069 --> 00:01:39.070
Of things that happened that you know, you, you, you expect that to happen on Amazon and at this stage of the game.
00:01:39.070 --> 00:01:44.484
But something that rang true for for me is this fees and and how to, how to approach them.
00:01:45.260 --> 00:01:54.444
I think it's interesting on the fee front, because so we've been seeing I mean, everybody's been seeing a squeeze, you know, over the last few years on that front for sure.
00:01:54.444 --> 00:02:15.651
But I think it's one of those areas where if you are, if you consider yourself to be, an Amazon brand, then those fees become obviously massively significant and you should, of course, try and minimize those fees, try to manage things.
00:02:15.651 --> 00:02:24.507
One of the things that Matt was talking about was the inventory placement and then, of course, we've got fees for too little inventory, fees for too much inventory, you know, fees for too little inventory, fees for too much inventory, you know, like.
00:02:24.507 --> 00:02:53.457
So the one thing that became clear there and I'm fortunate that we already had brought somebody on to manage that but if you are the owner of the business and you also are basically the one managing all of the different aspects of the business, I think one thing that's true of Amazon now is, because it's so much more complex than it used to be, that being a one man or one woman show is very difficult to really grow a brand in any significant way.
00:02:53.560 --> 00:03:10.520
Because even just being expert enough on and having enough time to manage the logistics side, you know, and in terms of making sure that you're addressing all of those fees that Amazon is charging and shipping in properly and at the right time, and all of that sort of thing.
00:03:10.539 --> 00:03:18.347
Like you can't just be willy nilly about it, it has to be very you know, regiment, let's say, and it's difficult to do as an individual person.
00:03:18.387 --> 00:03:22.308
So if you don't have people managing some of those different aspects of your business, you're probably going to have issues with it.
00:03:22.308 --> 00:03:39.283
But the other thing for us was it just made it crystal clear that we couldn't any longer really continue to be an Amazon business, even though we've always focused on trying to build the brand so that technically we weren't just an Amazon business.
00:03:39.283 --> 00:03:43.442
By the same token, virtually all of our sales have still been Amazon-based.
00:03:43.442 --> 00:04:13.645
We really haven't done a whole lot off of Amazon in terms of sales channels, and now we're looking at it and seeing that moving into the commercial market for us is going to be a much more profitable market for us, with much better margins than selling on Amazon is at this point, and also all of that work that we're doing off Amazon, I believe, based on everything that I've seen, should have a positive and direct impact on our Amazon sales and improve our sales there as a result of that off channel stuff.
00:04:13.664 --> 00:04:16.351
So I'm curious how do you guys feel about this?
00:04:16.351 --> 00:04:17.963
You know I see a lot of brands.
00:04:17.963 --> 00:04:21.403
You guys talk to a number of brands along with you know running your own brands.
00:04:21.403 --> 00:04:23.187
How much do you feel like?
00:04:23.749 --> 00:04:35.310
Because I think about like, okay, if you look at selling off your website, you know I think what gets lost in the calculation there that a lot of brands don't calculate in is is, you know your marketing costs there.
00:04:35.310 --> 00:04:49.151
So what's my customer acquisition cost if I'm driving, you know, somebody via a Facebook ad or a Google ad or something like that, understanding that my website probably is going to have a lot lower conversion rates?
00:04:49.151 --> 00:05:02.192
And then we've had some guests on here earlier this year that have talked about going really the wholesale route, getting into actual brick and mortar retail stores and some uneven success there.
00:05:02.192 --> 00:05:29.754
So I'm curious from your guys' perspective is the increases in fees and kind of the squeezing of margins on Amazon, because brands that were mainly focused on Amazon probably had it better than other channels and now we're starting to see kind of an equalization or is it that Amazon is truly becoming a less profitable channel than you know kind of the standard channels that are out there?
00:05:31.281 --> 00:05:33.589
I think part of it depends on how well you know what you're doing.
00:05:33.589 --> 00:06:11.586
Trying to generate traffic to a website and trying to manage you know conversion rates and whatnot, so that your customer acquisition costs are reasonable is not easy, but it's doable, and I think part of the issue, I guess, in your question lies an answer, that is, amazon for a long time in many ways, was an easy enough platform to sell on effectively that you didn't have to really understand marketing.
00:06:11.586 --> 00:06:14.771
You didn't have to understand a lot of those things.
00:06:14.771 --> 00:06:48.865
You could literally jump on Amazon, throw up a product and make money for a lot of years, and I think in that sense, I would say that it is probably true to some degree that it's really more of a balancing and an equalization of what is required and necessary to be able to sell effectively and profitably on Amazon versus what's required to sell off of Amazon as profitably, because to do it off of Amazon requires a lot of expertise to do it right and be profitable in it, and so if you don't have that, then yeah, you're in a tough spot.
