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How To Join The Creator Economy
3rd November 2022 • eCommerce Podcast • Matt Edmundson
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The creator economy is booming, and there are plenty of opportunities for those who know how to join in. In this episode, Tomer Hen joins Matt to talk about the creator economy and the best practices for successfully launching a personal consumer brand. 

TOMER HEN

Tomer Hen is a serial entrepreneur with over a decade of experience in the Digital Marketing industry. During this time, he founded the first mobile marketing school in Israel, created the first Israeli Mobile Marketing Summit, and has spearheaded notable campaigns with leading fortune 500 brands, including Amazon, Audible, and Mastercard. Backed by his expertise and a growing portfolio, Tomer was recognized as one of Forbes’s 30 promising entrepreneurs under 30. In 2011, Tomer founded MobCo Media, a user-acquisition and performance-driven intelligence company. With over 500 campaigns in more than 160 countries, MobCo has cemented its position as a front-runner in the ad tech space.

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

  • Today, the world is becoming more and more authentic, and people are looking for authenticity. We have an interesting mix of technology and the internet. And self-expression and authenticity are the keys to unlocking this Creator Economy. The most successful creators are those who are themselves.
  • There’s a huge difference between selling a product and building a brand. People choose to go after a brand because they believe in what that brand stands for and that it serves them in a unique way and makes them feel special and cared for.
  • Creator Economy is about finding a community you want to serve and building a brand around them and not vice versa. It is not about making money. People are very sensitive about why you do what you do. And when you realise it's all about who you serve, and not what you sell, then that's the main advantage for your brand.

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

Transcripts

Matt Edmundson:

Welcome to the e-Commerce podcast with

Matt Edmundson:

me, your host, Matt Edmundson.

Matt Edmundson:

The E-Commerce podcast is all about helping you deliver e-commerce wow.

Matt Edmundson:

And to help us do just that, I am chatting with my very special guest

Matt Edmundson:

today, Tomar hen from MobCo Media about how to join the Creator economy.

Matt Edmundson:

But before we jump into this fascinating conversation, let

Matt Edmundson:

me suggest a few other eCommerce podcast episodes to listen to that

Matt Edmundson:

I think you will also enjoy, try Katie Wight's conversation with me about content

Matt Edmundson:

strategy and why it is my new B F F.

Matt Edmundson:

And also have a look at Lauren Schwartz, a creative that drives the click through.

Matt Edmundson:

You can find both of these as well as our entire archive of episodes on our

Matt Edmundson:

website for free at ecommercepodcast.net.

Matt Edmundson:

Now shout out to today show sponsor, uh, e-commerce cohort.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, they e-commerce cohort is all about helping you deliver

Matt Edmundson:

e-commerce well to your customers.

Matt Edmundson:

I don't know if you've ever done an online course.

Matt Edmundson:

I've done a lot of them, but I've spent a small fortune, if I'm honest

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with you, in online courses over the years, some of which I've completed.

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Some of which I haven't, but ask me, you know, what I've done as

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a result of those online courses.

Matt Edmundson:

Sometimes I've just sat there and learned and not really done a whole great deal.

Matt Edmundson:

Online courses are great, but I find they're a bit overwhelming and I

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don't always get the most out of them.

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Well, Cohort's different.

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It's a lightweight membership group with guided monthly princess, right?

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Every month some new stuff comes out, which cycles through all

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the key areas of e-commerce.

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And this is brilliant because it, it's not like an online learning thing where

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you've got 11 hours worth of instruction.

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No, no, there's, there's no overwhelm.

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It's lightweight and it's practical.

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It's designed to help you get to, uh, work on your business.

Matt Edmundson:

So whether you are just starting out, uh, in e-commerce or like me, you've

Matt Edmundson:

been around a fair few years, as they say a well established e-commerce,

Matt Edmundson:

uh, then I encourage you to definitely check out eCommercecohort.com.

