You're listening to gift biz unwrapped episode 64.
Speaker:Why should I take your business seriously?
Speaker:If you can't take your message and your written information.
Speaker:Seriously, This is John Lee Dumas of entrepreneur on fire,
Speaker:and you're listening to gifted biz unwrapped,
Speaker:and now it's time to light it up.
Speaker:Welcome to gift biz,
Speaker:unwrapped your source for industry specific insights and advice to develop
Speaker:and grow your business.
Speaker:And now here's your host,
Speaker:Sue Monheit.
Speaker:Hi there.
Speaker:I'm Sue and welcome to the gift is unwrapped podcasts.
Speaker:Whether you own a brick and mortar store sell online or
Speaker:are just getting started,
Speaker:you'll discover new insights to gain traction and to grow your
Speaker:business. And today I have joining us,
Speaker:Heather Robinson,
Speaker:Heather is co owner and creative director of editor.
Speaker:This is a professional copy editing and proofreading app where you
Speaker:get immediate online service,
Speaker:24 seven with editing done by real people.
Speaker:She's in business with her husband,
Speaker:Brian, while working in Singapore.
Speaker:Brian came up with the idea for editor the need for
Speaker:an online proofreading service was strong business in Singapore,
Speaker:moves fast,
Speaker:and many are not native English speakers or writers editor launched
Speaker:to the public in April of 2016.
Speaker:And they currently have over 5,000
Speaker:registered users,
Speaker:small business owners,
Speaker:bloggers, job seekers,
Speaker:and students all use editor for their day to day writing.
Speaker:So super exciting,
Speaker:Heather, welcome to the show.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:Is there anything you would like to expound upon with the
Speaker:intro before we get started?
Speaker:I think you did a good job.
Speaker:It's pretty much your on-demand editing service for your day-to-day writing.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:So what I really will want to do and just for
Speaker:our listeners,
Speaker:so you all understand how we're going to take this interview
Speaker:is we are going to chat with how they actually started
Speaker:to develop the app.
Speaker:We're going to talk about the app and then it's applications
Speaker:potentially for you and your business too.
Speaker:So you're going to look at two different sides,
Speaker:how something like this even gets started,
Speaker:and then the value that this particular one could have for
Speaker:you. But before we jumped into any of that,
Speaker:Heather, we like to start off with hearing what your unique
Speaker:motivational candle would look like.
Speaker:If you were to create your very own candle,
Speaker:what color would it be and what would the quote beyond
Speaker:that candle?
Speaker:Well, my favorite color is green.
Speaker:I don't know that I would choose a green candle,
Speaker:but probably we'll go with it.
Speaker:And a quote that I always think about it's not very,
Speaker:if at all is you'll find me somewhere between a juice
Speaker:cleanse and a donut bench falling because I always have really
Speaker:good intentions and sometimes just doesn't work out on a more
Speaker:serious note.
Speaker:A quote that I do like that I try to remember
Speaker:is from Abraham Lincoln.
Speaker:And it says you cannot escape the responsibility of by evading
Speaker:Today. And that one kind of resonates just because I hate
Speaker:to admit that I'm sort of a perpetual procrastinator.
Speaker:So kind of reminds me like,
Speaker:if I push it off,
Speaker:it's not going anywhere.
Speaker:Yeah. It's still going to show up and soon to show
Speaker:its nasty little head again later.
Speaker:So you might as well just tackle it right away,
Speaker:right? Yeah,
Speaker:absolutely. All right.
Speaker:Let's start talking about the editor app.
Speaker:Yeah. How in the world.
Speaker:Okay. So it's pretty understandable and very cool.
Speaker:How Brian uncovered the need for this,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:because it's not just people who are in other countries who
Speaker:need to speak proper English.
Speaker:A lot of people here in the state,
Speaker:we're so easy with our language.
Speaker:It's so easy not to put correct grammar on paper these
Speaker:days. Would you agree?
Speaker:Yeah, it's I think just with so much typing and texting,
Speaker:it's kind of gotten away from us.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:when was the last time any of us really learned grammar,
Speaker:like seventh grade.
Speaker:So it really doesn't stick with you unless you reading a
Speaker:ton or a really honest,
Speaker:Right? And now all these apps that you have,
Speaker:you can just,
Speaker:or not apps,
Speaker:I don't mean that,
Speaker:but even a phone,
Speaker:you can just press the mic and speak right into it
Speaker:and send a text message.
Speaker:So it ends up being more,
Speaker:your spoken word that's written down versus real correct grammar,
Speaker:Right. And sometimes even a text to talk will get it
Speaker:wrong. I know a lot of people use dragon dictation and
Speaker:other dictation programs to write emails and write their papers.