00:06:49.386 --> 00:06:52.072
I'm fortunate that Amazon wasn't my first game.
00:06:52.072 --> 00:06:53.802
You know like I was in e-commerce.
00:06:53.802 --> 00:06:56.028
You know I've been there for nearly 30 years.
00:06:56.028 --> 00:07:03.300
So I had a lot of e-commerce experience previous to Amazon, which made Amazon a breeze because you know it was nothing.
00:07:03.300 --> 00:07:05.567
Now margins are squeezed.
00:07:05.567 --> 00:07:17.432
We can still be profitable, we're still doing fine, but moving off of that channel and taking advantage of what I know about off Amazon marketing and whatnot is, I think, going to be a big benefit to us.
00:07:17.841 --> 00:07:22.860
I think the biggest thing that you said there, mike, that I think not a lot of other Amazon brands.
00:07:22.860 --> 00:07:34.086
When they're thinking about off of Amazon, like it doesn't always have to be Facebook ads, like there's things that ProTuff, for example let's talk about a couple of the recent things that we're doing at ProTuff Like we hired an SEO agency.
00:07:34.086 --> 00:07:43.750
When's the last time you heard an Amazon like, not Amazon SEO or website SEO, and that's not something that a lot of Amazon sellers even think about investing in.
00:07:43.750 --> 00:07:48.970
But so like, that's just it's traditional advertising, traditional marketing.
00:07:48.970 --> 00:07:52.740
That that were that, yes, and actually the agency is helping.
00:07:52.740 --> 00:07:57.884
That we found is helping a lot because they're a paper performance agency and that that was new to me.
00:07:57.983 --> 00:08:04.005
So the initial outlay isn't, you know, you're not paying three, four or five grand retainer for hoping to get better keyword ranks.
00:08:04.005 --> 00:08:07.884
Like they don't get paid unless they actually increase your keyword rank, so like.
00:08:07.884 --> 00:08:13.305
But then also like a social media agency, like all of these things that we're doing, we haven't really paid any.
00:08:13.305 --> 00:08:14.790
We're not increasing any ad spend right now.
00:08:14.790 --> 00:08:25.714
We're just making more content so that we'll be attractive to influencers and affiliates that we then can use, utilize to, to kind of stroke the fire a little bit, so to speak.
00:08:25.714 --> 00:08:29.288
So it's not really just dumping a whole bunch of money out of a helicopter and Facebook ads.
00:08:29.288 --> 00:08:38.570
It's investing in SEO on the website and investing in content for social media so that we can make a push, but an organic push in kind of some sort of ways.
00:08:39.592 --> 00:08:50.653
I think the other thing too and I was thinking this a moment ago and then kind of forgot about it as I was talking but that is the conversion rates on Amazon are terrific.
00:08:50.653 --> 00:08:58.140
I mean, if you even know a little bit about what you're doing on Amazon, your conversion rates will be significantly better than they will likely be on your website.
00:08:58.140 --> 00:09:22.394
That being said, even if you really know what you're doing on Amazon the conversion of a prospect to a customer, but then also to a person who is now on your list, which makes them yours and not Amazon's that conversion, if you're following the whole chain, to where do I get how many of them?
00:09:22.394 --> 00:09:26.197
Am I actually getting to the point where, if Amazon shuts me down, I still have a business?
00:09:26.197 --> 00:09:45.412
That's way different, because we've been doing post-purchase for a long time and I think we're probably way better at it than most Amazon sellers are and still we probably only get I don't know 25% ish of our Amazon customers to actually end up on our list.
00:09:45.412 --> 00:09:55.980
So even though our conversion rate to sale is pretty good on Amazon, that conversion rate to actual subscriber is not On your website.
00:09:55.980 --> 00:09:59.817
You have a much better opportunity there because you have all of their information.
00:09:59.857 --> 00:10:02.995
Now, of course, you probably want to put a tick box Do you want to subscribe Whatever?
00:10:02.995 --> 00:10:09.808
But you're still going to get a much, much higher rate of return on that in terms of people who end up on your list that you can remarket to and whatnot.
00:10:09.808 --> 00:10:16.970
So even though on the front end maybe you're only getting a 4% conversion rate on your website or something, if you're good maybe you get a little bit more than that.
00:10:16.970 --> 00:10:31.448
Some people are only getting two to three if you're not very good, and and Amazon might be 10 or 15 or 20 or 30%, depending on what kind of product you have your conversion to list is much better and that ability to remarket to people is much better.
00:10:31.448 --> 00:10:32.946
So you have to weigh those things.