Matt Edmundson:

Ecommercecohort.com.

Matt Edmundson:

You can find a whole bunch more information, uh, about this fantastic

Matt Edmundson:

tool on the website, or you can email me directly, matt@ecommercepodcast.net.

Matt Edmundson:

If you've got any specific questions, I will try my level best to answer them.

Matt Edmundson:

Now.

Matt Edmundson:

Without further ado, uh, here is my conversation with.

Matt Edmundson:

Tomer.

Matt Edmundson:

Tomer Hen is a digital marketing expert with over a decade of experience.

Matt Edmundson:

He founded the first mobile marketing school in Israel, created

Matt Edmundson:

the first Israeli mobile marketing summit, and has spearheaded notable

Matt Edmundson:

campaigns with leading Fortune 500.

Matt Edmundson:

He is the man now backed by expertise and a growing portfolio.

Matt Edmundson:

Tomer was recognized as one of Forbes 30 promising entrepreneurs under

Matt Edmundson:

30, so slightly envious the fact he was in Forbes and slightly envious.

Matt Edmundson:

Envious that he's still under 30.

Matt Edmundson:

So that said, he's the right dude to talk to because in this episode

Matt Edmundson:

we are gonna chat about how you can.

Matt Edmundson:

The creator economy and start making money doing what you love.

Matt Edmundson:

Now, if you are like me, you probably have lots of interests and passions that

Matt Edmundson:

actually you could easily turn into a career and would love to do so, but it

Matt Edmundson:

can be difficult to know where to start or how to make money doing what you love.

Matt Edmundson:

Now, whether you're an artist, A musician, a writer, or just have some great ideas.

Matt Edmundson:

Stay tuned for this conversation with Tomer because he is

Matt Edmundson:

the experts just for you.

Matt Edmundson:

Yes, Yes.

Matt Edmundson:

Tamer, welcome to the podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

Great to have you here.

Matt Edmundson:

How are

Matt Edmundson:

you doing?

Tomer Hen:

Thank you so much, Matt.

Tomer Hen:

It's great being here.

Tomer Hen:

That was quite an intro, so thank you for that.

Tomer Hen:

. Matt Edmundson: Yeah.

Tomer Hen:

Something we all now have to live up to?

Tomer Hen:

No, no, no.

Tomer Hen:

Where?

Tomer Hen:

Whereabouts in the world are you dialing in from?

Tomer Hen:

Right now I'm in Tel Aviv and I spend my time, um, in between,

Tomer Hen:

uh, La Tel Aviv, Austin, uh, and anywhere that I pretty much desire.

Tomer Hen:

Uh, and that's, uh, part of, uh, my, that was part of my goal as an entrepreneur,

Tomer Hen:

just living wherever I wanna live.

Tomer Hen:

Someone.

Matt Edmundson:

Well, I mean, that's awesome in the sense that, um, you

Matt Edmundson:

get to travel, uh, all over the place.

Matt Edmundson:

And did you.

Matt Edmundson:

Did you always have that as something you wanted to do, or is that something

Matt Edmundson:

that's kind of formed in the last few years of life as it were?

Tomer Hen:

Yeah, that's a, that's a great question.

Tomer Hen:

I've always loved travel.

Tomer Hen:

I've always been an entrepreneur ever since I can remember.

Tomer Hen:

And I always loved travel.

Tomer Hen:

I always, you know, I traveled with my parents and I was waiting for

Tomer Hen:

our, uh, summer holidays or, uh, just traveling all around the world

Tomer Hen:

and growing as an entrepreneur.

Tomer Hen:

I just wanted to do this more often.

Tomer Hen:

Uh, I never thought that I would, uh, be as free to actually leave.

Tomer Hen:

A few months here, a few months there, and just going with, uh, you know,

Tomer Hen:

with the win, just, just deciding where I wanna spend the next few months.

Tomer Hen:

Uh, also growing my business on that same location or the same city going

Tomer Hen:

to meetups, events, conferences.

