You're listening to gift biz unwrapped episode 185 the experience of
Speaker:signing the right greeting card.
Speaker:It's pretty miserable and it hasn't really changed in decades.
Speaker:Attention gifters,
Speaker:bakers, crafters and makers pursuing your dream can be fun.
Speaker:Whether you have an established business or looking to start one
Speaker:now you are in the right place.
Speaker:This is gift to biz unwrapped,
Speaker:helping you turn your skill into a flourishing business.
Speaker:Join us for an episode packed full of invaluable guidance,
Speaker:resources, and the support you need to grow your gift biz.
Speaker:Here is your host gift biz gal,
Speaker:Sue moon Heights.
Speaker:Hi there,
Speaker:it's Sue and thank you so much For taking a little
Speaker:bit of your time today and joining me on this show
Speaker:and Oh,
Speaker:are you going to be so glad you did?
Speaker:I'm going to be introducing our guests shortly,
Speaker:but you just need to know that Adam has so many
Speaker:good tips that he's going to be sharing today that apply
Speaker:to all of our businesses.
Speaker:Grab yourself a pen,
Speaker:grab some paper.
Speaker:You're going to see that.
Speaker:I'm going to say a couple of times through this episode
Speaker:that you should go back and listen to it again.
Speaker:I know I will be,
Speaker:but before we get started,
Speaker:I want to make sure you know about my newly released
Speaker:free masterclass.
Speaker:It's called how to turn your hobby into a business.
Speaker:How do you know if this is for you?
Speaker:Well, if you're starting a business right now,
Speaker:you've gotten that dream,
Speaker:but you're just not sure what steps you should be taking.
Speaker:This masterclass is for you if you're already in business,
Speaker:but something just isn't clicking,
Speaker:it's not bringing in the sales or it's just not performing
Speaker:the way you think it should.
Speaker:This masterclass is also for you to check it out.
Speaker:Just go over to gift biz,
Speaker:unwrapped.com forward slash masterclass.
Speaker:I look forward to seeing you over there and for now,
Speaker:let's get into the show Today.
Speaker:I am thrilled to introduce you to Adam Denato of card
Speaker:aisle. The greeting card industry hasn't really seen anything new in
Speaker:the last 50 years except for the cards that play music
Speaker:when they're opened.
Speaker:Cardell is a company founded by three engineers that changes that
Speaker:they've captured all the magic that comes from a tangible greeting
Speaker:card, even in the digital age,
Speaker:and simply made it easier to find that perfect card.
Speaker:Whether you run an eCommerce shop,
Speaker:take most of your orders over the phone,
Speaker:or have a brick and mortar store Cardell set you up
Speaker:with more selection than a hallmark store.
Speaker:It also eliminates the headache of guessing what car designs will
Speaker:sell. Adam,
Speaker:I am so excited to get into this story.
Speaker:Welcome to the gift biz unwrapped podcast.
Speaker:Yeah, thank you.
Speaker:I'm psyched to be here as well.
Speaker:So I met you at a convention a little bit ago,
Speaker:maybe few weeks or so ago,
Speaker:but I really don't know the story behind Cardell so we're
Speaker:going to get into all of that.
Speaker:But before that,
Speaker:I want to get to know you a little better too.
Speaker:We do this in a creative way.
Speaker:I told you that in the pre chat,
Speaker:but if you were to describe yourself through a motivational candle,
Speaker:what color would your candle be and what would be the
Speaker:quote on the candle?
Speaker:I was actually laughing with my wife about this last night
Speaker:trying to figure out,
Speaker:this was just a very different question that I'm used to
Speaker:answer again,
Speaker:what ended up coming to as far as a quote goes,
Speaker:the quote that has been sticking with me recently,
Speaker:something that that's really made me think is the guy who
Speaker:says it can't be done,
Speaker:shouldn't get in the way of the guy doing it.
Speaker:Oh, I love that.
Speaker:It captures so much of why so many of us are
Speaker:entrepreneurs that it's not that desired escape or to make a
Speaker:ton of money or anything else.
Speaker:It's that I like creating,
Speaker:I like doing things that other people haven't done before and
Speaker:so often you run into when some kind of structured organization,
Speaker:people saying,
Speaker:no, this is how we've always done it.
Speaker:This is the only way we can do it.
Speaker:That's so limiting.
Speaker:Yeah, and then as far as the color goes,
Speaker:this stumps me a little bit more.
Speaker:My wife and I enjoy getting outside a bunch.
Speaker:We do a lot of rock climbing,
Speaker:mountain biking,
Speaker:backpacking, stuff like that in the mountains out in Virginia.
Speaker:And towards sunset.
Speaker:If you look out and you can see the mountains on
Speaker:the horizon,
Speaker:they get this two dimensional kind of look and you get
Speaker:this bluish green color that sort of the mountains take on
Speaker:that color I think would be really neat.
Speaker:If you had one of those thicker candles where the wick
Speaker:burns down in the center and you see the light shining
Speaker:through the candle through that bluish green kind of coming outwards
Speaker:I think would be a really amazing glow.
Speaker:Oh, I love it.
Speaker:I can actually see that.
Speaker:So I have to ask you,
Speaker:did your wife agree with your quote in your color?
Speaker:She thought they were good.
Speaker:Yeah, she and I laughed.
Speaker:We came up with a lot of funny quotes,
Speaker:but I think that this was one that we all settled
Speaker:on. You got to have one that we can use on
Speaker:the show,
Speaker:so that's fun.
Speaker:I hope it led to some interesting conversation.
Speaker:That's fun.
Speaker:All right,
Speaker:let's get into Cardell.
Speaker:You knew your talk about with your quote,
Speaker:the fact that if it's not done the same and people,
Speaker:you know it's not something that's been done before.
Speaker:People really challenge you and question it.
Speaker:And Cardell is definitely different.
Speaker:So you're saying that it's founded by three engineers,
Speaker:so that's kind of curious.
Speaker:That gets me questioning.
Speaker:But talk about the story behind the creation of card aisle.
Speaker:Yeah, so I was doing a PhD in mechanical engineering and
Speaker:had gotten to the point where I was all done with
Speaker:coursework and was just doing research at this point actually just
Speaker:come off the discovery channel was doing this reality TV show
Speaker:about engineers and flown out to LA and done some neat
Speaker:stuff with that and came back and buddy mentioned this idea
Speaker:of this new class that was being funded by the national
Speaker:science foundation and they had run into this problem in academia
Speaker:where they've been dumping tons and tons of money into research
Speaker:and the research isn't gaining commercialized.
Speaker:So they've been trying to figure out how do we teach
Speaker:academics, how do you take these great ideas that do amazing
Speaker:things in a lab and convert it into a commercial technology,
Speaker:something that can benefit people kind of in a big and
Speaker:a large way and should they create this class and because
Speaker:it was through the engineering department,
Speaker:it had this brilliant and creative name.
Speaker:It was called the startup class,
Speaker:so you knew exactly what you were getting and they had
Speaker:four faculty members for 30 students.