Speaker:And unless you're really reading over,
Speaker:it could translate something incorrectly or say F O U R
Speaker:a few points for,
Speaker:and so things like that are just contextual mistakes that a
Speaker:spellcheck or something else isn't gonna catch.
Speaker:You're really gonna need human to be reading it and understand.
Speaker:Right. Okay.
Speaker:So Brian saw the need because he was in Singapore and
Speaker:saw it really prevalent there.
Speaker:So saw that there was an opportunity to fill that gap.
Speaker:What do you see is the value of making sure that
Speaker:you have your grammar proper?
Speaker:Why is that even important?
Speaker:I believe it's important just because it'll make me take you
Speaker:seriously. If I'm reading through a sales letter or an email
Speaker:and there's even two or three mistakes,
Speaker:I'm kind of going to think twice about,
Speaker:well, if you're not taking your message to me,
Speaker:seriously, are you taking your business serious?
Speaker:Are you,
Speaker:why should I take your business seriously?
Speaker:If you can't take your message and your written information seriously.
Speaker:So it's a whole credibility play and what your images out
Speaker:to the world.
Speaker:Yeah. I really think it's a level of professionalism.
Speaker:It shows you double-check,
Speaker:what's going on that you care how you're presented out to
Speaker:your customers and,
Speaker:yeah. Right.
Speaker:And I think in this day and age,
Speaker:there are so many options.
Speaker:So if you were a marketing company,
Speaker:for example,
Speaker:and your brochures had misspelled words or your letters out to
Speaker:customers had misspelled words that could look like your company is
Speaker:less than the level that someone would want to use.
Speaker:And so they'll go onto the next one because there's always
Speaker:a next one these days.
Speaker:Lots of options.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:So let's talk,
Speaker:I'm very curious.
Speaker:How in the world,
Speaker:once you have this idea,
Speaker:how do you build an app?
Speaker:Take us through the process of how this actually became a
Speaker:reality. I probably can just give you like a glossed over
Speaker:version because I am not a programmer and I didn't develop
Speaker:it. That was all Brian.
Speaker:So he kind of is like a self-taught developer,
Speaker:a programmer.
Speaker:And once he and his partner decided,
Speaker:well, this is something that we need.
Speaker:He also is a college professor.
Speaker:So he kind of was like,
Speaker:well, I have this huge network of teachers and professors that
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:And if somehow we could just dispatch this information out to
Speaker:people, they can pick it up and fix it.
Speaker:It was kind of when Uber was growing and starting to
Speaker:get really popular.
Speaker:So they just started sitting down and coding a lot of
Speaker:coding. Actually the first prep of developing an app would be
Speaker:kind of almost like writing a book.
Speaker:Like you have to write out,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:what do you want to achieve?
Speaker:How do you want it to look how it looks today
Speaker:is not what it looked like,
Speaker:probably on its first through fifth rounds.
Speaker:So it is a lot of stylization and really just depending
Speaker:on how are people gonna work through it too,
Speaker:because when you're building something,
Speaker:it makes sense to you.
Speaker:And then when you give it off to a friend to
Speaker:say like here,
Speaker:try this out and you don't even tell them how to
Speaker:use it.
Speaker:You have to watch them using it to see what do
Speaker:they intuitively do.
Speaker:And sometimes it's not always what you think it's going to
Speaker:be, Right.
Speaker:Just the whole user experience.
Speaker:You have to look at it from that end as you're
Speaker:developing and as you're going through draft by draft,
Speaker:Right? So they took about a year to develop just actually
Speaker:the backend app.
Speaker:There's also an algorithm that we have that will filter the
Speaker:better editors to the top for when they get notified as
Speaker:they get rated and as their speed so that it will
Speaker:eventually naturally weed out any editors that maybe aren't up to
Speaker:par. Okay.
Speaker:You know what,
Speaker:at this point,
Speaker:I think it would be good so that our audience understands
Speaker:what you're actually talking about.
Speaker:Let's go through and talk about the process,
Speaker:what the app looks like now today.
Speaker:And then we can get back to what you're talking about
Speaker:with the better editors and all that,
Speaker:because I think it'll become clear to people.
Speaker:So if you would talk through how it works from a
Speaker:user perspective and then how you get your editors so that,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:for sure you've,
Speaker:you're getting quality work done because you are not editing.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:it's not just Brian and Heather on the other side,
Speaker:editing all of this.
Speaker:So walk through all that for us.
Speaker:Would you first from the customer standpoint?
Speaker:So if I wanted to submit something to you,
Speaker:I was interested,
Speaker:how does that work?
Speaker:Sure. Well,
Speaker:we have both a web app and a mobile app.
Speaker:What that is is you can go and use the service
Speaker:from your desktop on our website,
Speaker:which is editor with two rs.com.
Speaker:You would go there and sign up for an account and
Speaker:then you can get started.
Speaker:We have a,
Speaker:how it works tab with a great explainer video.