Tomer Hen:

Just building sort of a community in, in cities that I travel to,

Tomer Hen:

it's not just about sighting or eating in, in, in local restaurants.

Tomer Hen:

It's all about building a community, um, knowing the local entrepreneurs,

Tomer Hen:

the local businesses, and that's part of, of the passion that I have.

Tomer Hen:

It's not just about going on a vacation because I feel.

Tomer Hen:

I don't have to, I, I've built my, my routine or my life in a way that

Tomer Hen:

I don't have to go on a vacation and just unplug for a few months

Tomer Hen:

just to, to reset or recover.

Tomer Hen:

Um, I could recover on that same day, just, you know, work for an hour or I

Tomer Hen:

could recover for a week or a month.

Tomer Hen:

Um, but I really love what I'm doing and when it's not.

Tomer Hen:

I just give up on that project or that task or even that business.

Tomer Hen:

So fun is basically what leads my.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, I was gonna say

Matt Edmundson:

that's quite an interesting metric, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

Fun?

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, because everybody's wrapped up with metrics like ROI and average order value

Matt Edmundson:

and, and all these sorts of things.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, I quite like that.

Matt Edmundson:

What's the fun level, uh, in what we are doing?

Matt Edmundson:

How fun is it?

Matt Edmundson:

So you, you mentioned that your, um, you traveled with your parents.

Matt Edmundson:

Were your parents entrepreneurial?

Matt Edmundson:

Is that where you picked it up?

Tomer Hen:

Um, to be honest, no.

Tomer Hen:

I mean, my mom, um, uh, she works for a big software company and my dad has been

Tomer Hen:

a self-employed accountant, so they always had to, when they went on a vacation,

Tomer Hen:

they had to go on a vacation, so they were not location free by any sense.

Tomer Hen:

I guess that's.

Tomer Hen:

Where I figured out that when I grow up, I wanna travel and be location free so I can

Tomer Hen:

just, you know, travel as much as I want.

Tomer Hen:

Just like, just like a kid that wants to eat as much candy as

Tomer Hen:

they want when they move out.

Tomer Hen:

Um, this is basically what, what, what led me into saying I only do business.

Tomer Hen:

That, uh, that gets, gets me that goal of being location free and traveling all.

Tomer Hen:

Um, I still don't have kids, so I guess that's easier and that might change,

Tomer Hen:

uh, when, when I have my own family, but for now I'm just, uh, seizing the

Tomer Hen:

moment.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, well do it, Do it, do it, do it.

Matt Edmundson:

It's funny actually because, um, my kids, I have three kids and my

Matt Edmundson:

kids are, uh, two of them, uh, this year are gonna be in university and

Matt Edmundson:

one of them is, is sort of 15 16.

Matt Edmundson:

And so I'm, I'm kind of coming outta that phase where you have to be around all

Matt Edmundson:

the time, uh, to get the kids to school and all that sort of stuff, you know, And

Matt Edmundson:

it's, we're sort of coming, coming out the other side and I'm, I'm quite looking

Matt Edmundson:

forward to that, if I'm honest with you.

Matt Edmundson:

So I look, I enjoyed it pre-kids.

Matt Edmundson:

I've enjoyed having kids immensely and I'm enjoying the sort of, the

Matt Edmundson:

idea of the empty nest syndrome, as we call it here in the uk.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, so you get to travel, right?

Matt Edmundson:

You get to do this whole entrepreneurial thing.

Matt Edmundson:

The fun fact is a big deal for you doing stuff that doesn't

Matt Edmundson:

tie you down to one space.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, it sounds very, um, four hour work week, you know, the kind of Tim Ferris

Matt Edmundson:

kind of, uh, idea, uh, in that book.

Matt Edmundson:

Have you ever read that book?

Matt Edmundson:

Is this where the idea sort of came from or is this something that

Matt Edmundson:

you've kind of figured out along

Matt Edmundson:

the.