Speaker:There's like brand new class that we're trying all sorts of
Speaker:new things and day one of the class we showed up
Speaker:and everybody had to have an idea,
Speaker:had to have some kind of business concepts that we were
Speaker:going to run with and because much of my research was
Speaker:with supercomputers,
Speaker:I pitched day you basically a better version of Google,
Speaker:which I still stand by.
Speaker:I has some strong merits,
Speaker:but that was what I pitched.
Speaker:One of the other guys,
Speaker:David, who ended up being one of the other founders,
Speaker:does a lot of sailing and he pitched a technique for
Speaker:taking salt water and converting it into fresh water,
Speaker:like good solid engineering solution.
Speaker:And Stephan,
Speaker:the third co-founder stood up and said,
Speaker:well we all buy greeting cards.
Speaker:We all receive greeting cards.
Speaker:But the experience of getting that greeting card and finding the
Speaker:right greeting card said it's pretty miserable and it hasn't really
Speaker:changed in decades.
Speaker:Said this is an opportunity.
Speaker:There is something here.
Speaker:There has to be a better way of doing this.
Speaker:And halfway through the class there was this intermission,
Speaker:it was one of these like three hour long classes.
Speaker:And at the intermission we had only heard half of the
Speaker:pitches and David and I made a beeline right over to
Speaker:Stephan. So we like your idea way better than our idea.
Speaker:And the very next day we got together and started rolling
Speaker:with us.
Speaker:So one of the big focuses of the class and this
Speaker:like as an engineer is someone who likes building things.
Speaker:This was hard.
Speaker:Big focus was go out and talk to customers,
Speaker:go out and find what problems customers are facing,
Speaker:find what actually needs to be solved.
Speaker:Because so often it's easy to come up with the solution
Speaker:in a vacuum that it turns out you're the only one
Speaker:that has that problem.
Speaker:So we went out and we interviewed somewhere in the ballpark
Speaker:of about 700 strangers.
Speaker:We got thrown out of a mall twice for solicitation.
Speaker:We had like,
Speaker:it was an experience.
Speaker:So Adam is for clarification,
Speaker:you're a customer at that juncture was the end user.
Speaker:So the recipient of a card,
Speaker:not someone who would supply the cards.
Speaker:Exactly. We were heavily focused at that point on the end
Speaker:user and yeah,
Speaker:as you have uh,
Speaker:alluded to,
Speaker:we ended up shifting towards like longer-term towards the retailer.
Speaker:But at that point we were looking at the end user,
Speaker:the person buying the card.
Speaker:And what we ended up finding,
Speaker:we saw a consistent message and I think there was this
Speaker:one grandmother who embodied the message better than anybody else.
Speaker:And we ran into her and it was in one of
Speaker:those big box stores and she had the list of five
Speaker:or 10 grandkids that were having birthdays that month and she
Speaker:was picking out the perfect card for each kid.
Speaker:And she told us stories about every kid and like it
Speaker:was clear she knew these grandkids much better than someone who
Speaker:only sees their grandkids the big holidays.
Speaker:So she was looking for the perfect card for every kid
Speaker:and just like warm and rosy and really friendly woman.
Speaker:And when we asked her what she thought about the process
Speaker:of buying those greeting cards of actually finding the perfect card,
Speaker:like not what happens once you have the perfect card but
Speaker:getting there,
Speaker:she went off on this litany of obscenities that would make
Speaker:your hair curl.
Speaker:Oh that's funny.
Speaker:She'd been to four stories that morning and she was at
Speaker:that moment struggling to find a card for a middle school
Speaker:aged boy that wasn't obscene and wasn't childish.
Speaker:And ah,
Speaker:she was frustrated and we saw this theme time and again
Speaker:the people love getting the perfect card but it is often
Speaker:so hard to get that perfect card.
Speaker:So at that point we had collected this data.
Speaker:We had seen there is a problem,
Speaker:there is a large market for this.
Speaker:So the first idea that we had was we said,
Speaker:all right,
Speaker:what if we kind of meld some technology into getting the
Speaker:perfect card?
Speaker:And so we reached out to a bunch of local artists
Speaker:and got some phenomenal designs from these artists and we got
Speaker:some money from the national science foundation day of the class
Speaker:to buy some printers.
Speaker:We got one of those tents that people set up,
Speaker:soccer games and whatnot that you can or tailgating that you
Speaker:can kind of hang out under.
Speaker:And we set up in front of the engineering building just
Speaker:a little before mother's day.
Speaker:And what we were doing,
Speaker:we had,
Speaker:it was the junkiest setup.
Speaker:People basically pointed at the card they wanted,
Speaker:like one of these designs that the artists had.
Speaker:They told us what message they wanted on the inside.
Speaker:And then we typed it out around a computer.
Speaker:We had a printer sitting right there and we'd hit print.
Speaker:And the big thing we were testing was if we can
Speaker:offer convenience,
Speaker:if we can offer with these local artists,
Speaker:we can make it much easier to get cards that really
Speaker:fit the people we're targeting.
Speaker:And we were at Virginia tech,
Speaker:so talk about a university that is very proud of being
Speaker:Virginia tech.
Speaker:So being able to get the local artists,
Speaker:the locally themed cards,
Speaker:making it easy for people to find the card,
Speaker:making it easy for people to access this.
Speaker:We were right there,
Speaker:it was convenient.
Speaker:And then the personalization that still gets you a professional quality
Speaker:card at the end.
Speaker:And so we ended up,
Speaker:we had to shut down early because we had so many
Speaker:orders, we couldn't print the orders fast enough.
Speaker:So we were writing down dorm numbers and petty shut down
Speaker:and we were delivering cards to the students' dorms afterwards because
Speaker:there was such a line.
Speaker:Wow, I'm going to stop this story right here.
Speaker:It's so coating Adam and I don't want to lose it.
Speaker:I want to because there's so much here.
Speaker:I want all of our listeners to capture all of this.
Speaker:I've gotten four points in your evolution of this business and
Speaker:we're not even to really what car dial is yet.
Speaker:Totally the thing.
Speaker:Have you ever heard the term blue ocean versus red ocean?
Speaker:Okay, so you totally have a blue ocean business for sure.
Speaker:Do you want us to describe blue ocean for the listeners
Speaker:or should I do it real quick?
Speaker:Okay, so blue ocean you guys is,
Speaker:you know there's a red ocean or there's a blue ocean.
Speaker:Oh, red ocean means it's shark-infested,
Speaker:if you will.
Speaker:There's so much competition out there because there are so many
Speaker:people doing something similar to what you're doing.
Speaker:So it could be in the way you're describing your product.
Speaker:You make cupcakes,
Speaker:for example.
Speaker:There's not a lot of difference.
Speaker:There's a lot of other cupcakes out there.
Speaker:What could you do to make yourself different so you're not
Speaker:in those shark infested waters?
Speaker:Another way you can do it,
Speaker:which is what Adam's done.
Speaker:And it was Stephen,
Speaker:Stephen, Stephen,
Speaker:Stephen, Stephen who identified a blue ocean opportunity with the greeting
Speaker:cards. If they could change the experience of acquiring and what
Speaker:that greeting card was.