Speaker:Essentially what you do is sign up login and you can
Speaker:either cut and paste your writing into the work field,
Speaker:or you can type right into it.
Speaker:You would then click submit and that's it for you.
Speaker:Is there any limit on the length?
Speaker:We have a 2000 word limit and that's actually pretty long.
Speaker:That's about three pages,
Speaker:Sales letter or lots of different types of wording.
Speaker:Yeah. And we have it limited to 2000 words just because
Speaker:we really wanted it to be more of your day-to-day writing.
Speaker:We want our editors to be able to pick it up
Speaker:mobily in between what they're doing.
Speaker:Anything over 2000 words takes a lot more time to edit.
Speaker:So you're not going to submit a book.
Speaker:No, there's other stuff.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:So you submit your work and then what happens?
Speaker:Where does it go?
Speaker:That will then be dispatched out to our network of editors.
Speaker:They'll receive a text notification that says,
Speaker:would you like to make $2 and 10 cents pick up
Speaker:this job?
Speaker:And so then the first editor to pick up the job
Speaker:gets it,
Speaker:you'll then get a notification that says your job has been
Speaker:picked up and editors out of the unit.
Speaker:And it should be back to you within about five minutes,
Speaker:depending on the length,
Speaker:the editor will then edit it and press submit on their
Speaker:end. You'll get another notification that says your job is fixed
Speaker:and done,
Speaker:and you can check it out.
Speaker:You'll then see two versions,
Speaker:you'll see a marked up version so that you can learn
Speaker:and know what's happened.
Speaker:And then you'll also have a clean version so that you
Speaker:could either send it off right from the workspace.
Speaker:And it'll be emailed from the email that you used to
Speaker:sign up,
Speaker:or you can cut and paste it and put it wherever
Speaker:you need it.
Speaker:I love the fact that there's that learn aspect to it.
Speaker:Yeah. That was really important.
Speaker:Cause we,
Speaker:Did you have that right from the beginning?
Speaker:Or did that kind of evolve as you were going through
Speaker:all your different drafts?
Speaker:That was actually from the beginning.
Speaker:Yeah. We wanted people to be able to learn and know
Speaker:what they're doing incorrectly and why.
Speaker:Right. And how long is the turnaround?
Speaker:Approximately? Obviously it depends on length of course,
Speaker:but approximately hour,
Speaker:Our average turnaround is 5.1
Speaker:minutes. Oh my gosh,
Speaker:you guys 5.1
Speaker:minutes to make sure that everything is proofed and put together
Speaker:properly and it goes out and it comes back and it's
Speaker:ready to go.
Speaker:That is super cool,
Speaker:Heather. Yeah.
Speaker:It's really great to see it come back to you so
Speaker:fast. Cause that was the big thing.
Speaker:A lot of people,
Speaker:they want to get their email out quick.
Speaker:They want to get their blog posts posted and they don't
Speaker:like sitting around waiting for someone to pick up their email,
Speaker:read over it.
Speaker:So that was very important to us.
Speaker:Is speed.
Speaker:Okay. So then how on the other end,
Speaker:how did you get all of your editors and you offer
Speaker:24 seven service.
Speaker:So how that had to have taken a lot of planning
Speaker:to get that whole thing set up and ready to go.
Speaker:Yeah. The 24 hour service was challenging to kind of figure
Speaker:out at first,
Speaker:I'll let you know I was editing work probably around 2:00
Speaker:AM the first week or so,
Speaker:Because you just didn't have editors in the time zones that
Speaker:would be available to pick it up probably right.
Speaker:You just didn't have enough.
Speaker:And at the level and English knowing English.
Speaker:Yeah, absolutely.
Speaker:So they're probably the first week or so it was Brian
Speaker:and they had a lot of sleepless nights picking up these
Speaker:jobs when they came in.
Speaker:So for the 24 hour,
Speaker:we have actually a few editors overseas that are English speaking,
Speaker:but they're just an ex-pats.
Speaker:So they're the people who kind of take our overnight medics
Speaker:and fighting the editors.
Speaker:We started out with solid group of professors who Brian knows
Speaker:who had to pass the assessment.
Speaker:So we found an English assessment that we've tweaked and rewritten
Speaker:and that's the first step.
Speaker:And then after you pass the grammatical English assessment,
Speaker:you will then edit three jobs,
Speaker:like three test jobs that we've strategically placed,
Speaker:common mistakes and just kind of a variety of issues.
Speaker:And that is checked on how fast you edit through it
Speaker:and how accurate your editing is.
Speaker:And so that's how the editors are vetted.
Speaker:So if someone wanted to be an editor who's listening right
Speaker:now, are they able to apply?
Speaker:Yeah, absolutely.