Tomer Hen:

Yeah, that's, that's a great point.

Tomer Hen:

So, uh, four Hour Work Week was one of the first books that I ever read.

Tomer Hen:

I think it was done, Done, Get Me Up.

Tomer Hen:

I think it was like 10 years ago.

Tomer Hen:

May no more than 10 years, or like 15 years ago, probably.

Tomer Hen:

Mm-hmm.

Tomer Hen:

. Um, and I think that it's not that they got the idea from the book, but.

Tomer Hen:

I love the book so much because I could really resonate with what Tim

Tomer Hen:

Ferris has put together with what I believe in and what I wanted as a kid.

Tomer Hen:

You know, even as a 13 year old kid, this is what I wanted and I think

Tomer Hen:

that before I work with is kind of the newer version of Reach Dad, Poor dad.

Tomer Hen:

But I think that today, Um, today you have a new version of the four hour

Tomer Hen:

work week where you could see all of your work as non-work or what I like

Tomer Hen:

to call, um, uh, effortless effort.

Tomer Hen:

So I don't think that you should divide between, uh,

Tomer Hen:

your work and again, your fun.

Tomer Hen:

I think that you could really combine combined it together and people

Tomer Hen:

tend to think that they should work.

Tomer Hen:

In whatever that makes the money up until the point where it

Tomer Hen:

allows them to do whatever is fun for them or exciting for them.

Tomer Hen:

But I think that if you flip that around and you do the thing that is

Tomer Hen:

fun for you and that excites you, you will make money so you don't have

Tomer Hen:

to get all the way in trying to make as much as much money as possible.

Tomer Hen:

And then, Go out and figuring out, you know what I, I think that chapter on the

Tomer Hen:

four hour work is called Filling the Void.

Tomer Hen:

So you don't have to wait and try to fill the void, but you can say, Hey,

Tomer Hen:

what do I wanna feel my life with?

Tomer Hen:

And nowadays you can create a business around any interest, any hobby,

Tomer Hen:

any, anything that excites you.

Tomer Hen:

You can just go and TikTok and, you know, create a huge business around it.

Tomer Hen:

And you have so many evidence.

Tomer Hen:

So, uh, I think that's kind of the newer version of before I will work with,

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, it's interesting, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

Because now for the first time that I can remember, uh, and you know, I'm,

Matt Edmundson:

I'm talking, I've got a few years of memory here, uh, for the first time that

Matt Edmundson:

I can remember now, kids are coming out of school with a very definite plan of,

Matt Edmundson:

um, being some kind of content creator.

Matt Edmundson:

Like that's a career choice now.

Matt Edmundson:

Which, I mean, when I was at school, I did nothing like that ever existed

Matt Edmundson:

unless you wanted to write books, in which case she went to academia.

Matt Edmundson:

But, um, but it seems to be now a very real career path.

Matt Edmundson:

A very real career choice that people take is I, I want to get into this

Matt Edmundson:

whole content creation type thing.

Matt Edmundson:

And, um, it fascinates me in some respects I'm doing it.

Matt Edmundson:

You know, we do this podcast, uh, you know, with, it's a

Matt Edmundson:

form of content creation.

Matt Edmundson:

We do, um, you know, we have our own online course or cohorts we're gonna

Matt Edmundson:

be, uh, calling it, uh, instead of the, and so there are these things

Matt Edmundson:

which we do, which years ago we.

Matt Edmundson:

No, it never entered to anyone's sort of consciousness that this was actually

Matt Edmundson:

a possibility that I could, that I could create some kind of content

Matt Edmundson:

that people would be willing to buy.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and yeah, so you're right.

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, kids coming outta school now going, I'm just gonna be, you

Matt Edmundson:

know, make my money outta TikTok.

Matt Edmundson:

And all their parents are sitting there going, How?