Speaker:No one else is doing that.
Speaker:So it's kind of like if you can stay with the
Speaker:ocean strategy here is you go into this blue ocean where
Speaker:you're just swimming free.
Speaker:There's not a lot of competition and it makes things easier.
Speaker:Although Adam,
Speaker:I know it can be challenging too,
Speaker:so we're going to get to that in a minute.
Speaker:But, so the first thing was just identifying an opportunity and
Speaker:this opportunity was sitting right in a blue ocean.
Speaker:So that's the first thing.
Speaker:The other thing that they did was they went out and
Speaker:they did some research.
Speaker:It was kind of like a checkpoint to see if what
Speaker:they thought was such a good idea really was I.
Speaker:E. The story about the grandmother.
Speaker:Then they went out and tested a little bit further and
Speaker:this is a big point to you guys.
Speaker:You heard how he's just describing on the campus,
Speaker:they didn't have the refined end product yet.
Speaker:They hadn't spent all the money and done everything yet.
Speaker:They've brought it to a point where they could bring it
Speaker:to market and test it as like the first step of
Speaker:development. And I know there was some investment there already,
Speaker:Adam, but it was the first step of seeing whether this
Speaker:was spin to fly.
Speaker:So a lot of things moving into what would end up
Speaker:being the company they also saw,
Speaker:and this was 0.4
Speaker:demand. Yeah,
Speaker:you can have the best thing in the world.
Speaker:It's cool,
Speaker:it's solves a problem.
Speaker:But if people aren't really interested in it,
Speaker:it doesn't matter.
Speaker:You're not gonna sell any.
Speaker:So opportunity research and a checkpoint,
Speaker:developing the product,
Speaker:kind of in a rough scale,
Speaker:checking it out,
Speaker:testing the market,
Speaker:and then seeing that their demand are the four steps we've
Speaker:gotten through already.
Speaker:So Adam,
Speaker:I'm loving this story.
Speaker:I hope you don't mind that I interrupted,
Speaker:But I wanted to catch all those points for everybody.
Speaker:Not a problem at all.
Speaker:So we're at the point where you guys are delivering the
Speaker:cards because there was so much demand you had to shut
Speaker:down early.
Speaker:And so you guys had to be excited.
Speaker:Like you guys were college kids yet.
Speaker:Did you go at guys go out and have a beer
Speaker:and celebration that night or what?
Speaker:We were all definitely,
Speaker:yeah, over 21 at that point.
Speaker:Celebrations. There you go.
Speaker:That's good because you're like,
Speaker:because you were probably thinking,
Speaker:okay, we've done all this stuff.
Speaker:No, all this work and it's really working.
Speaker:Yeah. Well and it was working better than we expected it
Speaker:to work too.
Speaker:Like that was part of the excitement too.
Speaker:Sure. Okay,
Speaker:so carry on.
Speaker:So everyone got their cards,
Speaker:what happens next?
Speaker:Yeah, so at that point,
Speaker:the two big things that we identified that we really wanted
Speaker:to hone in on where the personalization and with that personalization,
Speaker:like access to local artists and being able to upload your
Speaker:own photos and being able to really get the message.
Speaker:And what we ended up seeing was even amongst college age
Speaker:guys, there were folks that were excited about this personalization.
Speaker:We even saw guys bragging to strangers about the card they
Speaker:had just designed because it was so perfect and it was
Speaker:something like we stepped back and we were thinking,
Speaker:imagine if you were in a hallmark store and some millennial
Speaker:age guys starts bragging to you about the card that he
Speaker:just picked out.
Speaker:They'd be creepy.
Speaker:Like that would be so outside the normal.
Speaker:And we were seeing that I would not have expected that
Speaker:either. So that personalization,
Speaker:like that ability to make it easy for people to get
Speaker:to the right card.
Speaker:And then the other thing we saw was being able to
Speaker:meet people where they are already being able to provide some
Speaker:sense of convenience.
Speaker:So for this,
Speaker:what we ended up and as engineers we said we can
Speaker:build anything.
Speaker:We ended up building this.
Speaker:Basically the ideal was around like a Redbox for greeting cards
Speaker:or an ATM for greeting cards.
Speaker:So something that would be completely automated that we can set
Speaker:up anywhere.
Speaker:And the very first one of these that we built,
Speaker:it's still operating today.
Speaker:It's still printing cards and it very much looks like three
Speaker:engineers built it.
Speaker:There is no design aesthetic at all.
Speaker:Like there's a screen at the height that you stand at
Speaker:and a card comes out the bottom.
Speaker:And honestly refilling this thing with anchor card or anything is
Speaker:a burden that involves disassembling most of the kiosk.
Speaker:Oh my gosh.
Speaker:We basically went up and down main street in Blacksburg,
Speaker:Virginia, where we're based and talked to a number of different
Speaker:retailers trying to find a home and eventually found a home
Speaker:with this.
Speaker:It's an organic grocery store and great location,
Speaker:great spot.
Speaker:That kiosk did well,
Speaker:does well today and then from there we ended up,
Speaker:the next thing we said,
Speaker:okay, there's one of these,
Speaker:or like this,
Speaker:it's an organic grocery store,
Speaker:but it's a very unique organic grocery store.
Speaker:And we said like,
Speaker:there's no way this is going to scale.
Speaker:We need to find something else.
Speaker:Going back to the university ended up convincing to put two
Speaker:kiosks on the campus and it was something that they basically
Speaker:said yes.
Speaker:So we went home and scrambled and built two more kiosks.
Speaker:Did they look the same for they?
Speaker:The big red box type things again now.
Speaker:So the first one was that that first one in the
Speaker:organic grocery store is this light funny shade of white and
Speaker:blue and it's got enough paint on it that the whole
Speaker:thing looks like it's made out of plastic because our woodworking
Speaker:skills were a little mediocre.
Speaker:The next one looks kind of like something that would fit
Speaker:in a Cracker barrel.
Speaker:It's very like stained wood.
Speaker:It's again has way more pieces than necessary.
Speaker:And then the third one we worked with some design students
Speaker:at tech and got connected with a local cabinet maker and
Speaker:that one actually looks fairly professional.
Speaker:It's got much more of a present,
Speaker:it has clean lines and that the design that we ended
Speaker:up basically tweaking from then on.
Speaker:Got it.
Speaker:Yeah. She,
Speaker:we ended up got a couple of kiosks on Virginia Tech's
Speaker:campus S and these continued to do well at this point.
Speaker:We went out and did a small fundraising round from some
Speaker:friends and family that got us to the point where we
Speaker:were able to get a fair number,
Speaker:more kiosks out at different local stores,
Speaker:a handful of other colleges,
Speaker:a couple of other universities,
Speaker:and then we got a really cool opportunity with Rackspace,
Speaker:which is this big tech company.
Speaker:It competes with Amazon and Microsoft in different fields and with
Speaker:Rackspace they have this huge headquarters down in San Antonio and
Speaker:something like 10,000
Speaker:employees. One of the big challenges we were facing with universities
Speaker:is that for a third of the year they're empty.
