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How To Grow Your Business Using Email Marketing Strategies
23rd February 2023 • eCommerce Podcast • Matt Edmundson
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Are you struggling to find new and effective ways to grow your business? Look no further than email marketing! In this episode, our expert guest, Tom Kulzer, shares the most valuable email marketing strategies to help you attract new customers, engage with your audience, and drive growth for your business. Tune in and get ready to learn how to use email marketing to take your business to the next level!

ABOUT TOM

Tom Kulzer is the founder and CEO at AWeber, the leading email marketing and automation platform for small businesses, where he is actively involved in the company’s strategic direction, growth and evolution. Over the company’s 24-year history, Tom has nurtured AWeber from a small start-up to a robust organization, that has enabled over 1 million customers to grow their businesses, all without public or venture funding.

Here’s a summary of the great stuff that we cover in this show:

  • AWeber is an email marketing platform that enables small businesses around the world to be able to send communications out to the people that requested them. They are the automation behind communicating with your subscribers.
  • Email has remained one of the top investments for businesses from a return-on-investment standpoint through the years. When done right, it is highly profitable, allowing you to connect with your users in ways that you just can't do across social and other platforms.
  • Another major benefit of email is that you own your audience. Email is more transferable, more ownable, has longer term economics and email subscribers are worth far more than Facebook or Twitter followers.

For complete show notes, transcript and links to our guest, check out our website: www.ecommerce-podcast.com.

Transcripts

Matt Edmundson:

Well, hello and welcome to the eCommerce podcast

Matt Edmundson:

with me, your host, Matt Edmundson.

Matt Edmundson:

The eCommerce podcast is all about helping you to deliver eCommerce.

Matt Edmundson:

Wow.

Matt Edmundson:

And to help us do just that, I am chatting with today's very special guest, Tom

Matt Edmundson:

Kulzer, who is the founder and CEO of AWeber, about how to grow your online

Matt Edmundson:

business using email marketing strategies.

Matt Edmundson:

But before Tom and I get into that.

Matt Edmundson:

Let me suggest a few other eCommerce podcast episodes that I think you're

Matt Edmundson:

also gonna enjoy listening to.

Matt Edmundson:

Why not check out a recent episode with Daniel Budai, the Secrets of

Matt Edmundson:

Retaining Customers with email marketing.

Matt Edmundson:

What a legend in that guy is, and also check out how to optimize

Matt Edmundson:

engagement through customer lifestyle marketing with Cath Pay.

Matt Edmundson:

I still remember Cath Pay being in a very tropical location

Matt Edmundson:

when we recorded that episode.

Matt Edmundson:

So do check those out.

Matt Edmundson:

You can find these and our entire archive of episodes on our website

Matt Edmundson:

for free ecommercepodcast.net.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and on our website you can also sign up to our email's newsletter.

Matt Edmundson:

Which I feel very good about given today's guest.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and each week we will email you, uh, these links along with the notes and

Matt Edmundson:

the transcript from today's conversation with Tom directly to your inbox.

Matt Edmundson:

Totally free.

Matt Edmundson:

It's all good stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

It's all totally amazing.

Matt Edmundson:

Now, this episode is brought to you by, The e-commerce cohort, which helps you

Matt Edmundson:

deliver e-commerce wow to your customers.

Matt Edmundson:

You know what, I've come across a bunch of folks who find e-commerce.

Matt Edmundson:

It's a bit of an overwhelming topic, shall we say.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, you've gotta keep it with the tech, which changes so fast.

Matt Edmundson:

How do you do customer service when everybody's taste and habits

Matt Edmundson:

are changing all of the time.

Matt Edmundson:

And to top it all off, you've gotta stay on top of all the latest

Matt Edmundson:

marketing techniques and ideas.

Matt Edmundson:

So we talk about all of these things, obviously, on the e-commerce podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

But for those of you in e-commerce, you should also check out ecommercecohort.com.

Matt Edmundson:

It is a membership group for those who are in e-commerce.

Matt Edmundson:

And it does guided monthly sprints that cycle through all the key areas of E-com.

Matt Edmundson:

You'll keep up to date.

Matt Edmundson:

You'll be working on the key areas of your e-commerce business, including

Matt Edmundson:

your marketing and email marketing like we're talking about today.

Matt Edmundson:

So whether you are just starting out in e-commerce or if like me, you

Matt Edmundson:

are a well established e-commercer.

Matt Edmundson:

I encourage you to get involved.

Matt Edmundson:

Check it out, uh, ecommercecohort.com.

Matt Edmundson:

That's ecommercecohort.com.

Matt Edmundson:

Now, before I get into today's conversation, uh, I just wanna, just wanna

Matt Edmundson:

read out the bio that's in front of me.

Matt Edmundson:

Tom is the founder and CEO of AWeber, the leading email marketing platform,

Matt Edmundson:

uh, and automation platform for small businesses where he is actively

Matt Edmundson:

involved in the company's strategic.

Matt Edmundson:

That's not easy to say.

Matt Edmundson:

Company's strategic direction, growth and evolution.

Matt Edmundson:

Over the company's 24 year history, Tom has nurtured AWeber from a small

Matt Edmundson:

startup to a robust organization that we've all heard of, we all know

Matt Edmundson:

about, and has enabled over 1 million customers to grow their businesses.

Matt Edmundson:

All without public or venture funding.

Matt Edmundson:

Go.

Matt Edmundson:

Tom, that's amazing.

Matt Edmundson:

Tom, great to have you here on the e-Commerce podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

Thank you for taking time out of your no doubt, insanely busy

Matt Edmundson:

schedule to join us, uh, here today.

Tom Kulzer:

Thanks for having me on today, Matt.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh, no worries.

Tom Kulzer:

Looking forward to the conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh yeah, it's gonna be great.

Matt Edmundson:

So for those you know, for the four people listening to the podcast

Matt Edmundson:

that actually hasn't heard of AWeber, um, just tell us, uh, what

Matt Edmundson:

is AWeber and what do you guys do?

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

We're a email marketing platform.

Tom Kulzer:

So think of us as the, uh, you know, automation behind

Tom Kulzer:

communicating with your subscribers.

Tom Kulzer:

So when you publish an email newsletter, you log into AWeber to create that

Tom Kulzer:

newsletter and send that content out.

Tom Kulzer:

Uh, when you think about.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, automation sequences that people talk about or automated follow up.

Tom Kulzer:

Our platform is the one that enables you to, to do that.

Tom Kulzer:

So when somebody clicks on an email or clicks on a link, you send a

Tom Kulzer:

certain email, you know, they open a message, they don't open a message,

Tom Kulzer:

you send a different email, et cetera.

Tom Kulzer:

So our platform is the one that enables small businesses around the world to,

Tom Kulzer:

to be able to send those communications out to the people that requested them.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Now, I'm kind of curious, where did the name AWeber come from?

Matt Edmundson:

Because it's not, well, it's not.

Matt Edmundson:

It's not what I would've named an email company.

Matt Edmundson:

Do you know what I mean?

Matt Edmundson:

It's not a sort of top, unless I'm missing something.

Tom Kulzer:

It's not off the head.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

So back in 90, early 98, we were calling it the automated web

Tom Kulzer:

assistant, and it's before it launched.

Tom Kulzer:

So now it's making more sense, eh?

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

So you know, automated web assistant is like a really long domain name

Tom Kulzer:

and that's just not particularly catchy, so it kind of got shortened

Tom Kulzer:

and it's like, aweb, aweb ass.

Tom Kulzer:

No, no, no.

Tom Kulzer:

It just turned into aweber.