Speaker:If you go to our website,
Speaker:editor.com on the top right side,
Speaker:there's a small box,
Speaker:it says become an editor.
Speaker:And then you would just sign up through that button and
Speaker:apply there.
Speaker:All right,
Speaker:let's get back to the app development.
Speaker:So now everyone understands how the app works,
Speaker:who the editors are and we're talking already about the quality.
Speaker:Clearly your result is only going to be as good as
Speaker:the quality of the editors.
Speaker:So you really took that seriously in terms of making sure
Speaker:that there was a process.
Speaker:And do you reject a lot of people?
Speaker:We do.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I'm excited about it,
Speaker:but yeah,
Speaker:there's some people that just don't pass and unfortunately we need
Speaker:to maintain high standards.
Speaker:Right. That'll make or break your service for sure.
Speaker:Yeah. And so now you're creating this from scratch,
Speaker:not been around before.
Speaker:How do you decide what your pricing structure is going to
Speaker:be? The pricing structure was probably our hardest issue to tackle
Speaker:that. And right now it's on,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:it's good.
Speaker:Our pricing is staying the way it is,
Speaker:but this is probably the third round of pricing that we
Speaker:finally finalized on.
Speaker:There are a few similar programs,
Speaker:but they're not either on demand.
Speaker:They're not fast or they're not real people.
Speaker:So there were a few things that were similar to what
Speaker:we're doing that we're able to look to.
Speaker:And we also thought about like,
Speaker:well, what would we pay and broke it down that way.
Speaker:If I was sending a sales letter to,
Speaker:to someone who I wanted to become a tenant of mine
Speaker:or something like that,
Speaker:how much would I pay to just really make sure that
Speaker:that letter is buttoned up and started from there.
Speaker:And then we also asked around a lot,
Speaker:like, what would you pay?
Speaker:What do you think?
Speaker:Do you think this is too high?
Speaker:Do you think it's too low?
Speaker:And so I think it's really kind of have to ask
Speaker:around and do a lot of research to come up with
Speaker:what works.
Speaker:And then once we laid out the pricing and put it
Speaker:up there to the public,
Speaker:we even got more response and then tweaked it a little
Speaker:bit more.
Speaker:So I think the importance about that is just fluidity and
Speaker:being able to pivot to what your audience and what your
Speaker:customer wants.
Speaker:It needs.
Speaker:I just heard from you is there were really three steps.
Speaker:There was research.
Speaker:So identifying what was already out there and what the pricing
Speaker:models looked like,
Speaker:albeit they weren't real life.
Speaker:People like you had.
Speaker:So yours has a twist to it.
Speaker:Then a reality check in terms of how much you think
Speaker:would be reasonable if you were actually using the service and
Speaker:then bringing it to the customers and getting feedback from them.
Speaker:So kind of a three tiered thing in terms of the
Speaker:pricing and give biz listeners,
Speaker:we talk about pricing of your handcrafted products.
Speaker:And this can be a very similar type of a process.
Speaker:Now with you guys,
Speaker:you have materials and you have time in and labor and
Speaker:all of that.
Speaker:But in terms of the steps of the research reality check
Speaker:and then live testing,
Speaker:these are three steps that you could easily apply to your
Speaker:businesses as well.
Speaker:The other thing Heather,
Speaker:that I thought was really interesting and important to bring up
Speaker:and underline here is there are several places where you did
Speaker:put something out,
Speaker:you tested it and you revised it.
Speaker:You put something out,
Speaker:you tested it and revised it.
Speaker:You'd mentioned that just in the app development,
Speaker:in the coding,
Speaker:you had multiple drafts before you landed on the exact thing,
Speaker:same thing with pricing.
Speaker:You had several passes before you've landed on what sounds like
Speaker:now you'll use for at least some time,
Speaker:right? You never know if there'll be a revision later or
Speaker:adjustments for a large corporate business or,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:whatever that might be.
Speaker:Again, the point is you don't always land at the first
Speaker:time you put something out there,
Speaker:you test it,
Speaker:you can always adjust.
Speaker:And even if you don't get it right,
Speaker:the first time,
Speaker:probably 90% of the time,
Speaker:you won't,
Speaker:that's not a failure.
Speaker:That's just an adjustment and an additional learning and advancement you
Speaker:make for your businesses.
Speaker:And that's exactly what you were doing here,
Speaker:Heather. Yeah.
Speaker:The people who are using my service now have no idea
Speaker:that it was priced differently six months.
Speaker:Well, we haven't been around for six months,
Speaker:but it was,
Speaker:it wasn't the same in April.
Speaker:So you kind of have to keep that in mind too.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:what you did wrong or was different,
Speaker:but like you said,
Speaker:90% of the people aren't going to notice.
Speaker:And just because you maybe got it wrong the first time,
Speaker:it doesn't really mean it was wrong.