Matt Edmundson:

How, No, I don't, How does that work?

Matt Edmundson:

Right?

Matt Edmundson:

, did you again?

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Even Siri wasn't sure.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, but it's kind like how does that work?

Matt Edmundson:

How does that even compute?

Matt Edmundson:

You know?

Matt Edmundson:

Um, so it's a real interesting shift, isn't it, that this has now become

Matt Edmundson:

a sort of a bigger and bigger deal.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, it, And so is this where you, where you do part of your journey is

Matt Edmundson:

in, in what we call now the content economy, You know, this sort of, uh,

Matt Edmundson:

is this where you run part of your.

Tomer Hen:

Right.

Tomer Hen:

That's, that's, you know, that's a really good point.

Tomer Hen:

And when I analyze this backwards and when you think about it, Kids always

Tomer Hen:

wanted to express themself and become the famous actors, singers, they wanted,

Tomer Hen:

you know, girls wanted to be Beyonce or, you know, you, you wanted to be, you

Tomer Hen:

wanted to be that famous guy you saw on MTV before you, you had, even before you

Tomer Hen:

had Instagram and, and Facebook, and you basically want, a lot of kids wanted that.

Tomer Hen:

I, I think it's not as superficial as, as Jess or Shallow as just being famous.

Tomer Hen:

It's.

Tomer Hen:

Self expression.

Tomer Hen:

Mm-hmm.

Tomer Hen:

. And then there was this period when, you know, you had Mark Zuckerberg and

Tomer Hen:

apps and people became billionaires by, by selling software, which

Tomer Hen:

was kind of novel at that time.

Tomer Hen:

And all those kids wanted to become entrepreneurs and and coders.

Tomer Hen:

And nowadays I think that's kind of a mix where, Where you get and, and

Tomer Hen:

you know, and the parents always told you, you know, you can't be an actor.

Tomer Hen:

You wanna have any money, you wanna make any money, you can't

Tomer Hen:

be a singer because there are only just a few who would make it.

Tomer Hen:

Um, and now you have this, this interesting combination between

Tomer Hen:

self-expression and anyone can express themselves in any topic.

Tomer Hen:

It doesn't have to be mainstream and go on MTV in order for it to be successful.

Tomer Hen:

Um, and you.

Tomer Hen:

You don't have to have a, a very, a hard skill like coding in order

Tomer Hen:

to become super wealthy or super successful, or super, uh, influential.

Tomer Hen:

And you have this interesting mix between, um, between the tech and internet and

Tomer Hen:

utilizing internet and technology and self-expression where you can just,

Tomer Hen:

you don't have to learn anything.

Tomer Hen:

You don't have, you just have to be your.

Tomer Hen:

And the world is becoming more and more authentic.

Tomer Hen:

People are looking for that authenticity and not necessarily, uh, building a

Tomer Hen:

very, uh, uh, uh, polished figure or a singer, or an actor or a content

Tomer Hen:

creator, which is basically the same, you know, content creator or being,

Tomer Hen:

being a very famous singer where people would pay for your performance

Tomer Hen:

or buying your songs or your albums.

Tomer Hen:

People would now pay for you to reels for them or creating TikTok videos for them?

Tomer Hen:

It's basically the same.

Tomer Hen:

It's just that the opportunities are just for anyone out there.

Matt Edmundson:

Fascinating,

Matt Edmundson:

isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

Abs and there's a word there that you use that I just want to draw on and,

Matt Edmundson:

and, and, and ask, like if I'm gonna get into this sort of creator economy.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, is, uh, self-expression is authentic.

Matt Edmundson:

Auth, I can't even say the word.

Matt Edmundson:

Authenticity.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, is authenticity and self-expression.

Matt Edmundson:

Some of the keys to doing this well, to unlocking, um, maybe the, the, the

Matt Edmundson:

power of, uh, this sort of new economy.

Tomer Hen:

I, I think so.