00:10:32.946 --> 00:10:34.846
It's important to pay attention to the whole chain.
00:10:36.330 --> 00:10:46.327
Yeah, and I mean I think you know, I would say over this year, one thing that I've been thinking about a lot in the brands that we're working with is the right lever to pull at the right time.
00:10:46.327 --> 00:11:10.681
So brands out there that are listening, if you're struggling with top line revenue, then Amazon is probably a pretty good place for you to be, because if you can't make top line sales, profit is a different story, but if you can't make top line sales on Amazon, you're going to really struggle off of Amazon because there's something that needs to be tuned with your product market fit.
00:11:10.681 --> 00:11:51.082
Yeah, that said, if you're like, hey, you know we're I mean, of course, we always want more revenue, but at the same time, if you're like, hey, we'd really like to increase our you know our net profit margin, how many dollars we have in our pocket at the end of the day, and you've built up enough revenue to have a, you know, a decent business where you're doing, you know, at least a few hundred thousand dollars a year, if not more, on Amazon, then, looking at, you know things like what you're talking about, mike, which is, hey, let's figure out how to drive some traffic to our own sites, make some sales there and I mean that's a great opportunity to have, you know, complimentary products.
00:11:51.082 --> 00:11:54.152
I think you know it doesn't have to be the same products necessarily.
00:11:54.152 --> 00:12:06.331
And then, at the same time, thinking about, I think still one of the least sexy opportunities that sits out there is increasing your conversion rates.
00:12:06.880 --> 00:12:20.383
It shocks me every single time the number of smart brand owners that I talk to and I say, hey, when was the last time you updated your listing or tried a different main image, a different title, something to increase your conversion rate?
00:12:20.462 --> 00:12:26.072
And most of the time, something to increase your conversion rate, and most of the time it's six to 12 months.
00:12:26.072 --> 00:12:33.381
Very few brand owners.
00:12:33.381 --> 00:12:51.216
And again, I understand that it may not be possible to do on every single one of your products, but just take the 80-20 rule and find that top 20% of your products and you really should, on a regular basis and I would say just as a rule of thumb and I would say you know, just as a rule of thumb, probably quarterly be testing main image or title or some part of your listing in order to increase your conversion rates.
00:12:51.216 --> 00:13:04.510
Because even if you go from you know a 12% conversion rate to a 13% conversion rate, not only does that increase your visibility, because Amazon gives you more visibility, but then think about the impact that that has on ad costs.
00:13:04.510 --> 00:13:09.177
I know you know we all talk about how CPCs and that type of stuff are going up, which is very frustrating.
00:13:09.177 --> 00:13:16.274
That's one of the easiest ways in order to get more efficient with your ad spend is by increasing your conversion rate.
00:13:16.620 --> 00:13:23.369
Well and we talked about this in a previous episode One of the things that Brian Johnson's been working on with what is the company called that he's?
00:13:24.211 --> 00:13:24.652
DeepM.
00:13:25.052 --> 00:13:25.754
Yeah, deepm.
00:13:26.179 --> 00:13:54.126
One of the things that he talked about when he was with us was this idea of shelves in Amazon, seo, and that you might have 10 products that are essentially sitting on a shelf and you're below that shelf and maybe you're sitting at this 12% conversion rate and if you hit 13, all of a sudden you don't jump one slot, you jump 12 slots because you jumped the entire shelf and you don't know just how much effect that little increase in conversion rate can be.
00:13:54.567 --> 00:14:00.710
And so it's easy to look at it and say, well, we've tried before and we've never really gotten a decent change.
00:14:00.710 --> 00:14:07.582
Maybe we got 1%, or 1% can be a lot, and if you don't build that in and you're not testing that, you don't know.
00:14:07.582 --> 00:14:16.982
And the other thing is, just because the changes that you made before only gave you a 1% increase, it doesn't mean that the next change that you do might not give you a 5% increase.
00:14:16.982 --> 00:14:24.591
You're going to try something new, you're going to try something different, and you never know from one test to the next just how much of a change it could be.
00:14:24.591 --> 00:14:28.863
But if you're not doing it at all, then you know what the change is going to be and that's nothing.
00:14:28.863 --> 00:14:30.705
You're muted, I think, matt.
00:14:32.527 --> 00:14:42.561
In the spirit of the things that were hit or bust in 2024, one of the things that is all the rage and everyone talks about is AI.
00:14:42.965 --> 00:14:43.894
Everyone's talking about is AI.
00:14:46.187 --> 00:15:07.153
But what's true about Amazon recently, in the past year, is that they've given us tools where there's really no excuse now to not have like videos on your listing, for example, like there's built in tools in just on on the, in the backend, that you can make videos in on in campaign manager, just with static photos of your product.