Tom Kulzer:

And, you know, historically, it's, it's one of those things that's

Tom Kulzer:

like, it begins with an A, it's short, it's catchy, it's unique.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, and, and it's just kind of a memorable thing when, when somebody hears it,

Tom Kulzer:

we always capitalize the A and the w.

Tom Kulzer:

But not the e because, you know, it's not the, uh, assistant part, but,

Tom Kulzer:

uh, yeah, no, it's just, it was one of those kind of funny naming, uh,

Tom Kulzer:

historical bits that we hung onto.

Matt Edmundson:

That's really funny how that, how these things

Matt Edmundson:

sort of come about, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

And the story.

Matt Edmundson:

So yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

How did you get started?

Matt Edmundson:

How did AWeber get started and did you just wake up one day and think, I'm gonna

Matt Edmundson:

help people conquer the world of Email?

Tom Kulzer:

No, not at all.

Tom Kulzer:

Uh, I was actually, uh, I was studying mechanical engineering in, uh, college.

Tom Kulzer:

And I was, um, I was selling this wireless modem.

Tom Kulzer:

Uh, so this was back when we still had dial up modems, uh,

Tom Kulzer:

for connecting to the internet.

Tom Kulzer:

So like wireless technology that you could, you know, Velcro to the back

Tom Kulzer:

of your laptop was, uh, was, you know, the latest, greatest thing.

Tom Kulzer:

And I was selling this at computer shows and I was basically a sales rep for it.

Tom Kulzer:

And, you know, in the process being a college student.

Tom Kulzer:

I was kind of lazy and you know, actually selling things required follow up.

Tom Kulzer:

Like I didn't just see them at the computer show and they instantly bought

Tom Kulzer:

this expensive device and then paid for an expensive monthly service.

Tom Kulzer:

They had more questions or they weren't sold right away, and you

Tom Kulzer:

had to kind of follow up with them.

Tom Kulzer:

So I'd send these manual emails and that's a lot of work, hence

Tom Kulzer:

the lazy college student aspect.

Tom Kulzer:

I wrote a little program that would automatically send out the

Tom Kulzer:

messages because 90% of the messages that I sent were the same message

Tom Kulzer:

to each of the different people, and I customized a little bit.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, and, uh, yeah, so I, I wrote this and I ended up sharing it with

Tom Kulzer:

other salespeople around the country that were selling this same product.

Tom Kulzer:

And my payment for that was send me the messages that are working.

Tom Kulzer:

I wanna know what copy works, because that was not something

Tom Kulzer:

I was particularly good at.

Tom Kulzer:

So we shared them and I would share 'em off to other people, and we all sold

Tom Kulzer:

more as a result of both this automated email tool and sharing copy that works.

Tom Kulzer:

So we had the right messaging.

Tom Kulzer:

One thing led to another.

Tom Kulzer:

I ended up leaving that company to focus on school.

Tom Kulzer:

Uh, somebody was telling me that was important.

Tom Kulzer:

Parents.

Tom Kulzer:

And, uh, I stopped running that program that was sending out all the

Tom Kulzer:

automated follow-ups for all these other people around the country, and

Tom Kulzer:

they started coming to me saying, Hey, I'll pay you for that thing that

Tom Kulzer:

I was previously getting for free.

Tom Kulzer:

And I was like, Hm.

Tom Kulzer:

Maybe there's a business here.

Tom Kulzer:

Maybe just, um, and that turned into our automated web assistant,

Tom Kulzer:

uh, that turned into AWeber.

Tom Kulzer:

Many years later, here we are.

Matt Edmundson:

Wow.

Matt Edmundson:

It's funny, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

How, um, when?

Matt Edmundson:

Can I ask when was it you wrote this first little program?

Tom Kulzer:

So it was like 97.

Matt Edmundson:

97.

Matt Edmundson:

So 98.

Matt Edmundson:

In 98, I wrote my first ever website.

Matt Edmundson:

It was around 97, 98.

Matt Edmundson:

And then that sort of one thing led to another and that ended

Matt Edmundson:

up, right, an e-commerce site.

Matt Edmundson:

And then that led to something else.

Matt Edmundson:

And then that led to, and then here I am today.

Matt Edmundson:

Right.

Matt Edmundson:

And I find it fascinating, uh, Tom, that you kind of, the amount of journeys

Matt Edmundson:

that start off with, I was in college.

Matt Edmundson:

Or I was at uni, or I was young, had a lot of time on my hands, and I just

Matt Edmundson:

played around with dot, dot, dot.

Matt Edmundson:

And 20 years later, here I am dot, dot, dot.

Matt Edmundson:

Do you know what I mean?

Matt Edmundson:

It's that kind of really fascinating story to me, and that seems to be yours, right?

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah, no, absolutely.

Tom Kulzer:

At the time I was, you know, single and, uh, racing bicycles,

Tom Kulzer:

uh, kind of in the amateur level.

Tom Kulzer:

So if I was either not, uh, you know, not in school or not riding

Tom Kulzer:

my bike, I was sitting in front of a computer, uh, messing around with

Tom Kulzer:

code and, you know, just seeing what I could kind of hack away on.

Tom Kulzer:

I was part of a number of, uh, different like kind of newsletters.

Tom Kulzer:

I moderated a newsletter that basically took kind of entrepreneurial.

Tom Kulzer:

Just something that was always interesting to me.

Tom Kulzer:

So I kind of, I, I created this little ecosystem around me

Tom Kulzer:

that was other entrepreneurs.

Tom Kulzer:

Uh, so when I ultimately, I kind of launched AWeber to a larger group.

Tom Kulzer:

I launched it to this group of entrepreneurs that were in other

Tom Kulzer:

businesses, and I, you know, instantly had traction as a result of that

Tom Kulzer:

because I, they already knew who I was.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah, like I, I had some element of validation even though I was very upfront

Tom Kulzer:

in the fact that I was a college student.

Tom Kulzer:

I was still figuring this out, but I had developed this thing that

Tom Kulzer:

was really useful for a lot of people and they instantly saw the

Tom Kulzer:

value in that and became customers.

Tom Kulzer:

So, you know, and I think there's this path that happens

Tom Kulzer:

for a lot of businesses that.

Tom Kulzer:

Just getting a little bit of traction in where you're actually adding value

Tom Kulzer:

and solving your own problems, but solving other people's problems is

Tom Kulzer:

really, really, you know, is really the point that you need to get.

Tom Kulzer:

I think a lot of the media obsesses around entrepreneurs that raise money,

Tom Kulzer:

As like, you know, this, this level of success, and it's like, I've never

Tom Kulzer:

looked at that as a point of success.

Tom Kulzer:

It's like, okay, I convinced a small board of people to gimme a whole lot of money.

Tom Kulzer:

That's very different than convincing a whole lot of businesses that the

Tom Kulzer:

thing that you're selling is valuable and they want to give me money.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah, it's two completely different dichotomies and, and I think the press and

Tom Kulzer:

the, the general public, you know, kind of romanticizes raising a whole bunch of

Tom Kulzer:

money, which to me is just like a ticking time bomb because eventually if you don't

Tom Kulzer:

have customers paying for whatever it is that you're selling, that money runs out.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

And you have to do some big changes.

Tom Kulzer:

Either raise more money, sell the company, fold, whatever, versus building a business

Tom Kulzer:

in a company that kind of has legs and can stand on its own two feet and continue

Tom Kulzer:

to grow and, you know, perpetuate for as, as long as, as long as those customers

Tom Kulzer:

find value in what you're selling.

Matt Edmundson:

No, I agree.

Matt Edmundson:

I think it's, um, I think, like you say, it's been overhyped

Matt Edmundson:

the whole raising finance thing.