Speaker:So a corporate campus provides a lot of this team feel
Speaker:of a college campus.
Speaker:It's just not empty.
Speaker:It's also full of people that have much more disposable income
Speaker:than college students.
Speaker:So we set up with Rackspace.
Speaker:That went really well,
Speaker:started scaling that into a number of other corporate campuses where
Speaker:with like Intel,
Speaker:we've got a kiosk recently with Cisco.
Speaker:From there we started scaling into military bases,
Speaker:so primarily army and air force bases.
Speaker:And after doing this for about a year or two,
Speaker:we ended up getting connected with some convention.
Speaker:There was a fellow that came up and said,
Speaker:I've got this eCommerce website,
Speaker:I'm selling gifts,
Speaker:and he said,
Speaker:I would love to be able to offer a greeting card,
Speaker:so I would love to be able to do something because
Speaker:at this point we've got 9,000
Speaker:designs and all sorts of core personalization and everything else and
Speaker:it's a really nice card when you print it out.
Speaker:And he said,
Speaker:I want to be able to offer that,
Speaker:but I want to be able to offer that through my
Speaker:website. So we went back and worked with our developers and
Speaker:ended up building a solution that was really easy to plug
Speaker:into a website and something that all of that smooth design
Speaker:experience that we had provided for the customers that had been
Speaker:honed over years of working in different locations and being able
Speaker:to find something that even the most helpless guy in a
Speaker:rush could find a card that his wife would be happy
Speaker:with it.
Speaker:We had that already and we were able to take that
Speaker:and plug that into this guy's website and he was thrilled.
Speaker:So what we've been doing since then is we've actually seen,
Speaker:it looks like this is just kind of the way everything
Speaker:is shifting.
Speaker:There is such a huge market right now.
Speaker:You talk about ocean,
Speaker:no sharks,
Speaker:where there is this huge opportunity to be able to partner
Speaker:with all of these different retailers who are in some kind
Speaker:of gifting business.
Speaker:And one of the things that really helps a gift to
Speaker:stand apart that really makes that gift unique and personalized and
Speaker:lets the recipient know just like exactly how you're feeling is
Speaker:that personalized greeting card.
Speaker:And we make it easy for any retailer of any size
Speaker:offer greeting cards.
Speaker:Wow. So do you still do the kiosks then also and
Speaker:the online or has everything now transitioned to online your eCommerce
Speaker:platform? There are still key asks out there,
Speaker:the rush stoke kiosks doing business.
Speaker:But the vast majority of our resources right now are going
Speaker:towards either folks with like a website placing orders or weave
Speaker:in about a week or two we're going to be launching
Speaker:this system that makes it easier for folks place an order
Speaker:over the phone for them to be able to design a
Speaker:personalized card brief in brick and mortar shops.
Speaker:But it's something that's very much moving away from that focus
Speaker:around automated kiosks.
Speaker:Got it.
Speaker:So the automated kiosks are kind of in maintenance mode because
Speaker:you've got them out there,
Speaker:but you're seeing the opportunity is leaning the other way.
Speaker:Yep. And to use the wonderful entrepreneur term we are,
Speaker:we're pivoting the company in the direction of these standalone as
Speaker:opposed to automated kiosk solutions.
Speaker:Well and much more scalable for you and also maintenance-free.
Speaker:Exactly All this talk is bringing to mind our sponsor.
Speaker:Let's hear from them right now.
Speaker:This podcast is made possible thanks to the support of the
Speaker:ribbon print company.
Speaker:Create custom ribbons right in your store.
Speaker:Craft studio in seconds.
Speaker:Visit the ribbon,
Speaker:print company.com
Speaker:for more information.
Speaker:Share With everybody so they truly understand.
Speaker:If they were to be producing one of the cards,
Speaker:what's the process that you go through to make a card?
Speaker:Do you do this as if you are the person who
Speaker:has card aisle in your store or do you do this
Speaker:as a customer who's online?
Speaker:I'm not sure which you take it whichever way it's supposed
Speaker:to go.
Speaker:I'm not sure.
Speaker:Yeah, so I'm going to take it from the perspective of
Speaker:the retailer just because that way you can see both sides
Speaker:and so your customers come to your online shop.
Speaker:Just the way they would make any purchase and we can
Speaker:set it up for your customers that they have two avenues
Speaker:to buy a greeting card.
Speaker:One option is just like any other upsell,
Speaker:so if a customer has the option of,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:maybe they wanted to change the shipping,
Speaker:maybe they want faster shipping or maybe they want to add
Speaker:a of wine to a gift basket or a Teddy bear
Speaker:to a floral arrangement or anything else like that.
Speaker:They've got the option of adding a personalized greeting card.
Speaker:And so here there's just going to be a nice button
Speaker:on your page that says add a personalized greeting card.
Speaker:When a customer clicks that button pop up appears in that
Speaker:popup, they can search for a card much the same way
Speaker:you would use Google to search for images or anything else.
Speaker:And they can search by occasion.
Speaker:They can search by recipient,
Speaker:they can search.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:if you're looking for a card with rainbows and unicorns,
Speaker:you can search for a card with rainbows and unicorns.
Speaker:And we have a fair number of those.
Speaker:I bet you do.
Speaker:They also have the option if they want to upload their
Speaker:own photograph for their own image,
Speaker:they can do that as well.
Speaker:Oh wow.
Speaker:And one other thing that,
Speaker:just as a brief aside,
Speaker:they can do all this from their phone as well.
Speaker:So this is something,
Speaker:it looks good on a computer.
Speaker:It looks just as good on a cell phone.
Speaker:So important Adam as you know,
Speaker:cause everyone's mobile now.
Speaker:And that's also where most people have their photographs.
Speaker:So if they want to upload a photo,
Speaker:there's a really good chance of that photo is on their
Speaker:phone already.
Speaker:Right? So they pick the cover on the inside.
Speaker:All of our artists will offer three suggestions because we found
Speaker:there's nothing more terrifying than a blank card where you have
Speaker:to come up with your own story.
Speaker:So the artists will offer three suggestions and then then the
Speaker:customer can personalize it.
Speaker:They can pick one of the suggestions,
Speaker:they can edit it.
Speaker:And what we see is most customers will pick one of
Speaker:the suggestions and then tweak it to personalize it.
Speaker:So they might add like an inside joke,
Speaker:they might put two,
Speaker:Bob loves Sam and they've got the card.
Speaker:Then they click add to order and they're done.
Speaker:So it's basically they pick the cover,
Speaker:they personalize the inside and they hit add to order.
Speaker:From the customer standpoint,
Speaker:that's it.
Speaker:They're done.
Speaker:The one other Avenue,
Speaker:as I mentioned,
Speaker:like they can do it as an upsell.
Speaker:They could also do it if they just wanted to buy
Speaker:a greeting card and they do that exact same process.
Speaker:So they pick a card,
Speaker:they personalize it,
Speaker:they add it to the order.