00:15:07.192 --> 00:15:14.924
So anything is better than not having a video at all, and now you can make one for free inside of inside of campaign manager.
00:15:14.924 --> 00:15:17.000
So AI is making it easier.
00:15:17.000 --> 00:15:27.597
It's leveling the field, so to speak, in terms of being able to change out your imagery and then split test your main, your hero images and split test your titles.
00:15:27.597 --> 00:15:39.538
You don't have to spend as much time as you used to because of the prevalence of AI, and Amazon's now kind of starting to weave it into the backend of Seller Central to where it makes it easy for you to make things like that now too.
00:15:39.538 --> 00:15:47.748
So I think that's something that in 2024 kind of changed the game for Amazon sellers, both on Amazon and off of Amazon in terms of the tools that you can use.
00:15:48.811 --> 00:15:59.114
Yeah, I'll steel man that a little bit, matt, in the sense of I think that you know, obviously, ai, a lot of the off platform tools you know, when you start looking at how do you write better listings and that type of stuff.
00:15:59.114 --> 00:16:07.368
I think there's a lot of great tools out there now for those types of things that can kind of get you 80% there and then you know, spend again.
00:16:07.368 --> 00:16:07.827
It makes it.
00:16:07.827 --> 00:16:19.570
It's not perfect, but it makes it a lot easier for a human to bring it all the way 100% home, to get those increases in conversion or create a new asset, whether it be an image or a video.
00:16:19.570 --> 00:16:20.913
So I think those things are great.
00:16:21.433 --> 00:16:28.529
That said, I am still woefully disappointed in Amazon's AI listing tool.
00:16:28.529 --> 00:16:34.556
It is amazing at how not good that tool is.
00:16:34.556 --> 00:16:34.875
Now.
00:16:34.875 --> 00:16:40.841
Does that mean that you shouldn't use it under any circumstances?
00:16:40.841 --> 00:16:41.647
Absolutely not.
00:16:41.647 --> 00:16:42.087
I would say.
00:16:42.087 --> 00:17:03.291
One of the most interesting things that we like to use it for and I think we've talked about a couple of times on the podcast is hey, if you have a title or an image for your product, especially if it's a new product, I really encourage people to put it into that listing builder because it tells you what based on the image, especially what Amazon thinks that product is, which is really valuable data.
00:17:03.291 --> 00:17:10.916
When we talk about one of the other trends in 2024, which is introduction of Rufus, that has now been, you know, much more rolled out.
00:17:10.916 --> 00:17:14.165
I think it's to everybody in the U?
00:17:14.165 --> 00:17:28.532
S now and I think they're starting to expand that as well, and I don't know if either one of you guys have tried that as a shopping experience, but it is significantly different from kind of the current standard of, you know, searching for products based on keywords.
00:17:29.886 --> 00:17:54.969
I haven't used Rufus, to be honest, and honestly to my detriment, because, even if I didn't care about it from an actual shopping perspective, I think that one of the things that sellers should be doing, including myself, is using it so that you understand how it operates and how it thinks and what it's doing, so that you can craft your Amazon presence a little better to line up with the way that Rufus actually operates.
00:17:55.029 --> 00:18:18.558
And I would say, john, that in my opinion, that listing tool that Amazon provides, I am completely in agreement with you that its most valuable use right now is to let Amazon tell you what they think your product is, and I will tell you there are a lot of products out there that Amazon thinks it is something very different than you think Amazon thinks it is.
00:18:19.605 --> 00:18:55.494
And you know, like even our product, you know, like Full Tools, amazon, there's a lot of confusion over a lot of different keywords in our category in terms of what it actually represents, and so it's interesting, you know, depending on the title that you put on or depending on the image that you give it, it's very interesting to see what Amazon comes back with in terms of, you know, bullet points and things like that, because oftentimes it is nothing related to the product that we're actually trying to sell, and it does help you get a better understanding of just where the fault lines are and how you might be able to you know sidestep some of those and make sure that you're actually getting the placement you want.
00:18:55.515 --> 00:19:19.991
Well, I think to that point, you know I would also and again, I know we've talked about this a couple of times this year on the podcast and I think you know we also have Vanessa hung on that if you want to listen to a in-depth episode on this, talking about all those different, you know, frankly little items within your listing that got the most of them got ignored for a long time, yeah, and now they're.
00:19:19.991 --> 00:19:26.711
You know, product specifications and all those little nitpicky things are becoming more and more important.