Matt Edmundson:

It's got, it's, it's got problems, right?

Matt Edmundson:

It's not all glamorous.

Matt Edmundson:

And, um, I, I know like with that, um, e-commerce, we sold a big

Matt Edmundson:

e-commerce business last year.

Matt Edmundson:

I have another one uh, still running.

Matt Edmundson:

Both of those companies?

Matt Edmundson:

Oh, yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Thanks.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, both of those.

Matt Edmundson:

Right.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, I have a very simple philosophy in that whatever stock we have, we own.

Matt Edmundson:

So I don't buy stock on invoice.

Matt Edmundson:

I don't, um, I don't do that.

Matt Edmundson:

I, I prepay for everything.

Matt Edmundson:

If that, I mean, the site we have now, we manufacture, so we

Matt Edmundson:

definitely gotta pay for everything.

Matt Edmundson:

But before, when we had the beauty site, I, everything on our shelves we owned.

Matt Edmundson:

And so when you in effect hit those problems, when there was downturns.

Matt Edmundson:

I didn't have to concern myself with trying to scramble to find the cash to

Matt Edmundson:

pay the invoices as well as payroll.

Matt Edmundson:

And there's something to be said, certainly from my point of view about,

Matt Edmundson:

I'd just call it organic growth.

Matt Edmundson:

The ability just to go out, find some more customers, serve those

Matt Edmundson:

customers, use the profits from that.

Matt Edmundson:

I can go and find more customers.

Matt Edmundson:

Right.

Matt Edmundson:

So is that, it sounds like that's what you've done.

Matt Edmundson:

Have I understood that right?

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah, no, absolutely.

Tom Kulzer:

That's, you know, we're through and through a bootstrap company, so

Tom Kulzer:

we've never raised outside funding.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, and, you know, we serve future customers based on the profits

Tom Kulzer:

from, from past customers and the revenue that they're paying us.

Tom Kulzer:

So, you know, at the end of the day, like our costs are very different

Tom Kulzer:

than, you know, a traditional kind of you know, inventory type business.

Tom Kulzer:

Like I don't have inventory sitting around.

Tom Kulzer:

Mm-hmm.

Tom Kulzer:

But I think a lot of, you know, when you look at raising funds and so

Tom Kulzer:

forth, it's, it's the, um, you know, it's the dichotomy of how you're

Tom Kulzer:

leveraging the business to grow.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, we've certainly grown slower as a result of that.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, I think in ways that, you know, were both my own comfort zone, um,

Tom Kulzer:

as well as in ways that I think change a company's kind of dna.

Tom Kulzer:

Mm-hmm.

Tom Kulzer:

, um, when you grow too fast, you know, if I doubled head count, you know,

Tom Kulzer:

I doubled our team size this year.

Tom Kulzer:

That's gonna impact the way that our team members talk to each other and how they

Tom Kulzer:

relate to one another, and how company culture passes from one to the other.

Tom Kulzer:

Mm-hmm..

Tom Kulzer:

Um, and I think that, that those things have to be balanced as, you

Tom Kulzer:

know, as you grow a company over the years or you kind of lose who

Tom Kulzer:

you are and what makes you special.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, It's just, there's lots of things to think about, but that's

Tom Kulzer:

just kind of some of the stuff that I've balanced over the years.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, if I, at the same time, like if I went back to the beginning, I ran

Tom Kulzer:

everything myself for the first two years.

Tom Kulzer:

I didn't hire anyone until we had, it was like 23 or 2,400 customers, like Oh wow.

Tom Kulzer:

Over 2000 paying customers.

Tom Kulzer:

I'm writing code, I'm doing marketing, I'm doing all the customer service.

Tom Kulzer:

This is basically during the day I did all customer service and

Tom Kulzer:

at night I did marketing, pr, you know, writing new code, et cetera.

Tom Kulzer:

And it was like, it was, I look back on it and it was like, that's insane.

Tom Kulzer:

Why did I do that?

Tom Kulzer:

But for me it was like, okay, at what point can I get to a revenue component

Tom Kulzer:

where I can feel really confident that I can support another person's livelihood?

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

And at the same time it was like, well, hiring somebody like that's scary.

Tom Kulzer:

How do I do that?

Tom Kulzer:

Like, how do I even physically do that?

Tom Kulzer:

And it's like, you know, it's really not that hard when you look back on it,

Tom Kulzer:

but as a new entrepreneur and having never done that before, it's like

Tom Kulzer:

that's, you know, it's, it's a barrier and you have to get through that.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

So,

Matt Edmundson:

Oh no, it sounds, I mean, I, I could wax

Matt Edmundson:

lyrical with you all afternoon.

Matt Edmundson:

I think about just how you, how you build the business and,

Matt Edmundson:

and the learnings from that.

Matt Edmundson:

I find the whole thing fascinating.

Matt Edmundson:

It's why between you and me, and I don't think I've mentioned this

Matt Edmundson:

before in the ecom podcast, we're launching a second podcast called Push.

Matt Edmundson:

In fact, by the time this airs, Push will be out, push to be more, uh,

Matt Edmundson:

where I just talk to leaders about how they've led, uh, I love it.

Matt Edmundson:

It's great, they're fascinating conversations.

Matt Edmundson:

Nice.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, we'll have to get you on that one as well.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, let's talk about e-commerce because, you know, that's why

Matt Edmundson:

people have tuned in really.

Matt Edmundson:

Let's, let's, uh, so you've obviously been around email, well, you've been

Matt Edmundson:

around email longer than I've been around.

Matt Edmundson:

I started in e-commerce in 2002.

Matt Edmundson:

So you've been in email longer than I've been in e-commerce, so, you know,

Tom Kulzer:

uh, I've sent a lot of emails.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Have you, have you actually tried to calculate how many emails you have

Matt Edmundson:

been responsible for being sent?

Tom Kulzer:

Oh gosh.

Tom Kulzer:

It, it's, it's not quite trillions yet, but it's hundreds

Tom Kulzer:

of billions, so it's crazy.

Tom Kulzer:

It's a lot of emails.

Tom Kulzer:

It's crazy.

Tom Kulzer:

And I, and I like to always make sure that I preface that with

Tom Kulzer:

it's permission based emails.

Tom Kulzer:

We don't send emails that people don't request, so you have to

Tom Kulzer:

have permission to send emails.

Tom Kulzer:

So we're, we're not, we try very hard to not be part of the spam problem.

Matt Edmundson:

Well, years ago, spam wasn't a problem.

Matt Edmundson:

Obviously when you first started out, it wasn't.

Tom Kulzer:

Well, I would say it definitely was like, it's always

Tom Kulzer:

been a contingent of something that we've had to deal with.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, there was, there were different rules, like there

Tom Kulzer:

was a lack of rules back then.

Tom Kulzer:

I've always looked at spam and, you know, the unsolicited email, as you

Tom Kulzer:

know, taking care of the email ecosystem.

Tom Kulzer:

If we do things as a platform that trashes the viability of email as a

Tom Kulzer:

marketing platform or as a communication platform, you know, it's, it's kinda

Tom Kulzer:

like, you know, biting the hand that feeds you and that, that expression,

Tom Kulzer:

it's like, why, you know, why would I wanna make that a useless platform?

Tom Kulzer:

Because ultimately then businesses aren't going to invest in it.

Tom Kulzer:

Email has really remained one of the top investments for businesses from

Tom Kulzer:

a return on investment standpoint, you know, every dollar, you know,

Tom Kulzer:

gets turned into $34 according to direct marketing association on mm-hmm

Tom Kulzer:

on, you know, investment in email.