Speaker:It just wasn't what was perfect.
Speaker:And really the service still isn't perfect.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I'm, I'll never say anything.
Speaker:It's perfect.
Speaker:It's always going to be growing and evolving.
Speaker:Absolutely. All right.
Speaker:So when we're creating our own products,
Speaker:whether it's a company or an app or a piece of
Speaker:jewelry, and we're our own boss in the beginning,
Speaker:when you first start off,
Speaker:everything's beautiful.
Speaker:You're going to create this product or this service and life
Speaker:is going to be beautiful,
Speaker:but we know that that's not reality problem set in.
Speaker:There are sleepless nights.
Speaker:Things can be a struggle.
Speaker:There's that gut wrenching moment when something you thought was perfect,
Speaker:all of a sudden is wrong.
Speaker:Can you tell us about something like that?
Speaker:That has happened with editor?
Speaker:Yeah. So she says hesitantly.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:absolutely the sleepless nights,
Speaker:the long working hours,
Speaker:the, are we ever going to make any money out of
Speaker:this? All those questions come to mind when you are building
Speaker:something like this and starting a business.
Speaker:I think as business owners,
Speaker:you kind of have to swallow the reality that you're probably
Speaker:the last person to be paid.
Speaker:Unfortunately, our editors are paid,
Speaker:but getting to that point is a slow point.
Speaker:And you just have to have faith in yourself.
Speaker:One kind of moment we had was right at the beginning
Speaker:of April,
Speaker:we had launched and someone bought like a pretty decent package.
Speaker:They were not only a user,
Speaker:but they were like a paid user.
Speaker:And they wrote up their sales newsletter inside our desktop.
Speaker:They didn't copy and paste it or anything.
Speaker:They wrote it in there and they submitted it.
Speaker:And some like wires crossed,
Speaker:well, not real wires,
Speaker:but you know,
Speaker:like wires crossed on the backend and they lost it.
Speaker:And they just freaked out because they,
Speaker:they were like,
Speaker:I just spend an hour writing this.
Speaker:Where is it?
Speaker:And it took Brian about a day to find it in
Speaker:our database,
Speaker:but he was able to recover it and fixed the problem
Speaker:that caused their connection to basically lose it.
Speaker:Like it would never really was lost,
Speaker:but it was hidden unless you were going in the backend
Speaker:database to find it.
Speaker:And so that was the biggest,
Speaker:Oh my God moment.
Speaker:Cause they were paying and it was in the beginning.
Speaker:And So how did you manage the communication with them as
Speaker:you were struggling frantically to figure this out.
Speaker:Brian had emailed them and said he was looking for it.
Speaker:It should be able to be recovered,
Speaker:please. Don't panic essentially.
Speaker:And he would let us do the panicking.
Speaker:He's like,
Speaker:I'll get it back to you.
Speaker:He actually gave them his direct phone number.
Speaker:He's like,
Speaker:if you need to call me,
Speaker:you can,
Speaker:but no we're looking into this and we'll get it back
Speaker:to you.
Speaker:So customer service is really important to us in being transparent
Speaker:and being accessible.
Speaker:We're On pins and needles.
Speaker:Did it all end?
Speaker:Well, yes,
Speaker:It didn't work out.
Speaker:Oh yay.
Speaker:He recovered,
Speaker:the writing found the job.
Speaker:It was fixed and they're actually still customers.
Speaker:So it was good,
Speaker:but that was probably the biggest problem And big point.
Speaker:All of us as businesses.
Speaker:Now you were in development stage yet.
Speaker:So you were still early in testing the systems and all
Speaker:that, but still,
Speaker:if you ever fall short of what your customer is expecting,
Speaker:that'll happen to all of us.
Speaker:And we can just assume that there's a time and a
Speaker:place where that is going to happen.
Speaker:But the big point I'm so glad you responded as you
Speaker:did, Heather is communication with your customer and not having them
Speaker:feel like they are out there and not being recognized,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:and that their issue isn't as important to you as it
Speaker:is to them.
Speaker:That communication goes miles in terms of just while you're resolving
Speaker:the problem or working through any situation,
Speaker:because that really shows on,
Speaker:I honestly think this separates quality businesses from those who really
Speaker:don't care,
Speaker:who aren't going to put in the time.
Speaker:And you may end up on the other side with a
Speaker:more loyal customer than just a regular customer where everything goes
Speaker:perfectly all the time.
Speaker:Would you agree with that?
Speaker:I do.
Speaker:And I feel like if people have people don't share really
Speaker:their good experiences,
Speaker:people will share like exceptional experiences and terrible experiences.
Speaker:So if you're able to go above and beyond and really
Speaker:help the person,
Speaker:I think it will come back to you because then they'll
Speaker:tell people and say,
Speaker:you know what?