00:19:26.711 --> 00:19:53.032
As you know, rufus is using those in order to decide what to show to shoppers, because it it, and again, I, you know I just started using it a couple times, probably about a month ago, as we are into the holiday season, looking for gifts and that type of stuff, and what I noticed about it is is that it essentially bypasses a lot of the ads that we rely on in Amazon at this point.
00:19:53.032 --> 00:19:54.797
So there's no video ads.
00:19:55.167 --> 00:20:02.298
Amazon did just send me a message just the other day talking about how they're going to begin injecting ads into Rufus.
00:20:02.825 --> 00:20:03.689
Oh, I'm sure they are.
00:20:03.689 --> 00:20:08.948
I mean, I'm sure it's coming, but there will be no place that Amazon does not inject an ad.
00:20:09.410 --> 00:20:10.593
Yes, I'm sure.
00:20:11.253 --> 00:20:32.134
That said, I think that just being aware of how those ads display in there for example, you know, are they going to have video ads Is it going to be that, you know, or sponsor brand ads, at least from what, what it is right now and again it's going to probably, you know, evolve over the next couple of years is my guess is that ad will probably look more like a sponsor product ad.
00:20:33.244 --> 00:20:35.269
So it may not have.
00:20:35.269 --> 00:21:19.836
You know, you're, frankly, most of our listeners out there and our brands that we like to work with are premium level brands that have a brand story to tell as to why their product is significantly more than some product that's made at the lowest possible price from an overseas seller, and so when you start looking at those brands, then it's okay making sure that you have all the pieces that you need within that what would typically be a sponsored product ad, in order to give those buying signals in a way that can be hard to do compared to or sponsored brand placement, where you can tell a much more detailed and in-depth story.
00:21:20.785 --> 00:21:26.476
Well, I think too, what's interesting about Rufus is that it will give some of that nuance, right.
00:21:26.476 --> 00:21:35.115
Because if anybody who's looked at the reviews, their review profile, lately, you notice that at the top of that it lists a lot of the things that customers said this about the product and it's kind of these little.
00:21:35.115 --> 00:21:42.236
It lists a lot of the things that you know customers said this about the product and it's kind of these little bullets that are positive or negative or whatever, which is also part of that.
00:21:42.236 --> 00:21:47.464
You know, rufus AI kind of a system, and so what's interesting about Rufus is that it takes all that into account.
00:21:47.585 --> 00:22:10.097
So if somebody, let's say somebody was searching for let's just go back to ProTel, they're searching for commercial grade, you know, pool cleaning tools or a commercial grade pool poll, let's say you could put in your listing commercial grade and in the past that keyword, then I mean, if you were doing your job right, you should be showing up fairly prominently for commercial grade pool poll, right.
00:22:10.097 --> 00:22:28.554
But if the reviews for your product all say this product sucks, it's not, you know, it lasted a week, you know whatever, then in the past you wouldn't know that until you got to the listing and actually went through the reviews to discover they say it's commercial grade, but clearly it's not.
00:22:28.554 --> 00:22:37.045
The reviews say it's not Rufus.
00:22:37.045 --> 00:22:42.758
If I search for commercial grade pool pool, it isn't going to show me the pool pool that says it's commercial grade, but all of the reviews tell Rufus, this is the cheapest pool on the planet.
00:22:42.758 --> 00:22:44.191
It is clearly not commercial grade.
00:22:44.191 --> 00:22:46.471
That customer won't even see that product in Rufus.
00:22:47.114 --> 00:22:59.357
Yeah, and again, I'm sure the experience is going to change, but based on my experience with Rufus is you only see a maximum of like two to three products at a time.
00:22:59.357 --> 00:23:10.861
So it's very different also from, again, that search experience where there's 15 to 20 products if you count the ads on the search results page.
00:23:10.861 --> 00:23:27.122
So there's even less real estate and, like you said, Mike, getting you know, getting Rufus to essentially recommend your product, is going to be a very different game than the search results that we're used to.
00:23:28.086 --> 00:23:37.358
So one of the things we were talking about before we jumped on here too so while we're maybe somewhat on the topic of the things where people were like, oh, the sky is falling, you know, this is going to happen, this is going to happen.
00:23:37.358 --> 00:23:43.904
So you know, we talked AI a little bit, we talked about Amazon fees and kind of getting squeezed on the profit margin side.
00:23:43.904 --> 00:24:00.531
But another one that was really big early on in 2024 was this whole idea that Temu or Timu or however it is that you say it I still don't know was going to be the thing that kind of knocked Amazon off their pedestal, so to speak.
00:24:00.531 --> 00:24:09.747
Matt, what do you think about that in terms of whether it's actually had an impact, whether it's been significant or not, whether it's changed how Amazon is doing things.
00:24:09.747 --> 00:24:11.510
What do you think about that situation?