Tom Kulzer:

So it's, it's one of those things that done right, it can be really profitable,

Tom Kulzer:

can really connect with your users in ways that you just can't do across social and,

Tom Kulzer:

and other platforms that are out there.

Tom Kulzer:

At the same time, like you own your audience.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, it's like everyone's got every other business's logo

Tom Kulzer:

on their website these days.

Tom Kulzer:

Subscribe to my YouTube, you know, follow me on Twitter, like me on Facebook,

Tom Kulzer:

like, you know, you name, name 'em off.

Tom Kulzer:

Even now it's, you know, follow my podcast on Apple and, you know, 14 different

Tom Kulzer:

platforms and it's like, As a business, we don't own any of those platforms.

Tom Kulzer:

If one of those platform, like if Twitter decides they don't want you publishing

Tom Kulzer:

on Twitter anymore, goodbye audience.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

I can't take my Twitter following and like import them into a new platform

Tom Kulzer:

and continue to communicate with them.

Tom Kulzer:

Whereas email.

Tom Kulzer:

You own the email address like they belong to you, you can export them

Tom Kulzer:

from our platform or any other platform that you're sending those email

Tom Kulzer:

from and continue to send to those subscribers from a different platform.

Tom Kulzer:

So if we for some reason, decide that whatever it is that you're doing is

Tom Kulzer:

not appropriate on our platform, You can continue to do that somewhere else.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah, you can't, you don't have that same leverage with Facebook, it's very

Tom Kulzer:

much this, you know, when I go back to, you know, the nineties and the early two

Tom Kulzer:

thousands, it's the same way everyone was trying to build platform around AOL

Tom Kulzer:

and getting, you know, people to, to kind of follow you in that closed ecosystem.

Tom Kulzer:

That was the paywall behind aol.

Tom Kulzer:

That was really kind of the leading.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, a leading indicator of what then turned into all of these

Tom Kulzer:

other platforms that are out there with Twitter and Facebook and YouTube

Tom Kulzer:

and so forth in that you have to play exclusively by their rules.

Tom Kulzer:

And if you don't, you're gone.

Tom Kulzer:

Mm-hmm.

Tom Kulzer:

and it's as simple as that.

Tom Kulzer:

And you have no recovery.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, so it's a, it's a balance.

Tom Kulzer:

And I look at email as, as something that is more transferable, more ownable,

Tom Kulzer:

um, has higher, longer term economics, you know, and email subscribers worth

Tom Kulzer:

far more than a Twitter follower, a, you know, Facebook follower, et cetera.

Matt Edmundson:

So I, I totally agree and it's what I mean, I like what you

Matt Edmundson:

said there, how, um, I mean, I, I was joking or jesting in some respects,

Matt Edmundson:

saying email, you've been doing email longer than I've been doing e-commerce.

Matt Edmundson:

And it show I wasn't doing Twitter, I wasn't doing Facebook.

Matt Edmundson:

I wasn't doing, they didn't even exist when I was, when I

Matt Edmundson:

first started out in business.

Matt Edmundson:

But email did, and email is still by far the biggest return on our investment

Matt Edmundson:

from a marketing point of view.

Matt Edmundson:

And it's like, I, people ask me all the time, what do you think about

Matt Edmundson:

dot dot dot and this technique or this fancy idea over here?

Matt Edmundson:

And you go, well, listen, have you got the basics done right?

Matt Edmundson:

What are the basics?

Matt Edmundson:

Well, let's talk about your website and let's talk about your email marketing.

Matt Edmundson:

Right?

Matt Edmundson:

They've been around since the start of e-commerce and they're still here.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, but obviously email is, has changed.

Matt Edmundson:

It's adapted.

Matt Edmundson:

It's evolved over time.

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, what are some of the things that you've noticed sort of change

Matt Edmundson:

in the email marketing world?

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah, there's, there's a lot of, you know, overall changes.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, when I first started, you know, messages where it was

Tom Kulzer:

just a subject line and plain text.

Tom Kulzer:

Mm-hmm, and now you've got obviously HTML email where you can make, you know, an

Tom Kulzer:

email, have images and you know, it can look like, you know, a lot of businesses

Tom Kulzer:

send these brochure type emails.

Tom Kulzer:

I don't generally recommend most businesses send this, uh mm-hmm.

Tom Kulzer:

you know, use email as more of a personal communication platform than, um, you

Tom Kulzer:

know, than just sending out brochureware.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, it's, it's what would you wanna get from businesses?

Tom Kulzer:

Um, you know, there's lots of up upcoming things that, you know, a lot of

Tom Kulzer:

businesses haven't even heard about yet.

Tom Kulzer:

There's something called AMP for email, um, that normally

Tom Kulzer:

when you send out an html.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, the content that I write and then hit send on is the content that

Tom Kulzer:

you as a subscriber receive and see.

Tom Kulzer:

And no matter how long after you go back and read that same email, it

Tom Kulzer:

will look the same in your inbox.

Tom Kulzer:

Mm-hmm.

Tom Kulzer:

Amp for email is actually a, um, you've probably heard for about

Tom Kulzer:

amp uh, when it comes to website load times and Google and so forth.

Tom Kulzer:

It's a protocol that, that Google originally developed.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, but what it essentially allows you to do is as a sender, I can

Tom Kulzer:

make parts of my email dynamic.

Tom Kulzer:

So think, um, you subscribe to a stock newsletter and you get in, in, you

Tom Kulzer:

know, they list off different stocks and when they send that, you know,

Tom Kulzer:

Google's trading in, I don't even know what it's trading at right now, let's

Tom Kulzer:

call it a thousand dollars a share.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, and, uh, you know, tomorrow when you read it, Their shares might be a

Tom Kulzer:

thousand dollars, you know, $1,020.

Tom Kulzer:

Mm-hmm.

Tom Kulzer:

, um, and, and for email would allow it to pull in the real time, uh,

Tom Kulzer:

stock, you know, quote for that.

Tom Kulzer:

So in the e-commerce world, think of, you know, you send out a

Tom Kulzer:

promotion for a particular widget and you sell out of that widget.

Tom Kulzer:

Well, now you've got all the, you've got these emails that you sent

Tom Kulzer:

to, let's call, 5,000 subscribers.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, a thousand of them saw and you know, went and bought your

Tom Kulzer:

widget, but then 4,000 haven't opened yet, but you sold out of that widget.

Tom Kulzer:

With amp for email, what I could do is I could actually replace that widget A in

Tom Kulzer:

the email with a widget B, so the other 4,000 that hadn't opened it yet, still

Tom Kulzer:

have the opportunity to see something of value that they could potentially purchase

Tom Kulzer:

versus a like, you know, clicking on the link and then going, oh, it's sold out.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, so it's, that's amazing.

Tom Kulzer:

It's.

Tom Kulzer:

There's some really cool stuff.

Tom Kulzer:

There's, uh, you know,

Matt Edmundson:

Is that out now, um, amp for email?

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah, absolutely.

Tom Kulzer:

It's supported on a number of platforms.

Tom Kulzer:

Google, obviously, and for most e-commerce businesses, that's, you

Tom Kulzer:

know, a good 40 to 60%, sometimes 70% of, of a lot of subscribers

Tom Kulzer:

lists, a lot of businesses list.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, and there's other platforms that are, that are building in support for.

Tom Kulzer:

Yahoo, has support for it.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, and as well as others are, are in the process of adding.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, but that's a, a really cool technology.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, we're gonna see buying things in the actual email very soon, uh, instead

Tom Kulzer:

of having to go off to another website, uh, to, to do the actual checkout process.