Speaker:I had this problem,
Speaker:but they totally took care of it.
Speaker:It all worked out.
Speaker:And I think that will come back to you like later.
Speaker:Okay. Agreed.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Now I'm going to make you tell a story and we
Speaker:did not prep for this.
Speaker:So get ready Heather and I saw each other at social
Speaker:media marketing world in San Diego a couple of months back.
Speaker:And I want you to walk through and tell the story
Speaker:kind of quickly.
Speaker:We don't have to go through the whole thing,
Speaker:but tell the story about Chris Brogan and his comments about
Speaker:the app and just the whole situation,
Speaker:set it all up and give us that story.
Speaker:So he was speaking and we were sitting there with Brian,
Speaker:my husband,
Speaker:and he's kind of always been a fan of Chris Brogan.
Speaker:He's read his books,
Speaker:but my husband is also not a fan boy.
Speaker:Like people don't impress them in that way,
Speaker:but you know,
Speaker:he was still kind of excited to be there during Chris's
Speaker:speech. He challenged us to all do something that was out
Speaker:of her comfort zone.
Speaker:Something that we wouldn't typically do.
Speaker:And he also mentioned something about failure is just part of
Speaker:life and how many sticker,
Speaker:like startup business stickers.
Speaker:He peels off his website or his laptop every year,
Speaker:which is funny because my husband and I's laptops are full
Speaker:of stickers.
Speaker:So after the talk,
Speaker:Brian walked up and introduced himself and then handed him an
Speaker:editor sticker and was like,
Speaker:here's a sticker for your laptop.
Speaker:Hopefully you don't have to peel it off in a year.
Speaker:And that kind of just keep the conversation going.
Speaker:He didn't want to go up and sell them anything.
Speaker:He just wanted to like be funny and give them a
Speaker:sticker. And so then Chris asked like,
Speaker:well, what is this quickly told them about it.
Speaker:And he was like,
Speaker:this is awesome.
Speaker:So many people mean to use this.
Speaker:I think it's great.
Speaker:And so Brian did something that was out of his comfort
Speaker:zone. He wouldn't have normally gone up to someone that he
Speaker:didn't know to talk to.
Speaker:And then later that day I was walking by and Chris
Speaker:Brogan and Steve Dotto and a few other people were sitting
Speaker:at a table and I'm just walking by the table.
Speaker:And I say hi to Steve Dotto.
Speaker:Cause I know him a little bit better.
Speaker:And Chris Brogan stops me and he's like,
Speaker:Hey, Brian's wife.
Speaker:But he actually did remember my name too,
Speaker:but he's like,
Speaker:you're going to tell all these people about editor.
Speaker:And before I could even finish telling people what editor was,
Speaker:he kind of interrupted me and like finished the pitch for
Speaker:me. So it was pretty awesome that he got it immediately
Speaker:and really liked it.
Speaker:And so Brian and Chris can email each other back and
Speaker:joke and they're like friends now.
Speaker:So it's really great Is super and to get some recognition
Speaker:and some eyes on the app from someone who has quite
Speaker:a following and is very professional,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:in and of his own right.
Speaker:Is so cool.
Speaker:So you never know when those things are going to come.
Speaker:Yeah. I think it's just about being like real and honest
Speaker:and, and funny.
Speaker:Yeah. Brian didn't even really know what he was doing,
Speaker:but he drew attention to himself just because it wasn't the
Speaker:same old,
Speaker:hi Chris,
Speaker:I'm Brian and you know,
Speaker:love your book,
Speaker:great speech,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:whatever. He came with something different,
Speaker:which really started the conversation in a different direction.
Speaker:And I'm sure captured Chris's attention.
Speaker:Yeah. All right,
Speaker:Heather, I want to go now into our reflection section.
Speaker:This is the dive into you and what makes you productive
Speaker:and how you go through your day,
Speaker:which might give us clues that we can capture and use
Speaker:for ourselves.
Speaker:If you were to think about something that's innately in you,
Speaker:that you pull out every day to be more productive and
Speaker:to be successful as you are now with this editor app,
Speaker:what would that?
Speaker:Well, we've already talked about my awesome procrastination.
Speaker:So I feel like I'm pretty creative and calm.
Speaker:A lot of stuff doesn't really get to me right away.
Speaker:At least I kind of am like,
Speaker:okay, it's always going to get done.
Speaker:No, one's dying.
Speaker:So I feel like I kind of have this calmness factor
Speaker:that I don't like have freak out moments right away very
Speaker:often. Okay.
Speaker:That's good.
Speaker:Do you,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:you're just naturally that your response is pretty calm and like,
Speaker:okay, here's the problem now let's work through it.
Speaker:I think so Brian will probably say something totally different.
Speaker:He would probably be like,
Speaker:are you kidding me?
Speaker:Like freak out.