Speaker:Once the card has been added to the order,
Speaker:you get the,
Speaker:as the retailer,
Speaker:you would get the purchase order,
Speaker:you can choose specifically,
Speaker:these are all the things that this customer ordered.
Speaker:Here's the shipping address,
Speaker:here's all of the information that you need to fulfill that
Speaker:order and in that information we'll provide you this unique five
Speaker:digit code.
Speaker:You take that five digit code you entered into the printer
Speaker:that we've sent you and the printer that we stent is
Speaker:like the easiest printer in the world was set up.
Speaker:You don't even need to connect it to a computer.
Speaker:It's simply a printer that sits on a shelf anywhere you
Speaker:want. You connect it to the internet and you're done.
Speaker:You enter this five digit code into the printer.
Speaker:That five digit code uniquely identifies as that card card print
Speaker:out for you.
Speaker:You've got that card on the nice high quality cardstock that
Speaker:we provided you with.
Speaker:You've got these nice envelopes that we provided you with.
Speaker:You put the whole thing together and however you're going to
Speaker:fulfill that order,
Speaker:whether it's in a box or hand delivery,
Speaker:you don't have the card to go with it.
Speaker:Wow, that's incredible.
Speaker:Adam. So let me ask you this.
Speaker:So I can't buy a car directly from aisle.
Speaker:I would buy a good card from someone who has the
Speaker:process within their shop.
Speaker:Right? That's what we encourage.
Speaker:We do offer,
Speaker:if anybody wanted to buy a car directly from us,
Speaker:they could do that.
Speaker:But we would much prefer to pass that business out to
Speaker:out to all of our retail partners.
Speaker:And the big goal is pretty much like,
Speaker:as you mentioned in the introduction,
Speaker:we want to give the partners that selection of basically more
Speaker:selection than a hallmark store,
Speaker:but without having all of that inventory and needing to worry
Speaker:about is this card going to salary,
Speaker:is that card going to sell?
Speaker:Because the cards,
Speaker:they're not printed until somebody buys the card.
Speaker:Right. So it opens up floor space for someone who has
Speaker:a brick and mortar too,
Speaker:which is always important to have as much floor space for
Speaker:displays as you possibly can,
Speaker:but then someone as a consumer could also,
Speaker:let's say I had three cards that I needed to send
Speaker:out. I could just do it right from my own home
Speaker:because of brick and mortar or online.
Speaker:Same. You could just buy the card only if you wanted
Speaker:or you could buy the card and the product.
Speaker:Any options.
Speaker:Exactly. Wow.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:I want to walk through because we started with the steps
Speaker:earlier. I want to walk through and continue after we talked
Speaker:about the demand,
Speaker:I don't know if you guys listened to this,
Speaker:but I'm hearing this from you,
Speaker:Adam, this whole way through and give biz listeners.
Speaker:I would love for you after we're done,
Speaker:take this from the top and really listen to how Adam
Speaker:talks. He continually is bringing in the benefit for the consumer.
Speaker:He was doing it when they were researching and he does
Speaker:it even when he's talking about the product.
Speaker:He talks about the ability to personalize where they can utilize
Speaker:local artists,
Speaker:meeting a customer where they are already.
Speaker:So being right in the same footpath,
Speaker:which obviously makes it convenient towards a purchase.
Speaker:So he's always talking about benefits.
Speaker:Then they tested their first model,
Speaker:so remember they had that kind of more rough draft on
Speaker:a college campus.
Speaker:Then they tested it with the kiosks,
Speaker:three different versions there too,
Speaker:which was interesting.
Speaker:And Oh my gosh,
Speaker:your story,
Speaker:you have so many great things at them.
Speaker:Then fundraising,
Speaker:so you notice where that came through within the system.
Speaker:They had a concept developed,
Speaker:they'd done a lot of testing before they actually went out
Speaker:and did fundraising.
Speaker:So really important.
Speaker:I'm not sure we're not going to go into fundraising here
Speaker:because there's so many good things here.
Speaker:We can't do everything,
Speaker:but I just want people to recognize where that was in
Speaker:the process.
Speaker:Then step-by-step with the kiosks they started getting into Rackspace,
Speaker:some significant corporate buildings,
Speaker:military bases,
Speaker:et cetera.
Speaker:So again,
Speaker:step-by-step, you see how it keeps elevating up and up and
Speaker:up. And then really significant point here is that you were
Speaker:listening when that person came and said,
Speaker:what about online?
Speaker:What about e-commerce?
Speaker:Cause that like you could have so easily discounted that idea
Speaker:and said,
Speaker:no, you know we are knocking it out of the park.
Speaker:Look at the names of the places where we have,
Speaker:you could have just stayed with that,
Speaker:but you guys were open enough to listen and look.
Speaker:Now it pivoted into the biggest opportunity available to you right
Speaker:now. Right,
Speaker:which is online because you can virtually offer this to the
Speaker:world. And I would,
Speaker:I don't know this for sure,
Speaker:but I would think in a much easier way cause you're
Speaker:not having to make these kiosks now maintain and support them,
Speaker:et cetera.
Speaker:This platform being online is so much easier in that vein.
Speaker:I'm sure there's other things too that aren't as easy.
Speaker:So again,
Speaker:give his listeners,
Speaker:I would love for you to go back and listen to
Speaker:this and here because even when we got into the online
Speaker:platform you were starting to talk about what those benefits are.
Speaker:You know in terms of being able to do it right
Speaker:online you don't have the floor space you need like all
Speaker:the benefits.
Speaker:I just wanted to run through that now.
Speaker:So here you are.
Speaker:You've got the systems in play,
Speaker:what's happening now.
Speaker:So right now we're continuing in this spirit of experimentation.
Speaker:We are looking largely at retailers that do some level of
Speaker:gifting. We just this past weekend went to floral trade show
Speaker:out in California,
Speaker:met some amazing florist.
Speaker:It was a very similar feel to what we got at
Speaker:the gift basket conference where we met you Sue that just
Speaker:amazing entrepreneurs doing really interesting things and the kind of folks
Speaker:that are interested in trying new things and looking at better
Speaker:ways to serve their customers.
Speaker:It's a lot of fun being around like minded people that
Speaker:are looking to go out there and basically shake up the
Speaker:same industries that we're looking to shake up.
Speaker:And so what we're doing right now is we're pretty much
Speaker:in that stage where we've got a really solid product and
Speaker:we're looking to scale,
Speaker:we're looking to find out which industries this works best in.
Speaker:And we're also looking at how do we set up our
Speaker:existing retail partners to be even more successful.
Speaker:So one example of that,
Speaker:we've heard feedback talking mentioned very early on with the 700
Speaker:interviews, we're really focused on learning from the people that are
Speaker:using our product,
Speaker:what's working from them.
Speaker:And we've been hearing from a lot of the folks that
Speaker:have our e-commerce plugin that they do a significant number of
Speaker:their orders over the phone.
Speaker:So we were saying,
Speaker:how can we help you be successful with those orders over
Speaker:the phone where you can include a greeting card?