Tom Kulzer:

And because it's all validated, because I know I sent it to you as a subscriber.

Tom Kulzer:

If you already have payment details on file, you could potentially even, you

Tom Kulzer:

know, accept an order without having to make the user enter a credit card

Tom Kulzer:

number because you've already got it on file and it's authenticated that you

Tom Kulzer:

sent it to that particular recipient.

Tom Kulzer:

So there's some really, really cool things that you can do that is,

Tom Kulzer:

we've implemented it in a lot of our own newsletters as like surveys.

Tom Kulzer:

So like when you fill out the survey, you, you actually click the buttons in

Tom Kulzer:

the email and when you hit submit, You're still in the email and it shows you the

Tom Kulzer:

results of, you know, whatever survey that we sent out, um, you know, and, and

Tom Kulzer:

whoever's responded to it, uh, so far.

Tom Kulzer:

So it, it turns email from what was this static thing?

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

Into a more dynamic, um, and interactive process.

Tom Kulzer:

And that's really what is key with email and getting, you know, good results with

Tom Kulzer:

email is, it all comes back to engagement.

Tom Kulzer:

Uh, and when I think of, you know, when I say engagement, that means, you know,

Tom Kulzer:

whether or not somebody opens an email, whether or not somebody clicks on links

Tom Kulzer:

and goes to your website in the email.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, but so those are the two like.

Tom Kulzer:

An email marketer.

Tom Kulzer:

Those are the two metrics that businesses often look at as engagement.

Tom Kulzer:

But there's a lot of other things if you think past that, that you know, Google

Tom Kulzer:

and Microsoft and Yahoo are looking at that kind of count as engagement.

Tom Kulzer:

So think, um, you know, do you forward that email to somebody else?

Tom Kulzer:

Do you reply to that email?

Tom Kulzer:

Um, do you, uh, you know, when you open it, do you scroll down?

Tom Kulzer:

Is the message bigger than my window?

Tom Kulzer:

Do I scroll down?

Tom Kulzer:

You know, when you're reading on Gmail, let me tell you,

Tom Kulzer:

Google sees all those things.

Tom Kulzer:

They keep track of all of those things and that feeds into, um, the.

Tom Kulzer:

Uh, their algorithms as far as what emails they're gonna show you in the

Tom Kulzer:

future, but it's also setting that kind of engagement reputation for whether

Tom Kulzer:

or not your messages continue to show up in the inboxes of all the other

Tom Kulzer:

people that they sent, that you sent to.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, Do you then save that email to a different folder or label it in Gmail

Tom Kulzer:

or Yahoo or wherever it happens to be?

Tom Kulzer:

So there's all these different kind of cues that mailbox providers get from

Tom Kulzer:

every interaction with your messages.

Tom Kulzer:

Do they delete it?

Tom Kulzer:

Do they mark it as spam?

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

Et cetera.

Tom Kulzer:

So there's a lot of things that businesses do.

Tom Kulzer:

That are, you know, when you, when you put that engagement hat on that are

Tom Kulzer:

actually hurting that ability to interact.

Tom Kulzer:

So, you know, how many businesses, particularly in the e-commerce space,

Tom Kulzer:

have addresses that they send out to, that are kind of the, the what

Tom Kulzer:

we call 'em as no reply emails.

Tom Kulzer:

And, and I always call those, you know, the, the middle finger email address.

Matt Edmundson:

You've got this email, don't ever come back to me.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

Exactly.

Tom Kulzer:

It's like, gimme your money and, and go yourself.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

It's like, you know, that's, that's not how I, as you know, when I get messages in

Tom Kulzer:

my inbox and it's like I have a question about something, it's like, oh crap.

Tom Kulzer:

Like how do I get this question answered?

Tom Kulzer:

I gotta go to their website.

Tom Kulzer:

I gotta figure out how to contact 'em.

Tom Kulzer:

Like, just let me reply to the darn email you just sent me.

Tom Kulzer:

You're in my inbox.

Tom Kulzer:

It's literally two way communication platform, and you're just giving me

Tom Kulzer:

the finger and telling me to go away.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Its, it's the craziest thing I, I've never understood Tom why people have done that.

Tom Kulzer:

And it's so, so common.

Tom Kulzer:

So it's, it's the give, give me your money and go away kind of cue.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

And it's not, it's not a good way to build engagement with your audience.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, it's one of the, it's one of the most simple tricks that a lot of

Tom Kulzer:

really good publishers, particularly at the, like, you know, smaller

Tom Kulzer:

level is when somebody subscribes to their newsletter, particularly in the

Tom Kulzer:

like kind of creator economy folks with, you know, writing based on,

Tom Kulzer:

on what their audience's needs are.

Tom Kulzer:

Hey, what's your, what's your biggest struggle right now?

Tom Kulzer:

Just hit reply and, and let me know.

Tom Kulzer:

And while, yes, that's gonna generate email volume to you,

Tom Kulzer:

it's also a great stream of ideas for content for you to write.

Tom Kulzer:

It's as an eCommerce vendor, it's potentially great ideas for products

Tom Kulzer:

that you could bring, that you might not have or, um, it's also great for.

Tom Kulzer:

Uh, increase, you know, improving your content on your website by using the

Tom Kulzer:

terminology that your own customers are using to describe their problems.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

So there's a lot of things that you can do with that, and at the same time you're

Tom Kulzer:

signaling to Google and others Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

That like.

Tom Kulzer:

Hey, they want my email and they're engaging with what I'm

Tom Kulzer:

sending, which is really valuable.

Matt Edmundson:

So if, um, I dunno if this, I'm going too into the detail now.

Matt Edmundson:

I, you've got me thinking maybe I need to set up an email address which says, yes,

Matt Edmundson:

you can reply to this@whatever.com, uh.

Matt Edmundson:

But you get the replies from your customers.

Matt Edmundson:

You send, you know, emails out and they, you encourage 'em to

Matt Edmundson:

hit reply for all the reasons you mentioned, which are all valid.

Matt Edmundson:

Does that mean, then that Google's going 60, 70% of email going through Google.

Matt Edmundson:

You saying Google are looking at that going, this guy's got a little

Matt Edmundson:

bit of engagement, people are responding, people are replying.

Matt Edmundson:

Therefore, does the deliverability of my emails increase?

Tom Kulzer:

Absolutely.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah, absolutely.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, when you think about like, so deliverability means a couple

Tom Kulzer:

of different things and it's often, uh, misquoted in the marketplace.

Tom Kulzer:

So like, you know, when you think about a social platform, you know,

Tom Kulzer:

if I have a thousand people following me on Twitter and I post something

Tom Kulzer:

on Twitter, maybe 10% of those people are gonna actually see that and it'll

Tom Kulzer:

actually show up in their stream.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, when I send an email, if I sent that email to a thousand people, if I

Tom Kulzer:

only delivered it to a hundred people.

Tom Kulzer:

We'd have a lot of really ticked off customers.

Tom Kulzer:

So like deliverability there, there's a component of delivering it to

Tom Kulzer:

the platform, and those numbers are usually in the 98, 99 percentile.

Tom Kulzer:

As far as you know.

Tom Kulzer:

Those are all the addresses that are valid.

Tom Kulzer:

And we've removed any of the addresses that aren't valid, meaning, you know, the

Tom Kulzer:

address unknown and those sort of things.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, so the deliver, so that's one component that's

Tom Kulzer:

often called deliverability.

Tom Kulzer:

Most businesses, you know, when you're thinking about it as a Sender are thinking

Tom Kulzer:

deliverability as to what percentage of my mail goes from me to somebody's inbox.