Speaker:I try to work through it and come up with a
Speaker:resolution before I just throw in the towel and freak out
Speaker:and say,
Speaker:Oh my God,
Speaker:it's we have to shut down a business.
Speaker:And so I think kind of just like a calmness factor
Speaker:until I hit the procrastination wall and creativity,
Speaker:I try to come up with I'm much more productive and
Speaker:better at working when I'm in like a creative area.
Speaker:So it sounds like you're kind an outside of the box
Speaker:Thinker. I try to be.
Speaker:So yeah,
Speaker:definitely thinking more outside the box,
Speaker:more in a,
Speaker:in a creative way.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Super. Do you have a tool that you use regularly now?
Speaker:Obviously we're going to be talking about editor in the show
Speaker:notes page,
Speaker:but is there anything else that you find yourself calling upon
Speaker:day after day that's really important for you,
Speaker:for your productivity or to create balance in your life?
Speaker:Yeah, I OmniFocus to track basically like all my tasks and
Speaker:OmniFocus is a program.
Speaker:I think they have it for PC.
Speaker:I have it on my Mac and you can install it.
Speaker:It's it's just like a great schedule.
Speaker:It's not even a scheduler.
Speaker:It's more just like a it's where you put like your
Speaker:tasks and your projects and it kind of breaks them down.
Speaker:Then you have everything then all in one place.
Speaker:Yeah. So everything's in there.
Speaker:I've also lately started using Slack and I really like that.
Speaker:Cause I feel like it kind of takes away emails,
Speaker:Brian and I,
Speaker:especially just aren't emailing back and forth like stupid one-liners.
Speaker:So Slack kind of helps keep that email clear Slack is
Speaker:I believe I have not used Slack,
Speaker:but I've heard about it before,
Speaker:correct me if I'm wrong.
Speaker:I just want to give a clear picture for our listeners
Speaker:is kind of a conversation between a group,
Speaker:but it's outside of email.
Speaker:So you're still communicating back and forth.
Speaker:Would you liken it more to messenger on your phone is
Speaker:if you were in a messenger group,
Speaker:It is similar to that,
Speaker:but you can also attach things.
Speaker:So like,
Speaker:if I want him to add a picture to the website
Speaker:or edit something for me or whatever,
Speaker:I can throw this stuff right into Slack and have it
Speaker:all in there.
Speaker:It is similar to messenger,
Speaker:but it also keeps it all there.
Speaker:You can search within Slack to find things.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Interesting. Well,
Speaker:give biz listeners,
Speaker:if you're working in any groups where you're passing information back
Speaker:and forth,
Speaker:whether it's comments or attachments or material,
Speaker:and you want everyone's eyes on it,
Speaker:it sounds like this may be something to check out.
Speaker:Yeah. And you can do private messages too.
Speaker:So like everything is most of it's public.
Speaker:But if I wanted to just privately message someone in the
Speaker:Slack group,
Speaker:you can otherwise it is like a big group message.
Speaker:Wonderful. Okay.
Speaker:And have you read a book lately that you think our
Speaker:listeners could find value in?
Speaker:Yeah. This is probably the third time I'm reading it,
Speaker:but again,
Speaker:I really need to get things done.
Speaker:It's getting things done by David Allen and that kind of
Speaker:goes with the OmniFocus.
Speaker:It's really about not letting chaos of business mandate what you
Speaker:do every day.
Speaker:He created the whole inbox zero,
Speaker:which my inbox is not zero right now,
Speaker:but that's why I'm reading the book again.
Speaker:So I think as business owners and entrepreneurs,
Speaker:I think that's a great book because it really helps you
Speaker:outline your day and your week.
Speaker:And has you put timelines and tasks to each project and
Speaker:then how you can break down a project so that it
Speaker:doesn't seem so,
Speaker:so you're like,
Speaker:okay, I need to launch this new product.
Speaker:Well, what 20 steps do I need within this launch of
Speaker:a product?
Speaker:Do I need to create?
Speaker:And then it helps you go backwards and break down what
Speaker:you're doing,
Speaker:that you need to get to that Well,
Speaker:and that does sound then like a book that you would
Speaker:want to reread because when you read it the first time,
Speaker:you're probably just getting the whole concept.
Speaker:Then you can read it other times because there are multiple
Speaker:projects that you're going to have over time and you might
Speaker:forget, or you might just need that extra motivation to do
Speaker:it in a structured way.
Speaker:Give busy listeners just as you're listening to the podcast today,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:you can also listen to audio books with ease.
Speaker:I've teamed up with audible for you to be able to
Speaker:get an audio book for free.
Speaker:All you need to do is go to gift biz,
Speaker:book.com and make a selection that's gift biz book that all
Speaker:right, Heather,
Speaker:I would like to present you with a virtual gift.