00:24:13.355 --> 00:24:14.877
I'm just not a Timu shopper.
00:24:14.877 --> 00:24:22.115
It's very similar to buying things off of a Facebook ad where you're pretty confident that it's going to come from overseas and you're not going to get it.
00:24:22.115 --> 00:24:33.515
For four weeks I did make a purchase on Temu I'm pretty sure the Super Bowl commercial got me and it was some incredible promotion and I ended up with like 30 products.
00:24:33.515 --> 00:24:42.107
It was addicting the way that the platform was to actually shop and add all these things that were like 32 cents to your basket, like I mean it was.
00:24:42.107 --> 00:24:42.710
It was.
00:24:42.710 --> 00:24:46.212
It got me to buy more than I would have, most of it's junk that I ended up throwing away.
00:24:46.212 --> 00:24:48.011
Like I got one thing out of it that I still use.
00:24:48.011 --> 00:25:01.461
I just thought that kind of a shopper so like and for me, I sell and I'm involved with categories where I'm the top end of the price point as opposed to the bottom end of the price point, which is more kind of what Temu.
00:25:01.481 --> 00:25:15.794
Now, amazon definitely took them serious, that's for sure, because they have their own I don't remember what Amazon's is called, but that I think will have an effect on sellers who sell at the opposite end of the price, the ones that are trying to get into that race to the bottom with the Chinese sellers.
00:25:15.814 --> 00:25:17.498
I think they're going to have a more difficult time.
00:25:17.498 --> 00:25:26.626
You know, yes, the Chinese manufacturers and the other sellers playing that game are going to steal market share from the ones that are higher price point.
00:25:26.626 --> 00:25:41.826
But I think that, like, take again, take ProTuff, that we always use as an example, like, instead of racing to the bottom in terms of price point, well, there is a another skew that we're launching that is going to allow us to compete a little bit better on price.
00:25:41.826 --> 00:25:48.813
But like we're going other places, like into the commercial market, where they're paying more for tools than they are on Amazon.
00:25:48.813 --> 00:26:06.164
So, you know, like I think that Temu and Sheen and I don't know how to say that, one Sheen but like there are people that shop on it, but like I, for me and the brands that I'm involved in, it's it's the opposite of where we're headed as a brand, as opposed to some of the other ones who have to because they sell the lower price point.
00:26:07.566 --> 00:26:07.685
It.
00:26:07.685 --> 00:26:47.949
It's interesting to me that I think you know, as you mentioned it and again I don't remember what Amazon is calling it either but as far as I understand it, they are rolling out, or maybe have rolled out to some degree, this kind of competitor to Tem products, because a lot of those low end, super low price products depending on how Amazon actually does this may filter out of the results that we're competing against.
00:26:47.949 --> 00:27:04.074
Like you've got two different shoppers essentially one in this store and one in this store and maybe we're no longer having to sift through all of these shoppers that probably never would have bought our product anyways and are looking for these low price products and what's left is the shopper that we really want anyway.
00:27:04.074 --> 00:27:20.823
You know, I don't know what Amazon's going to do with that, but for me I looked at it from the beginning as maybe it's an opportunity, you know, for for higher price products to actually have somewhat of a comeback on Amazon as many of those products maybe filter out of those listings, I don't know.
00:27:20.843 --> 00:27:23.249
Well, yeah, I don't know Amazon haul.
00:27:23.249 --> 00:27:26.236
It's called by the way Amazon haul.
00:27:26.236 --> 00:27:31.946
Actually, people commenting Mir has told us in the comments Amazon haul and he said it's already out, there's already, you can already purchase.
00:27:31.946 --> 00:27:32.769
So I'm going to go check it out.
00:27:32.769 --> 00:27:33.329
I want to go look.
00:27:34.092 --> 00:28:09.071
Yeah, I think it'd be well and what's interesting to me and I don't want to make, you know, too aggressive prediction for 2025, but you know, understand that you know Temu and Sheen and these types of companies, and probably even Amazon haul, is really dependent on kind of this weird loophole in you know customs law within the United States, combined with subsidies from the Chinese government for shipping, that allows these companies to exist, and so, again, it's no idea what's going to happen in 2025 as far as that scene is concerned.
00:28:09.071 --> 00:28:10.675
There's a lot of talks, so we'll see.
00:28:10.675 --> 00:28:12.267
Wait until there's some action there.
00:28:12.267 --> 00:28:15.053
However, I think you do have to take into account of.
00:28:15.053 --> 00:28:32.692
You know it's a pretty easy what if, if you know that loophole gets closed, that means a lot of these lower end products essentially no longer become viable in the current process that Temu and Sheen and these companies are using, and probably Amazon haul as well.