Tom Kulzer:

Mm-hmm.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, and that is the whether or not your messages go to the inbox

Tom Kulzer:

is based on your engagement.

Tom Kulzer:

And the more you can have an audience that is highly engaged, meaning

Tom Kulzer:

they're open clicking, replying.

Tom Kulzer:

Filing 'em away and saving 'em for later, the more likely your messages are

Tom Kulzer:

gonna go continue to go to the inbox.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, one thing that we often get, particularly from e-commerce merchants

Tom Kulzer:

is my emails go to the promotions folder.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

And they think in their head like, oh no, it's the spam folder.

Tom Kulzer:

Promotions folder is definitely not the spam folder.

Tom Kulzer:

They're two very different beasts.

Tom Kulzer:

Mm-hmm.

Tom Kulzer:

and a lot of our e-commerce platform centers that, that

Tom Kulzer:

go to the promotions folder.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, They get better results because they're there versus being in the inbox.

Tom Kulzer:

Because when people go to the, when they look at their promotions folder,

Tom Kulzer:

they're in a buying mood versus in the inbox it's like, well, I want,

Tom Kulzer:

I wanna read my email from Matt that where Matt and I were talking

Tom Kulzer:

about what we just did this weekend.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, it's a different kind of thing.

Tom Kulzer:

And at the same time, as an e-commerce center, you know, we often get the

Tom Kulzer:

question like, well, why is my email going to the promotions folder?

Tom Kulzer:

And it's like, well, You're sending promotions.

Tom Kulzer:

So, that's Google's kinda good at what they do.

Tom Kulzer:

So, uh, yeah, that's where it goes.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, you know, and if the content that you send is always promotions,

Tom Kulzer:

it's always buy, buy, buy, buy, buy.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, here's my latest listings, here's my coupons for my grocery

Tom Kulzer:

store, whatever it happens to be.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, you're gonna go to the promotions folder.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, you know, one of the newsletters that, that, uh, that I subscribe to, that,

Tom Kulzer:

you know, you could think about as a.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, as an e-commerce sender, I, I, it's called, uh, the Lift E Foil.

Tom Kulzer:

It's a company out Puerto Rico, and they make these cool, like,

Tom Kulzer:

um, it's like a surfboard with an electric motor on the bottom and it

Tom Kulzer:

kind of like flies out the water.

Tom Kulzer:

And I bought one a few years ago and I'm on their newsletter as a customer

Tom Kulzer:

and they send me product updates.

Tom Kulzer:

But the reason that I engage with those product updates is because they also link

Tom Kulzer:

off to YouTube videos and Instagram videos and those sort of things in their emails.

Tom Kulzer:

That are about other customers riding the Lift E foil in different parts

Tom Kulzer:

of the world that are really cool and beautiful, or people doing cool tricks

Tom Kulzer:

on them that I haven't figured out.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, so it's like it keeps me engaged as a customer and, oh, hey, by the

Tom Kulzer:

way, they've also got, you know, some new foils or a new motor or

Tom Kulzer:

something that I can put on it.

Tom Kulzer:

And I've bought a few of those because it's, it's topical to me.

Tom Kulzer:

But where does their email go?

Tom Kulzer:

It comes to my inbox because it's mostly content that is non-promotional, and

Tom Kulzer:

it's also content that I engage with.

Tom Kulzer:

I click those links.

Tom Kulzer:

I, you know, it's like, like at this point it's like, oh, where are they now?

Tom Kulzer:

Like, that's really cool.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

Or, you know, what, what trick am I gonna learn this week that I can't do?

Tom Kulzer:

And I'm gonna spend all summer bashing my head trying to figure out how to do it.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, so it's not a case then of, um, Because there's

Matt Edmundson:

a belief isn't there, that sort of floats around, which says if I send

Matt Edmundson:

plain text emails, I'll go into their inbox, uh, and if I send HTML,

Matt Edmundson:

I'm going into the promotions tab.

Matt Edmundson:

That's not, that's not right.

Tom Kulzer:

No, no, no.

Tom Kulzer:

If you sell things in your plain text message, you're gonna end up

Tom Kulzer:

going in the promotions folder.

Matt Edmundson:

So, um, you know, it's, say Google know what they're doing.

Matt Edmundson:

They've, they've seen every trick.

Tom Kulzer:

Absolutely.

Tom Kulzer:

So, and you've gotta, you've gotta understand they're also seeing all of the

Tom Kulzer:

content that you are sending in total.

Tom Kulzer:

So, you know, you'll get, you know, sometimes you'll get businesses that

Tom Kulzer:

are like, oh, you know, I went to this trade show and, and I got a

Tom Kulzer:

thousand names of people that hopped it in to receive emails from all the

Tom Kulzer:

vendors that were at the trade show.

Tom Kulzer:

And its like.

Tom Kulzer:

Okay.

Tom Kulzer:

You were at the trade show.

Tom Kulzer:

There were about 50 different vendors there.

Tom Kulzer:

Do you want 50 different vendors sending you emails as a result

Tom Kulzer:

of having gone to the trade show?

Tom Kulzer:

Mm-hmm?

Tom Kulzer:

No.

Tom Kulzer:

I know I don't.

Tom Kulzer:

Mm-hmm..

Tom Kulzer:

But these businesses look at it as a shortcut to like gain subscribers.

Tom Kulzer:

But think about this.

Tom Kulzer:

So put your Google hat on, okay?

Tom Kulzer:

That that particular business might have been, let's call it, they were

Tom Kulzer:

sending to 5,000 people before and on Monday they come back from their

Tom Kulzer:

conference and they have a thousand names and they import them, and they're

Tom Kulzer:

now sending 6,000 people an email.

Tom Kulzer:

Most businesses don't grow organically.

Tom Kulzer:

By whatever percent that is, you know, 20% overnight.

Tom Kulzer:

Like they don't instantly get another thousand subscribers.

Tom Kulzer:

Google knows, you know, they may only see a percentage of that.

Tom Kulzer:

So let's say they were seeing 2,500 subscribers that you were sending before,

Tom Kulzer:

and now with this new imported list, you magically got another 500 names.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

They know that those names have never gotten emails from you before, and

Tom Kulzer:

they're judging where to send those emails from an inbox perspective based on what

Tom Kulzer:

the, you know, 2000 or 2,500 were that, that were already seeing those emails.

Tom Kulzer:

So if those users were engaging with those messages, those new people

Tom Kulzer:

might be likely to see them, or they might send them to spam just because

Tom Kulzer:

it's like, that doesn't look organic.

Tom Kulzer:

When we look at most businesses growth, it just kind of, it's a nice steady

Tom Kulzer:

uptick of, of subscribers over time.

Tom Kulzer:

They don't, they don't jump up in, in big, you know, big jumps that's not

Tom Kulzer:

organic, and that is more than likely them doing something that is not permission

Tom Kulzer:

based and is gonna cause problems.

Tom Kulzer:

So it's, you know, so there's, there's a balance in, in, you know, making sure that

Tom Kulzer:

as an email center and as a business, You put your customer hat on and think of what

Tom Kulzer:

would you like to receive in your inbox.

Tom Kulzer:

Your emails are not special.

Tom Kulzer:

The entire planet does not want what you send just because it comes from you.

Tom Kulzer:

I, I hate to, you know, that applies to my emails, that applies

Tom Kulzer:

to your emails, that applies to all of our listeners emails here.

Tom Kulzer:

They're not special.

Tom Kulzer:

We need to earn our way into people's inboxes and earn our

Tom Kulzer:

ability to stay in their inboxes.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah,

Matt Edmundson:

that's such a important, we should maybe change the title of the

Matt Edmundson:

podcast to Your emails are not special.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, I think that's such a valid point.