Speaker:And so some of the ideas,
Speaker:and we're still in this experimental stage,
Speaker:so anybody who is existing like existing retailers that we're working
Speaker:with or other folks that are interested in trying something out,
Speaker:we're totally game to run experiments and what we're looking at
Speaker:right now is something where when somebody places an order over
Speaker:the phone,
Speaker:there's either an email address or phone number that goes with
Speaker:that order to be able to allow you to follow up
Speaker:with that customer afterwards.
Speaker:We can do it.
Speaker:Once that order is placed,
Speaker:we can set it up that you get one button to
Speaker:push and we're looking at integrating this into a point of
Speaker:sale, so nothing new to learn,
Speaker:nothing new right there you hit add a greeting card.
Speaker:That customer buys the greeting card.
Speaker:When they placed the phone order,
Speaker:you then hit that button,
Speaker:send them an email.
Speaker:They have six 1224 hours,
Speaker:whatever you determined as the time would they design the card?
Speaker:They now design it at their convenience and you know this
Speaker:customer is looking for that personal,
Speaker:that high quality experience.
Speaker:That's why they called you in the first place and now
Speaker:you're able to elevate their experience,
Speaker:make their life easier,
Speaker:make their gift better,
Speaker:and you make a little more money off of the sale.
Speaker:Perfect. This is a perfect segue because we're,
Speaker:I wanted to go,
Speaker:you must've been reading my mind Adam.
Speaker:Okay. This is something that has not existed before.
Speaker:How did you start thinking about a pricing structure?
Speaker:Again, with the spirit of experimentation,
Speaker:we tried stuff out.
Speaker:We reached out to some local folks that we knew that
Speaker:we had a little more of a relationship with,
Speaker:found out what they were paying for similar kinds of products
Speaker:and said,
Speaker:okay, if that's what you're paying for a similar product,
Speaker:here's how we can either meet or beat that or here's
Speaker:how we're going to provide you something that offers so much
Speaker:more value than what you currently have that you're going to
Speaker:be game for paying a little bit more.
Speaker:Okay, so you weren't just looking for a low price play
Speaker:for sure.
Speaker:Cause the whole experience is different.
Speaker:The interaction and the result is different.
Speaker:It's so customized.
Speaker:People are willing to pay for that.
Speaker:Exactly. And we ended up finding in the greeting card market,
Speaker:if you're looking at the end user,
Speaker:there's actually not that much price sensitivity.
Speaker:And you'll find a lot of people whine and complain all
Speaker:the time about how expensive greeting cards are.
Speaker:But at the end of the day,
Speaker:most people when they're buying a card,
Speaker:they need the card so they're going to buy it.
Speaker:So our mentality was we said,
Speaker:okay, there's the option to gouge customers,
Speaker:but that's not really in our company ethos.
Speaker:That's not the culture we want to build.
Speaker:So we said we want to look for what's a fair
Speaker:price. And so for most customers,
Speaker:somewhere in that ballpark of about $5 seem to be something
Speaker:that people would pay it.
Speaker:It would feel fair,
Speaker:they wouldn't feel ripped off,
Speaker:they'd be happy with it and everybody could move forward.
Speaker:Well not only that,
Speaker:but I'm kind of feeling from your description,
Speaker:cause I haven't actually seen one of these cards yet,
Speaker:is that it's also a keepsake.
Speaker:It's not just a card.
Speaker:Now, granted I get that there are a lot of people
Speaker:out there who keep and retain their cards.
Speaker:Right. But this if you're able to add a personal photo
Speaker:or for sure sayings like all of that,
Speaker:this is something that people are gonna really keep and maybe
Speaker:even display the photo.
Speaker:You never know.
Speaker:So it's way more than just a card.
Speaker:Exactly. Yeah.
Speaker:And the material is you mentioned without seeing the card to
Speaker:just describe it briefly.
Speaker:We actually did again,
Speaker:as with everything else,
Speaker:a fair amount of customer research trying to find what's the
Speaker:best card stock.
Speaker:And as I'm sure many of your listeners are aware,
Speaker:there are innumerable options for ways that you can buy card
Speaker:stock. And our initial plan was as engineers we figured more
Speaker:options are better.
Speaker:So we gave people about half a dozen options for cardstock
Speaker:and it turned out most people know nothing about cardstock and
Speaker:half a dozen options just like shut them down.
Speaker:It's too much.
Speaker:It's too much.
Speaker:And it's one of those things where we've got a bunch
Speaker:of cart designs on the cover.
Speaker:The average consumer is really good at picking.
Speaker:I like this design and we're really good at processing a
Speaker:bunch of visual information quickly.
Speaker:So we haven't seen that slow anybody down.
Speaker:But choosing instead of like 9,000
Speaker:cards, that was easy.
Speaker:Nobody had any problem.
Speaker:And we provide really easy search tools.
Speaker:So you're not looking at 9,000
Speaker:cards at once,
Speaker:but picking that card stock that shut people down.
Speaker:So what we ended up going with was we found 90%
Speaker:of our customers liked this one particular card stock after they
Speaker:had a chance to feel all of them.
Speaker:So like I got to interact,
Speaker:I got to play because that feels almost like what you
Speaker:would expect from a small boutique store where it's got on
Speaker:the cover little bit of texture.
Speaker:It's almost like a canvas type texture.
Speaker:And then on the inside is a nice smooth matte finish.
Speaker:And what we've found is that photographs or vector graphics or
Speaker:any other image looks really good on the cover.
Speaker:And it's something where even when folks are uploading photographs,
Speaker:because every now and then you'll find someone that only has
Speaker:that low resolution photo of grandma,
Speaker:but that's the photo that they love of grandma.
Speaker:It smooths out that pixelation a little bit.
Speaker:So every image looks really good on the cover of this
Speaker:and it feels good when you hold it.
Speaker:Well that worked out really well too because then someone who
Speaker:has this printer doesn't have to have multiple different cards because
Speaker:then just in terms of the consumable,
Speaker:it would be more expensive.
Speaker:Exactly. And it's another element in processing.
Speaker:What if they don't put it on the right card stock,
Speaker:you know all of that.
Speaker:So it ended up,
Speaker:your research really went in your favor too.
Speaker:It did on this one.
Speaker:Yeah. Yeah.
Speaker:And I love the fact that you're talking about with pricing,
Speaker:you weren't looking at being the lowest price,
Speaker:you weren't just going to compete on price,
Speaker:but you also recognize that what you're providing with the customization
Speaker:has greater value.
Speaker:So it sounds like your price point is absolutely perfect,
Speaker:but I want to take,
Speaker:there are so many places we can go with this story
Speaker:and such limited amount of time.
Speaker:So I want to talk a little bit about some of
Speaker:the rough patches cause it's not all beautiful story.
Speaker:As you progress through all these steps,
Speaker:there had to be some challenges.
Speaker:Can you share with us one of those stories?
Speaker:Yeah, so one of the things that you need when you
Speaker:get an automated kiosk,
Speaker:you need some way of accepting payment.
Speaker:And so we had these credit card Raiders initially and the
Speaker:credit card readers are designed for vending machines like a Coke
Speaker:machine or a snack machine.