00:28:33.775 --> 00:28:34.786
Yeah, agreed, it's.
00:28:34.786 --> 00:28:37.887
In fact, it's one of those I've had a number of conversations with people about.
00:28:37.887 --> 00:28:41.436
You know, concerns over potential tariffs and you know what.
00:28:41.436 --> 00:28:44.330
What is, you know, trump and his administration going to do when they get in?
00:28:44.330 --> 00:28:46.965
And okay, you know like I mean.
00:28:46.986 --> 00:28:48.148
We manufacture in China.
00:28:48.148 --> 00:28:53.048
We've we've tried on a number of occasions to to onshore our manufacturing and just couldn't do it.
00:28:53.048 --> 00:29:02.901
You know, maybe we end up in a scenario where we end up having to, but at the moment the biggest thing is because we are a premium price product.
00:29:02.901 --> 00:29:21.431
Even if those tariffs go into effect, they affect us far less on a profit margin perspective than those products that are at the low end of that pricing point, that have very slim margins and especially, as you said, many of those actual Chinese sellers who have a lot of these breaks.
00:29:22.305 --> 00:29:29.554
Let's say that allow them to pull that off as soon as that rug gets pulled out from under them and I'm not so sure that it won't be, we'll see.
00:29:29.554 --> 00:29:49.992
But if it does, again, same thing, just like I was talking about with the differentiation of the two platforms, maybe on Amazon, is that there's a lot of products that end up overnight, potentially not even being in the listings and all of a sudden a product that was number 30, because there were all these other cheap products ahead of them, now becomes number five.
00:29:49.992 --> 00:29:57.373
Who knows exactly what might happen with that, but I see it far more as an opportunity than I do as a possible problem for our company.
00:29:59.035 --> 00:29:59.256
Yeah.
00:29:59.256 --> 00:30:32.407
So I'd like to pivot a little bit towards speaking of premium brands, since I know that's most of our listeners and one of the topics that we were talking about before we hit record here, and we've talked about it a few times this year on the podcast which is Amazon Creators Connections and Mike, if Mike, if you want to share kind of high level your experience with it this year, and then you know, we want to give credit where credit is due, and I think it was Josh Hadley who kind of talked about how to go kind of beyond the basics of it in order to get a lot more value out of it.
00:30:32.407 --> 00:30:36.837
If you can give kind of a quick version of that, since I know we've talked about it on previous episodes.
00:30:37.419 --> 00:30:37.980
Yeah, for sure.
00:30:37.980 --> 00:30:44.413
I mean looking at it from the standpoint of, you know, benefit or bust, you know, did it happen or didn't happen?
00:30:44.413 --> 00:30:50.192
Creator Connections is it's been a good opportunity for our company.
00:30:50.192 --> 00:30:59.093
I think there is maybe an argument to be made for, you know, the smaller your company is, maybe the less potential opportunity there is maybe an argument to be made for the smaller your company is, maybe the less potential opportunity there is there.
00:30:59.093 --> 00:31:01.435
So take that into account.
00:31:01.435 --> 00:31:04.740
But we did through.
00:31:05.000 --> 00:31:09.673
Well, let me look at the dates on it so I can give you more of a timeframe of how long it took.
00:31:09.673 --> 00:31:12.468
We have so far we did one campaign.
00:31:12.468 --> 00:31:13.852
Well, I take that back.
00:31:13.852 --> 00:31:15.134
We've done two campaigns.
00:31:15.134 --> 00:31:17.567
The first campaign that we did was horrible.
00:31:17.567 --> 00:31:20.093
It produced virtually no result.
00:31:20.093 --> 00:31:37.530
The second campaign, after we implemented Josh Hadley's strategy and, to be clear, his strategy not only helps you with the actual performance of the campaign itself in terms of the number of creators that sign up and actually sell product on Amazon, so it increases the number of sales that you get.
00:31:37.530 --> 00:31:44.137
It also helps you on the back end of that you know, to create kind of this list of creators that you can work with off platform.
00:31:44.137 --> 00:31:54.935
So it's incredibly useful, but we did a total of $115,000 in sales from this one campaign.
00:31:54.935 --> 00:31:57.018
Now it's a long-term campaign.
00:31:57.077 --> 00:32:04.896
We started the campaign in mid-April, so basically it's been eight months and it essentially ends at the end of this month.
00:32:04.896 --> 00:32:09.173
So we're almost done with the campaign and we will absolutely rerun it.
00:32:09.173 --> 00:32:15.221
Without question, we will rerun it, and the nice thing about the rerun is everything's already set up.
00:32:15.221 --> 00:32:16.405
We already know the template.
00:32:16.405 --> 00:32:17.288
We don't have to change it.