Tomer Hen:

Uh, I, I know what it is not, it is not about making money.

Tomer Hen:

If you go onto this, In 2022, trying to just make money or basically just

Tomer Hen:

extract more money from the marketplace.

Tomer Hen:

I will try to get those budgets from those businesses, or I will

Tomer Hen:

try to get the attention of users.

Tomer Hen:

People are very, very sensitive for your, uh, for your why and why you're

Tomer Hen:

doing what you're doing, and if you're doing it, even if you have, you know,

Tomer Hen:

you're, you're posting daily and you.

Tomer Hen:

25 followers.

Tomer Hen:

People can sense it, people can, and, and people can sense that you're doing

Tomer Hen:

it not in order to become famous, but if you try to be whatever people want you

Tomer Hen:

to be and not being your authentic self.

Tomer Hen:

I know this could be, you know, it, it could sound very spiritual, but

Tomer Hen:

at the end of the day you can see the data and you can see that the

Tomer Hen:

more successful people out there, um, they were just being themselves.

Tomer Hen:

And if you do.

Tomer Hen:

It comes down to being consistent because if you try to create content in order

Tomer Hen:

to force an outcome in order to get the followers, and it's, it takes time.

Tomer Hen:

It takes time and effort, you would probably break down because

Tomer Hen:

you can't fake yourself as much.

Tomer Hen:

As you need to in order to build up those followers, build up this,

Tomer Hen:

uh, uh, trust within the audience.

Tomer Hen:

But if you do what you love, if you're just being yourself, you're

Tomer Hen:

just talking to a friend and, and you know, even if you, if you, even

Tomer Hen:

if you recommend products, right?

Tomer Hen:

That's what you do for, that's what you love, you love, uh, uh, food, or

Tomer Hen:

you'll have supplements, or you'll have restaurants or you'll love

Tomer Hen:

whatever, and you just do this for fun because this is what you love and you.

Tomer Hen:

Um, you, you would have the consistency and you have the commitment to do

Tomer Hen:

this daily because again, coming back to the fun fact, or you just do

Tomer Hen:

this for fun and it'll just build up.

Tomer Hen:

But if you try to force it, if you try to say, Hey, this is a trend on TikTok.

Tomer Hen:

Let's post daily, you will probably break up before you get this traction and

Tomer Hen:

you get this exponential growth that is needed in order to actually make a living.

Tomer Hen:

So it's not just about.

Tomer Hen:

You know, the saying those nice words about a b be

Tomer Hen:

authentic and you'll make money.

Tomer Hen:

I think that actually backs up with the data and it backs up with our

Tomer Hen:

human, um, uh, the, the way we are built as human beings, where we need

Tomer Hen:

to have a purpose and we need to, to have, well, basically we need to

Tomer Hen:

have fun in order to be consistent.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

I love that.

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, one of the things that you said there about being sensitive,

Matt Edmundson:

you know, the, the viewer, the people responding to your content

Matt Edmundson:

are very sensitive to your why.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, I, I've got down here a quote from you, uh, Tomer that, uh, you mentioned

Matt Edmundson:

previously said, what, when you realize it's all about who you serve and not

Matt Edmundson:

what you sell, then that's the main advantage for every brand, which I

Matt Edmundson:

thought was a phenomenal thing to say.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, understanding who you serve.

Matt Edmundson:

And being authentic to you and to that community seems to be, for me,

Matt Edmundson:

mixed with this idea of consistency, um, the way to win in this arena.

Matt Edmundson:

I guess my other observation is having now done this podcast for two

Matt Edmundson:

years, uh, it's not a quick thing.

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, there are people that rise through the ranks very quickly, it seems, but

Matt Edmundson:

on the whole, the majority of people.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, you, it's not like you start today and tomorrow it, it's all working fine.

Matt Edmundson:

Right?

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, we're, we're two years in.

Matt Edmundson:

We're still, I think we're getting better at understanding the journey and,

Matt Edmundson:

and what we're doing with the podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, but we never started it out to make money.