Speaker:It's a magical box containing unlimited possibilities for your future.
Speaker:This is your dream or your goal of almost unreachable Heights
Speaker:that you would wish to obtain.
Speaker:Please accept this gift and open it in our presence.
Speaker:What is inside your box?
Speaker:I think financial freedom.
Speaker:If I could sell editor,
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:I think in the future,
Speaker:I would love to just be able to travel,
Speaker:be with my family and then as like work or as
Speaker:something challenging,
Speaker:I'd like to invest in other companies and help other companies
Speaker:grow and invest in other startups and other small companies Helping
Speaker:other people,
Speaker:then you're having yours be successful and then helping other people
Speaker:see the same success as you.
Speaker:Right? Cause the success of my company would lead me to
Speaker:the money to be able to invest in them.
Speaker:Exactly. All right.
Speaker:And so now if our listeners are interested in learning more
Speaker:about you or more about editor,
Speaker:where's the single best place for them to go.
Speaker:I would first go to editor.com
Speaker:And remember everybody it's editor with two RS.
Speaker:Yes, Let's go there.
Speaker:Cause you can find everything out about the service.
Speaker:We have our pricing and how it works.
Speaker:If you want to become an editor,
Speaker:everything about that is there.
Speaker:And then our Instagram is probably kind of fun,
Speaker:which is editor app.
Speaker:And we're actually at editor app everywhere,
Speaker:but Instagram is probably the most fun.
Speaker:And then if you want to learn about just me,
Speaker:you can find me on my Facebook page or on my
Speaker:Instagram, which is Heather A.
Speaker:Robinson and that's public.
Speaker:So Okay.
Speaker:And give biz listeners,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:they'll show notes page will be backing all of this up.
Speaker:So if you're out and about,
Speaker:and you don't have time to make a note of that,
Speaker:just jump over to gift to biz on rapt,
Speaker:find Heather's page and you can capture all of this information
Speaker:as well.
Speaker:Okay. And Heather,
Speaker:I think you shared with me a little bit of a
Speaker:special surprise for our listeners.
Speaker:Yes. Today or anytime you're listening,
Speaker:you can use the code and gifted to unlock 500 free
Speaker:words. That is basically our silver package,
Speaker:which is a $13 value.
Speaker:You're giving that to our listeners at no charge.
Speaker:Yes, absolutely.
Speaker:Oh my gosh.
Speaker:Thank you so much,
Speaker:Heather. That's fabulous.
Speaker:You're welcome.
Speaker:We really want people to use it and enjoy it and
Speaker:gets me set of it.
Speaker:So 500 words should get them about a blog post or
Speaker:two to three emails to really get a handle on the
Speaker:service and see how it can help them with their business.
Speaker:Wow. Well you told me you had something,
Speaker:but I didn't know it was that spectacular.
Speaker:So thank you so much and give busy listeners,
Speaker:I believe the way to you'll correct me if I'm wrong,
Speaker:Heather, but you'll just go to editor,
Speaker:sign up for an account.
Speaker:And then in the discount code area,
Speaker:you'll just put gift biz.
Speaker:Is that right?
Speaker:Yep. That's correct.
Speaker:And you can sign up@editor.com
Speaker:and that's E D I T O R R with two
Speaker:RS. Or if you download the app on Google play or
Speaker:iOS, you can also sign up through the app.
Speaker:Heather, thank you so much.
Speaker:It has been so interesting really,
Speaker:to understand how an app gets developed.
Speaker:Some of the struggles you had,
Speaker:all of the information that you've shared in terms of getting
Speaker:this up,
Speaker:going live and super exciting that you were seeing such great
Speaker:results right out of the bat.
Speaker:I just love that.
Speaker:And I wish that you and Brian always have your candle
Speaker:burning, Learn how to work smarter while developing and growing your
Speaker:business. Download our guide called 25 free tools to enhance your
Speaker:business in life.
Speaker:It's our gift to you and available@giftbizonrap.com
Speaker:slash tools.
Speaker:Thanks for listening and be sure to join us for the
Speaker:next episode.
Speaker:Today's show is sponsored by the ribbon print company,
Speaker:looking for a new income source for your gift business.
Speaker:Customization is more popular now than ever your products with your
Speaker:logo or print a happy birthday,
Speaker:Jessica ribbon to add to a gift right at checkout,
Speaker:it's all done right in your shop or cross studio in
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Speaker:for more information after you listened to the show,
Speaker:if you like what you're hearing,
Speaker:make sure to jump over and subscribe to the show on
Speaker:iTunes. That way you'll automatically get the newest episodes when they
Speaker:go live.
Speaker:And thank you to those who have already left a rating
Speaker:and review by subscribing rating and reviewing you helped to increase.
Speaker:The visibility of gift is unwrapped.
Speaker:It's a great way to pay it forward,