Speaker:And if you've ever seen inside a Coker machine,
Speaker:this is not high tech fancy anything else.
Speaker:This is like stone age kind of technology,
Speaker:but it works and it's really robust.
Speaker:But what we had was something,
Speaker:we had a computer,
Speaker:we had printers,
Speaker:we had a lot of much more modern technology inside our
Speaker:kiosk. Well you also probably had to accept credit cards.
Speaker:You're not going to put in $5 worth of coins.
Speaker:Oh yeah,
Speaker:yeah. Without a doubt.
Speaker:It was only credit cards that we were accepting.
Speaker:So we had that card swipe on there and so we
Speaker:had taken these card swipes from vending machines.
Speaker:We had worked with the manufacturer and he assured us that
Speaker:this would work with just through like a standard USB connection.
Speaker:And so we had these credit card readers plugged in and
Speaker:it was again,
Speaker:like I did,
Speaker:this was not a smooth customer experience.
Speaker:There was the little screen on the credit card reader and
Speaker:at some point in the process we had a big arrow
Speaker:that told customers,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:look down at that screen because we couldn't actually do any
Speaker:interaction because it was just this very simple credit card reader.
Speaker:And the first one we got,
Speaker:it worked great.
Speaker:That first credit card reader we put on the first kiosk,
Speaker:no problems.
Speaker:The next one we got for whatever reason worked 70% of
Speaker:the time.
Speaker:Oh, we had set it up on this kiosk at Virginia
Speaker:Tech's campus and had that credit card reader set up there.
Speaker:And we sat in,
Speaker:babysat that kiosk for like two weeks.
Speaker:Well we tried troubleshooting so this was pretty much any time
Speaker:during normal business hours one of us would be sitting there
Speaker:in the student center watching the key class.
Speaker:Oh no.
Speaker:And we were doing like all sorts of things working with
Speaker:the vendor.
Speaker:The vendor shipped us a replacement,
Speaker:turned out the replacement also had this same bug and finally
Speaker:sorted out.
Speaker:But it was a lot of hours of hanging out in
Speaker:the student center watching pupil and Oh my gosh.
Speaker:What year was that Adam?
Speaker:I believe that was 2014 So I'm trying to place it
Speaker:about the time when some of the mobile card readers came
Speaker:out. So it was probably right at that time or just
Speaker:before? Just before.
Speaker:So there really wasn't a lot of that technology available yet.
Speaker:Exactly. Yep.
Speaker:All alright.
Speaker:So you guys are sitting there.
Speaker:So talk about customer service right there.
Speaker:Although you got a chance to talk with the people who
Speaker:were interested.
Speaker:So that's kind of good cause you could do a lot
Speaker:of research.
Speaker:Then also if you want to look on the bright side
Speaker:of that problem,
Speaker:really hard to find the bright side.
Speaker:Yeah. So how did this all get resolved?
Speaker:So we ended up finally after having these two troublesome units,
Speaker:we said,
Speaker:why don't we tried switching the unit with the switching the
Speaker:credit card reader off of the original Kia.
Speaker:It's the one that had been working and bringing that over
Speaker:and that ended up basically illuminating it right there.
Speaker:That turns out we managed to get very lucky or unlucky
Speaker:depending on how you frame it and getting to bum units
Speaker:one right after other.
Speaker:And Yeah,
Speaker:after that it turned out because of the way that we
Speaker:were using the credit card readers,
Speaker:it was a little off label.
Speaker:So when we were working with the vendor,
Speaker:the credit card readers that didn't work for us still work
Speaker:fine for the vending machines.
Speaker:And so he would go through and he would actually test
Speaker:every credit card reader before he sent it to us to
Speaker:see. Is this one of the ones that will work with
Speaker:the USB connection or is this one of the ones that
Speaker:only works in a vending machine?
Speaker:Gotcha. One boy that talks about the quality of your vendor
Speaker:too though.
Speaker:It does And important for all of us.
Speaker:That's just a good little side note is having vendors who
Speaker:will go the extra mile for you.
Speaker:You only need those card readers not to work a few
Speaker:times, especially when you're getting into some of the larger named
Speaker:companies where they're going to say,
Speaker:just get this out of here.
Speaker:We're not interested.
Speaker:Exactly. And so now today I'm assuming that the card readers
Speaker:are running nice and smooth.
Speaker:Yeah. We're actually not using those card readers anymore.
Speaker:Yeah, we built our own system from scratch now.
Speaker:Yeah. Okay.
Speaker:So already you,
Speaker:David and Stephen all still partners in the company.
Speaker:We are still partners in the company.
Speaker:Yep. Share a little bit of insight in terms of how
Speaker:that works because I know several for sure,
Speaker:but I'm sure there's way more than that of our listeners
Speaker:are in partnerships and sometimes that can be challenging.
Speaker:And you know I think of a partnership is maybe two
Speaker:people. You guys are three.
Speaker:So what advice do you have for people who were in
Speaker:partnerships? Yeah,
Speaker:so one of the early thing is that we ended up
Speaker:finding was having the partnership because all three of us are
Speaker:folks that going through school and whatnot,
Speaker:we were not people that liked working on teams and getting
Speaker:that right partner makes a world of difference and so having
Speaker:someone that you can count on,
Speaker:someone that you can trust,
Speaker:someone that you can really go to bat for and know
Speaker:they're going to do the same for you,
Speaker:that's huge.
Speaker:And then along those lines,
Speaker:by having somebody else,
Speaker:inevitably you're going to come on rough times.
Speaker:You're going to come on times when you're hanging out for
Speaker:two weeks watching kiosk or when revenue's not where you want
Speaker:it or anything else,
Speaker:and having somebody else who's in the trenches with you,
Speaker:having somebody else who is the error and feeling the burn
Speaker:just the same way you are.
Speaker:I feel like for us that is a significant reason why
Speaker:we're here because this is,
Speaker:as all of us are aware,
Speaker:like this is not a journey for the faint of heart
Speaker:By any stretch.
Speaker:Yeah. One other thing that was kind of counterintuitive to us
Speaker:initially, but we started out with no hierarchy.
Speaker:We were all three equal partners in this and all decisions
Speaker:were made kind of by unanimous vote and this worked well
Speaker:initially when we were kind of small,
Speaker:kind of moving slow,
Speaker:but as we started to scale,
Speaker:this gets to be unwieldy,
Speaker:but it was something that internally,
Speaker:none of us were the ones that were going to make
Speaker:waves. We didn't want to be the ones to change it
Speaker:and when we went out and did like after that friends
Speaker:and family round of investment,
Speaker:we went out and a much larger round of investment from
Speaker:handful of angel investors and some institutional investors and the things
Speaker:that they shared and they said this isn't a mandate,
Speaker:but something that would be really good if it happened is
Speaker:you need to come up with a CEO.
Speaker:You need someone that's going to be taking the rain,
Speaker:somebody who is going to make the tough decisions and someone
Speaker:who at the end of the day is the one that
Speaker:really owns any of those tough decisions and the responsibility.
Speaker:That was rough.
Speaker:That was something that changed the structure a lot.