Matt Edmundson:

We just started out, Cause we like talking about e-commerce.

Matt Edmundson:

We've met some amazing people along the way and now he is

Matt Edmundson:

actually helping us to make money.

Matt Edmundson:

But it took a little while.

Matt Edmundson:

I don't know if, if, if that's just me or if that's a general, a general.

Tomer Hen:

I, I think, I think that's a general truth because nowadays you

Tomer Hen:

have, so the days of just putting a product out there, and a product

Tomer Hen:

could be an Amazon listing, it could be a Shopify store, it could be a

Tomer Hen:

Facebook ad, it could be a podcast, it could be an email that you send out.

Tomer Hen:

Mm-hmm.

Tomer Hen:

. The days of just putting this product out there in the world and

Tomer Hen:

expecting to just make money and get the attention are probably.

Tomer Hen:

Um, so you need, you have a lot of competition, even if the upcoming

Tomer Hen:

platforms like TikTok where you.

Tomer Hen:

Uh, uh, uh, you know, comparably, you have less competition, but you

Tomer Hen:

still have that competition of the attention of the budgets, of the, uh,

Tomer Hen:

of, of the audience being resonating with whatever you have to say or sell.

Tomer Hen:

So you have to be mindful and, and know that it would take time either way.

Tomer Hen:

It would take time whether you do whatever you wanna do, and it would

Tomer Hen:

take time if you wanna do whatever you think people want you to do.

Tomer Hen:

So if you can keep up with creating content.

Tomer Hen:

Every day or every week for month or years, um, you will probably win because

Tomer Hen:

if you could resonate with even 50 people who would listen to your podcast

Tomer Hen:

or read your posts, but it would be very, very, it would speak directly to

Tomer Hen:

their hearts, It would speak directly to whatever they want to feel, and they

Tomer Hen:

believe you and they believe in your why.

Tomer Hen:

That is way more powerful than having 5,000.

Tomer Hen:

You know, randomly, uh, uh, seeing your video on the TikTok algorithm because you

Tomer Hen:

knew how to hack the, you know, the, the, the last hack of how to hack, you know,

Tomer Hen:

the Instagram or the TikTok algorithm, because those people will follow you.

Tomer Hen:

They believe you.

Tomer Hen:

They will send this to your friend.

Tomer Hen:

They will think about it after they watch your video or your content,

Tomer Hen:

or listen to your podcast, and then they would also buy your product.

Tomer Hen:

Mm-hmm.

Tomer Hen:

. But people sometimes try.

Tomer Hen:

Just sell a product.

Tomer Hen:

They try to get to the end of it.

Tomer Hen:

They, they think that if they learn the different, um, components

Tomer Hen:

of the Amazon algorithms, they will build a successful brand.

Tomer Hen:

But there is a huge difference, a huge difference between selling

Tomer Hen:

a product and building a brand.

Tomer Hen:

And when I say this, I don't just mean physical products.

Tomer Hen:

I think that it has huge difference between putting a

Tomer Hen:

very viral video on TikTok.

Tomer Hen:

Or building a brand on TikTok or a podcast or whatever it is, because a brand is

Tomer Hen:

someone or something that you choose to go after you choose to buy because

Tomer Hen:

they believe in what you believe in.

Tomer Hen:

Um, they, you know the reason, you know that they serve you.

Tomer Hen:

And basically if you can get to a point where that, where,

Tomer Hen:

where, where that person.

Tomer Hen:

Feels and believe that you are the only person or the only brand

Tomer Hen:

to help them with their journey.

Tomer Hen:

That's where you win a customer or a fan for life.

Tomer Hen:

That's what I believe in.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

And so true.

Matt Edmundson:

And uh, and it's a fascinating one, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

Because I mean, this applies, like you say, for selling hard

Matt Edmundson:

products, um, physical products, digital products, whatever it

Matt Edmundson:

is, the, the, the basic premises.