Matt Edmundson:

So what would be some of the, the tips, Tom, that you would

Matt Edmundson:

give to an e-commerce business?

Matt Edmundson:

You know, I'm, I'm, I'm an e-commerce guy.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm sat here, I'm listening to you, uh, and I'm thinking this is all great.

Matt Edmundson:

And, um, I, I get some of the stuff you were saying.

Matt Edmundson:

How does that help me when I come to sit down and, and

Matt Edmundson:

stop planning m email content?

Matt Edmundson:

What are some of the things that I should be thinking about?

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah, I think in the e-commerce space, I think a lot

Tom Kulzer:

of people think about prospecting and like, buy buy buy, buy now.

Tom Kulzer:

And most people, most e-commerce vendors get most of their

Tom Kulzer:

subscribers from new customers.

Tom Kulzer:

It's very rare from what I generally see that somebody comes to an e-commerce

Tom Kulzer:

website and opts into your email list.

Tom Kulzer:

Mm-hmm.

Tom Kulzer:

. So, you know, usually those opt-ins are coming from your customers and

Tom Kulzer:

you're actually emailing customers.

Tom Kulzer:

So, you know, going back to like that, lift the, the E foil, you know,

Tom Kulzer:

how can I educate people with the emails that I send about the product

Tom Kulzer:

that they just purchased from me?

Tom Kulzer:

Make them better consumers and more educated consumers of the

Tom Kulzer:

product that they just bought.

Tom Kulzer:

Make them smart, you know, is, is what I, you know, when you, when you make me

Tom Kulzer:

feel like an expert at doing whatever it is that I'm doing, I'm gonna come back

Tom Kulzer:

to you because you make me look smart.

Tom Kulzer:

That, that's a feel, that's a feel good emotion.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

And I'm more likely to go back to you again about, you

Tom Kulzer:

know, buying your products.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, if you sell me some fancy hair product and you teach me how to use it

Tom Kulzer:

more effectively than me going to the grocery store and buying something, I'm

Tom Kulzer:

more likely to continue to come back to you because you're gonna continue

Tom Kulzer:

to make my life better as a result.

Tom Kulzer:

And that's where, you know, during that educational process,

Tom Kulzer:

is where you cross sell.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, Hey, you bought the shampoo, but you didn't get the conditioner.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, like, you know, what other things can you do if you're a golf store?

Tom Kulzer:

Like, okay, you bought new clubs.

Tom Kulzer:

Well, did you get a bag for your new clubs?

Tom Kulzer:

Or are you ragging around your new clubs in your old ratty bag.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, like, how can you cross sell appropriate things to people

Tom Kulzer:

and with, you know, with, with, uh, tools like, you know, we have, uh,

Tom Kulzer:

conditional content so I can, I can save what it is that you bought and

Tom Kulzer:

put content in, in each email that I send out that is specific to each user.

Tom Kulzer:

So, you know, It's a little more work to do it if you have, yeah,

Tom Kulzer:

hundreds or thousands of SKUs.

Tom Kulzer:

But if you have a limited number of SKUs, it's easier to personalize the

Tom Kulzer:

content that you're sending out to people and make it very, very personal

Tom Kulzer:

and very relevant to each subscriber.

Tom Kulzer:

Whereas you might have kind of wrap a text around it that's more generic,

Tom Kulzer:

but then you have something that's specific to each individual user

Tom Kulzer:

that's gonna get that engagement.

Tom Kulzer:

And even though you're sending a customer newsletter to a thousand

Tom Kulzer:

people, There might be, you know, 15 different iterations that actually only

Tom Kulzer:

took an extra 10 or 15 minutes to put together because it's not hard to do.

Tom Kulzer:

It's all in one email.

Tom Kulzer:

As a sender, you send one email and the, you know, the backend at

Tom Kulzer:

AWeber or whatever platform you're using is, is doing the magic part.

Matt Edmundson:

It's Figuring it all out.

Matt Edmundson:

That's really interesting.

Matt Edmundson:

That's sort of skiing back up to some of the things that you mentioned earlier.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, you talked about, you know, You'll be buying things soon,

Matt Edmundson:

directly on your email hopefully.

Matt Edmundson:

How far away are we from that?

Tom Kulzer:

Depending.

Tom Kulzer:

So, um, I, it is technically possible now.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, the tools I'd say on the, like, you know, business kind of consumer end of

Tom Kulzer:

things aren't at, aren't quite there yet.

Tom Kulzer:

Like we don't have something built into our platform to do that yet.

Tom Kulzer:

Mm-hmm..

Tom Kulzer:

Um, but I see it coming very shortly, so I'd say in the next like 12 months, you

Tom Kulzer:

should be able to do that on, on the like, You know, easy sign out for a service.

Tom Kulzer:

Hey, I can send out an email and yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, all, all the transaction stuff just kind of magically works.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, so the, the tech is there, it just needs a few more

Tom Kulzer:

kind of integration points.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, why, why do you think, um, as curious to, to understand

Matt Edmundson:

this, you know, you, you've got, uh, in the world of eCommerce, you've got a

Matt Edmundson:

lot of changes that have happened from a technological point of view, right?

Matt Edmundson:

Where I think about what eCommerce sites were like back in 2002 to

Matt Edmundson:

what they are now and they're poles apart, and they're very.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, but email, like you say, seems to have been quite static.

Matt Edmundson:

You know, we went from plain text emails to, oh, I can put

Matt Edmundson:

my logo in a picture of me.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh, I can add a picture of a product.

Matt Edmundson:

But really has there been sort of any key innovation?

Matt Edmundson:

I like what you've been talking about with Amp, where you can

Matt Edmundson:

make it a bit more dynamic.

Matt Edmundson:

I like what you're talking about with the shopping cart.

Matt Edmundson:

That all seems quite recent.

Matt Edmundson:

Do you know what I mean?

Matt Edmundson:

It seems like it's been, it's been static for a while.

Matt Edmundson:

Do you know why that is?

Tom Kulzer:

Um, it's, it, I, I would say to a great extent, a lot of that is the,

Tom Kulzer:

um, uh, the, the dispersed nature of email in that like, no one platform owns email.

Tom Kulzer:

Mm-hmm.

Tom Kulzer:

um, you know, there isn't a central, you know, Google's probably

Tom Kulzer:

the closest to to it in that.

Tom Kulzer:

A lot of people have email boxes at, at Google, so kind of what they

Tom Kulzer:

do becomes kind of the standard.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, there's a lot of things that have happened behind the scenes and platforms

Tom Kulzer:

like AWeber try to remove that from something that, um, you know, our,

Tom Kulzer:

our customers need to think about.

Tom Kulzer:

So like authentication is a big, uh, thing that we do.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, we push folks to make sure that they're doing what's called dkim keys.

Tom Kulzer:

It's D K I M, and that's basically just a way that, uh, It best way to

Tom Kulzer:

describe it is it is it's a way for you to make an entry on your website or on

Tom Kulzer:

your domain that tells a provider like Google that yes, these are authorized

Tom Kulzer:

emails coming from my platform.

Tom Kulzer:

So it allows it, you know, it prevents people from pretending to

Tom Kulzer:

be you, from spoofing to be you.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, which again helps your email reputation as as a sender.

Tom Kulzer:

So we encourage all of our users to sign their emails with dkim and we

Tom Kulzer:

try to make that really easy and kind of walk them through how to do that.

Tom Kulzer:

Only takes like 10 minutes to do, but it's a good step to do.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, there are other tools that kind of layer on top of that.