00:32:17.288 --> 00:32:18.171
We already know it works.
00:32:18.752 --> 00:33:08.076
We are still, even to this day, eight months later after we started the campaign, we still have creators that are signing up to promote our product, and not just signing up through Amazon as a creator on the campaign, but also they are following the link to our Google form, signing up to our spreadsheet, which is just a list of creators for us to work with, and then we get to vet them, because we get a whole lot more information about them on what other platforms they're on, how many followers they have, how many video views they've got, and so there's been a massive benefit to us of that campaign, because I probably only invested about two hours in setting up that campaign and now that I have done it, it will literally take me two minutes.
00:33:08.537 --> 00:33:13.633
The next time I set it up because I'm going to use the exact same template, I'm going to send them to the exact same Google form.
00:33:13.633 --> 00:33:15.009
All of it's already set up.
00:33:15.009 --> 00:33:22.573
So whatever benefit we get out of the next campaign is all based on what's going to be literally a few minutes worth of effort to produce.
00:33:22.573 --> 00:33:31.296
Whatever we get out of it and I can almost guarantee at a minimum, we're going to continue to sign up creators and add them to that list that we can use off platform for getting content.
00:33:32.346 --> 00:33:38.977
So you're offering a 15% commission and you've generated 115K in sales.
00:33:38.977 --> 00:33:41.708
You said, or 105K in sales 115.
00:33:41.950 --> 00:33:45.065
$113,408.
00:33:45.224 --> 00:33:50.892
So I mean, let's compare that to your ACOS on Amazon advertising.
00:33:50.892 --> 00:33:51.432
What do you like?
00:33:51.432 --> 00:33:54.096
25% to 30%, 28% to 30% ACOS.
00:33:54.115 --> 00:33:58.201
Yeah, our ACOS right now is up in the 30% range.
00:33:58.201 --> 00:34:02.032
We feel like we're doing relatively decent if we can keep it under 30%.
00:34:02.032 --> 00:34:21.572
Fortunately, our tacos is better than that, but ACOS is about 30% at the moment and so, yeah, it's a much better performance track record for Creator Connections in terms of our profit, let's say per sale, but then also we get the creator on the back end that we can work with our platform.
00:34:21.612 --> 00:34:32.090
So it's difficult, quite frankly, to quantify just how much benefit that is, but certainly we're getting a lot of sales at less cost than if we were actually just advertising.
00:34:32.110 --> 00:34:48.237
Yeah, and that's the piece that I really want to just double click on, because I we've done this with a number of brands and, quite frankly, had mixed success, and I think a lot of it has to do with what category that brand is in and kind of some seasonality and some other things, and so it also size.
00:34:48.780 --> 00:34:59.849
You know, typically what we see kind of depending on the brand is, you know, this can be an additional, you know, 5% bump or so in revenue from based on what they're already doing.
00:34:59.869 --> 00:35:06.893
So if you're only doing, you know, 10 grand a month, it's probably not going to be move the needle in a huge way for your brand.
00:35:06.893 --> 00:35:51.750
But I would say you know, what you mentioned there, which is connecting with those creators, is really where 80% of that value is in this process, because that allows you to really work on building a relationship with them, getting them involved in your community and having them as, essentially, an ambassador for your brand long-term, creating content and doing all those other things that we want influencers and creators to do, and this is a great way for them to discover you without having to pay a ton of money, because there is plenty of brands out there that they'll pay hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars to find good creators like this, and essentially, they're coming to you and working for you.
00:35:51.750 --> 00:35:56.639
Like you said, matt, what boils down to a 15% ACoS for you.
00:35:57.784 --> 00:36:05.780
Yeah, no, it's, it's been, it's been terrific, and I would say that the even for a smaller brand.
00:36:05.780 --> 00:36:09.916
Well, let me ask you a question, John, because I'm curious because, like I said, we ran a.
00:36:09.916 --> 00:36:13.693
We ran a campaign previous to this one and it was dismal.
00:36:13.693 --> 00:36:15.197
I mean it literally was.
00:36:15.197 --> 00:36:17.231
I wrote creator connections completely off.
00:36:17.231 --> 00:36:18.496
I was like this is worthless.
00:36:18.675 --> 00:36:57.717
You know, in that there is a big lesson, because I think all too often as sellers, we test something, we try some new methods, some new advertising opportunity, whatever, and if it doesn't work, our answer to that is well, this method sucks, or this new service sucks or whatever sucks, you know, or this new service sucks or whatever, instead of taking a step back and, at least briefly, being a little bit introspective about it and saying what might have gone wrong, what maybe did I do wrong that made this not work and maybe how could I make it work better?