Speaker:And honestly the way we ended up doing it was we
Speaker:flipped a coin and said whoever wins gets to be CEO
Speaker:for a month and if it works well for a month,
Speaker:you get to continue being CEO.
Speaker:And I won the coin toss and still CEO today.
Speaker:Well, congratulations on that.
Speaker:I was expecting you to say Stephan,
Speaker:because it was his idea initially.
Speaker:Yeah. Well,
Speaker:so one of the other things that we found that's interesting
Speaker:is that in the startup world,
Speaker:ideas are almost cheap.
Speaker:Like there's a lot of people that have ideas.
Speaker:A lot of people that have different brilliant ideas.
Speaker:They come up with anybody that's watched shark tank that said,
Speaker:Hey, I came up with that idea.
Speaker:However far back you realize that ideas have been around,
Speaker:but at the end of the day it's the execution.
Speaker:And it's how do you take that idea and turn it
Speaker:into something like real and tangible that really sets things apart.
Speaker:So the idea was like clearly that was huge,
Speaker:which that made a world of a difference,
Speaker:but that's step one of many,
Speaker:many, many steps.
Speaker:And so have you also then divided responsibilities?
Speaker:So everyone is heading a certain function within the whole We
Speaker:have and it's something,
Speaker:one of the things that I really like about working with
Speaker:David and Stephanie is that we have a rough breakdown,
Speaker:but there are different times when something big comes in where
Speaker:we're able to really shift and kind of overlap a lot.
Speaker:So there isn't like one task that only one person can
Speaker:do And if there's something that happens or comes up that
Speaker:someone has a real skill in being able to handle,
Speaker:then you just send it over there.
Speaker:Exactly. Yeah.
Speaker:Wonderful. Oh my gosh.
Speaker:Okay. So I loved your comment that you just made,
Speaker:which was about,
Speaker:it's one thing to have an idea,
Speaker:it's another thing to be able to move forward on that
Speaker:idea and then actually have it work.
Speaker:Because just like you're talking about all the different steps and
Speaker:all the pivots and adjustments and testing and all of that
Speaker:that you've done to get to the point where you are
Speaker:now and to hear you saying you're still open to new
Speaker:ideas, other testing,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:wherever this is going to lead you in the future is
Speaker:spectacular. It's great words of wisdom for someone who's just starting
Speaker:out, what else would you say to somebody who is thinking
Speaker:they have their idea,
Speaker:they're thinking of moving forward.
Speaker:You've given them a million ideas right here,
Speaker:so that's fabulous.
Speaker:But what would you say on a motivational side for someone
Speaker:who just hasn't taken that action yet?
Speaker:So coming from academia,
Speaker:that was my original plan.
Speaker:I told you at the beginning going for the PhD.
Speaker:My original goal was I wanted to be a mechanical engineering
Speaker:professor. And that's still something like somewhere in the future that
Speaker:will likely happen.
Speaker:But one of the big differences that I saw between academia
Speaker:and the world of entrepreneurs is the willingness of entrepreneurs to
Speaker:help other people.
Speaker:And it's something that I don't know if it's the realization
Speaker:that we all know just how hard this is and we
Speaker:all know just how little we'd be able to accomplish without
Speaker:the help of other people.
Speaker:I don't know quite what it is,
Speaker:but it seems like in this world of entrepreneurs,
Speaker:there is such a culture of being able to help each
Speaker:other and being able to support each other and being able
Speaker:to figure out ways of collectively solving a problem together and
Speaker:going out and being willing to go and talk to these
Speaker:folks. Being willing to find mentors and being willing to find
Speaker:the folks that can help you be successful.
Speaker:I think it's just going to save you so much time
Speaker:because there's so many things that other people have done,
Speaker:other paths that they've been down that they've been down the
Speaker:path. You don't need to reinvent that wheel.
Speaker:Yeah, you can walk the path so much faster.
Speaker:Exactly. Perfect.
Speaker:I love that advice and now because you've shared so much
Speaker:with us,
Speaker:we would like to share with you,
Speaker:I'd like to present you on behalf of myself and all
Speaker:the listeners a virtual gift.
Speaker:It's a magical box containing unlimited possibilities for your future.
Speaker:So this is your dream or your goal of almost unreachable
Speaker:Heights that you would wish to obtain.
Speaker:Please accept this gift and open it in our presence.
Speaker:What is inside your box?
Speaker:So I love creating,
Speaker:I love starting things and I love especially with the ear,
Speaker:like I love being an entrepreneur.
Speaker:And so inside my box,
Speaker:this is pretty much the ability to build a career around
Speaker:entrepreneurship, to be able to continue to do this,
Speaker:to have it something where Cardell is one of many startups
Speaker:that I get to do over my lifetime.
Speaker:This is just the first,
Speaker:right? This is just the first.
Speaker:Okay, so we're going to keep our eye on you to
Speaker:see what else comes up along the way.
Speaker:For sure.
Speaker:Is there one single place where you would direct any of
Speaker:our listeners who are out and about right now and just
Speaker:want to touch base and see a little bit more about
Speaker:what car dials about,
Speaker:where's one single place that you would send them?
Speaker:Our website,
Speaker:so it's cardinal.com
Speaker:and one of the things with the name,
Speaker:just as a quick side story,
Speaker:initially when we were doing research,
Speaker:we kept talking about going to the car dial.
Speaker:Like in the grocery store you go to the car dial
Speaker:and me,
Speaker:I'm married to an English teacher so I know how to
Speaker:spell words correctly.
Speaker:My other founders as engineers kept spelling aisle like a grocery
Speaker:store aisle I SLE.
Speaker:So when it came time to come up with a name
Speaker:for the company,
Speaker:we kind of enjoyed the idea of card aisle,
Speaker:but I L is spelled ISL E and the logo,
Speaker:it has a nice colorful to can and would go with
Speaker:the Island theme a whole lot.
Speaker:So the website is cardell.com
Speaker:and with IO spelled ISL Lee.
Speaker:I love that.
Speaker:That's kind of a jab and give his listeners,
Speaker:you know that there'll be a show notes page attached with
Speaker:also the links to social media sites and anything else we
Speaker:decided to put on there as well as the top point
Speaker:in this very,
Speaker:very valuable interview.
Speaker:I hope you guys go back and listen to this again
Speaker:and again because there is so much here for all of
Speaker:us. Adam,
Speaker:thank you.
Speaker:I really,
Speaker:really appreciate connecting with you today and talking about your whole
Speaker:story and I look forward to seeing what comes next with
Speaker:you. I know it's going to be great.
Speaker:Thanks again.
Speaker:Are you discouraged because your business is not performing as you
Speaker:had envisioned?
Speaker:Are you stuck and confused about how to turn things around?
Speaker:Sue's new best selling book is structured to help you identify
Speaker:where the holes are in your business and show you exactly
Speaker:how to fix them.
Speaker:You'll learn from Sue and owners just like you who are
Speaker:seeing real growth and are living their dream maker to master
Speaker:find and fix what's not working in your small business.
Speaker:Get it on Amazon or through www.