Tom Kulzer:

There's something called bimi.

Tom Kulzer:

B I M I mm-hmm..

Tom Kulzer:

And that is, um, Oh, Josh, I should know what, uh, uh, it's like brand indicators.

Tom Kulzer:

I'm blanking on it at the moment.

Tom Kulzer:

It's Monday.

Tom Kulzer:

Give me a pass.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, but basically what bimi for, for everybody that's listening, it basically

Tom Kulzer:

means the ability for you to put a logo next to your email in the inbox.

Tom Kulzer:

So before somebody actually opens your email, when you're looking at your email

Tom Kulzer:

in, in Yahoo or in, uh, MacMail and those sort of things, you'll see that little

Tom Kulzer:

indicator down the side that'll have.

Tom Kulzer:

You know, your business logo.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, there, and that's, it's a way of displaying that outside

Tom Kulzer:

of the Google ecosystem.

Tom Kulzer:

So you might see that if you're in Google, you're just seeing

Tom Kulzer:

the Google kind of avatar.

Tom Kulzer:

Mm-hmm.

Tom Kulzer:

. Um, but outside of Google's ecosystem, there wasn't a way for people to do

Tom Kulzer:

that in an authenticated and secure way.

Tom Kulzer:

And Bimi is a tool for doing that.

Tom Kulzer:

So that again, is something that we encourage businesses to, to publish.

Tom Kulzer:

So there's a lot of things that are kind of behind the scenes, but at the end of

Tom Kulzer:

the day, like an email is an email, it's a subject line and some body content.

Tom Kulzer:

And what you send in that you know, is really up to every business.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, and, and I think, you know, trying to make sure that you're sending as

Tom Kulzer:

personalized content as possible, and that's where like the tech, and I think a

Tom Kulzer:

lot of the changes have come is yeah, how you go about doing that personalization.

Tom Kulzer:

Whereas before, you know, it was like I had one subject line.

Tom Kulzer:

And one set of body copy and everybody on my list got exactly the same thing.

Tom Kulzer:

Now it can be completely dynamic and completely different for

Tom Kulzer:

literally every single subscriber based on their preferences.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, and it's not that much extra work for a business to actually send

Tom Kulzer:

out emails that are that relevant.

Tom Kulzer:

Hmm.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, when you, when you've, you know, kind of tagged and, and, uh, you know,

Tom Kulzer:

segmented your user base over time.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Well, geez, Tom, I'm, I'm aware of time, first and foremost, uh, and I'm aware that

Matt Edmundson:

I've still got 25 questions to ask you.

Matt Edmundson:

Um.

Matt Edmundson:

So, uh, and I guess a lot of people have actually, uh, about email

Matt Edmundson:

marketing because it has been around since the dawn of e-commerce.

Matt Edmundson:

And it is still one of those things that people just don't get right.

Matt Edmundson:

And it, it's a phenomenal thing.

Matt Edmundson:

So if people have questions, if people wanna reach out to you,

Matt Edmundson:

what's the best way to do that?

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah, you can find us at aweber.com.

Tom Kulzer:

Uh, I'm on all the social places.

Tom Kulzer:

You can find me on Twitter at uh, TKultzer.

Tom Kulzer:

Uh, you can email me at tomk@aweber.com.

Tom Kulzer:

Um, and you know, you can give, give AWeber a shot.

Tom Kulzer:

We have a freemium offering for up to 500 subscribers, so if you don't have a

Tom Kulzer:

subscribe form on your website, Put one.

Tom Kulzer:

It's a very minimum.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

One, one going away tip here I'll have for everybody.

Tom Kulzer:

When someone subscribes to your email, if on your confirmation page after

Tom Kulzer:

someone hits, you know, enters their email address and hits, submit, the

Tom Kulzer:

page that comes up after that is often this barren wasteland of nothingness

Tom Kulzer:

is like, Hey, thanks for subscribing.

Tom Kulzer:

Put something for your audience to buy on there.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

So like in your, you know, in your case Matt, you know, put something

Tom Kulzer:

about your e-commerce cohort on there.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

So that people have an opportunity to see what else you're doing.

Tom Kulzer:

They're more, if they've just broken out their email address.

Tom Kulzer:

Their credit card is really only one step away from that.

Tom Kulzer:

Yeah.

Tom Kulzer:

Uh, and it's not that much farther away and we often see, you know, businesses

Tom Kulzer:

that didn't have something on that thank you page generating 10, 20, 30%

Tom Kulzer:

additional revenue just from that single page because it gets so much traffic and

Tom Kulzer:

because those users are so much higher engaged than other people on your website.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Top tip.

Matt Edmundson:

I like that.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, we will, I'll be checking with our marketing team now.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm gonna go and fill out some forms on our websites.

Matt Edmundson:

Ooh, I wonder what it tells me.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, Tom, thank you so much for coming onto the eCommerce podcast, man.

Matt Edmundson:

It's been great to meet you.

Matt Edmundson:

Great to hear your, uh, insight and thoughts.

Matt Edmundson:

And more than anything, if I'm honest, it's just lovely to hear your passion is

Matt Edmundson:

still there for, obviously, for email, uh, even after all of these years, and

Matt Edmundson:

that's actually something quite special.

Matt Edmundson:

So, um, thank you for coming and sharing it with us, uh, on the e-Commerce podcast.

Tom Kulzer:

Likewise.

Tom Kulzer:

Thanks for having me, Matt.

Tom Kulzer:

It's been fun.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh, no worries Matt.

Matt Edmundson:

No worries.

Matt Edmundson:

So let's play the music.

Matt Edmundson:

There we go..

Matt Edmundson:

Thanks again, uh, to Tom for joining me here on the podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, listen, if you signed up for our emails newsletter, one

Matt Edmundson:

of the things that will be.

Matt Edmundson:

Winging its way to you as this podcast goes live, uh, is the transcripts

Matt Edmundson:

and notes from today's conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

If you don't have that, you can head over to ecommercepodcast.net.

Matt Edmundson:

You can read it, you can get all the notes, all of the links to Tom and to

Matt Edmundson:

AWeber and to all that sort of stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

And of course, you can sign up for our emails newsletter, and I'm, let's

Matt Edmundson:

see what happens when you fill it in.

Matt Edmundson:

Absolutely.

Matt Edmundson:

Let's have a look at that.

Matt Edmundson:

So, uh, big shout out to today's show, sponsor ecommercecohort.com.

Matt Edmundson:

Do head over to ecommercecohort.com for more information about this new

Matt Edmundson:

type of community which you can join.

Matt Edmundson:

Be sure to follow the eCommerce podcast wherever you get your podcast from because

Matt Edmundson:

we've got even more great conversations lined up just like today's with Tom.

Matt Edmundson:

And I don't want you to miss any of them.

Matt Edmundson:

And in case no one has told you yet today dear listener, you are awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

Yes, you are.

Matt Edmundson:

It's just a burden we all have to bear.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, you, me, Tom, just the way it is.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, the e-commerce podcast is produced by Aurion Media.

Matt Edmundson:

You can find our entire archive of episodes on your favorite podcast app.

Matt Edmundson:

The team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon, Josh Catchpole,

Matt Edmundson:

Estella Robin, and Tim Johnson.

Matt Edmundson:

Our theme song has been written by Josh Edmundson and My Good Self.

Matt Edmundson:

And as I mentioned, if you would like to read the transcript or

Matt Edmundson:

show notes, ecommercepodcast.net is where you need to head to.

Matt Edmundson:

So that's it from me and from Tom.

Matt Edmundson:

Thank you so much for joining us this week on the eCommerce podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

I'll see you next time.

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