Matt Edmundson:

And, and I get asked all the time, you know, one of the big questions is why

Matt Edmundson:

would I set up an e-commerce website?

Matt Edmundson:

I can't compete with.

Matt Edmundson:

Right.

Matt Edmundson:

It's that how do I compete with Amazon?

Matt Edmundson:

And Amazon is great at being a commodity based website.

Matt Edmundson:

You go on there, you search it, you find it, you buy it.

Matt Edmundson:

I don't really know who I've bought it from.

Matt Edmundson:

I've just gone bought this product.

Matt Edmundson:

But more and more the consumer is going, No, no, Hang on a minute.

Matt Edmundson:

I wanna know a little bit more about this product.

Matt Edmundson:

I wanna know where it's come from.

Matt Edmundson:

I wanna know why you've made it.

Matt Edmundson:

I Do.

Matt Edmundson:

You know what I mean?

Matt Edmundson:

Like clothing.

Matt Edmundson:

We are moving away from fast fashion to people buying more sustainable clothing.

Matt Edmundson:

You see these trends, which are.

Matt Edmundson:

You can't do that on Amazon.

Matt Edmundson:

And so the way I think you compete with Amazon is you create a brand

Matt Edmundson:

voice and you tell that story and you connect with a customer in a way

Matt Edmundson:

that Amazon can't and never could do because they're a big supermarket.

Matt Edmundson:

They just sell commodities.

Matt Edmundson:

Whereas you are selling something, you're invested in.

Matt Edmundson:

Right.

Matt Edmundson:

You care deeply about these products and how they're gonna help people.

Matt Edmundson:

And I think that's the way you win, right?

Matt Edmundson:

Against people like Amazon.

Matt Edmundson:

So I'm living this, I'm living this whole, um, you know, you've gotta

Matt Edmundson:

develop again, that being sensitive to your why, your purpose, why are

Matt Edmundson:

you here and telling that story.

Matt Edmundson:

Super, super well, I mean is is incredible.

Matt Edmundson:

So let's talk a little bit more about the creator economy and.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, I mean, you've mentioned TikTok, you've mentioned Instagram,

Matt Edmundson:

but what are, what are some of the ways that we maybe should be

Matt Edmundson:

thinking about this creating economy?

Matt Edmundson:

What does it encompass?

Matt Edmundson:

What does it involve, Um, beyond just TikTok and Instagram.

Tomer Hen:

Yeah.

Tomer Hen:

Yeah.

Tomer Hen:

That's, that's a great, that's a great question and a topic

Tomer Hen:

that I love talking about.

Tomer Hen:

Um, You know, there, according to the data, there, there are about 50 million

Tomer Hen:

content creator with a certain certain threshold, and only about four of them,

Tomer Hen:

uh, said that they, they're able to make living out of the content that they

Tomer Hen:

make and for, for different reasons.

Tomer Hen:

Some of them, we, we actually mentioned here on our conversation

Tomer Hen:

and the today, the most common way for creators to monetize their content.

Tomer Hen:

Uh, collaborating with another brand or, uh, getting sponsorships from other

Tomer Hen:

brands or having some affiliate deals with other brands and promote them.

Tomer Hen:

But I think that nowadays, and you know, We go into a recession, a

Tomer Hen:

lot of creators say that, uh, they feel too dependent on those brands.

Tomer Hen:

They feel that they are bind, they are bind to the regulations,

Tomer Hen:

those brands put up on them, what they can say, what they can't say,

Tomer Hen:

how they can present the product.

Tomer Hen:

And eventually there is this conflict between they need to serve the brand,

Tomer Hen:

but they also need to make money and they also need to serve their

Tomer Hen:

audience and be authentic to themselves as of what, what we just said.

Tomer Hen:

I think that although it's pretty easy to hook up with another brand or just

Tomer Hen:

get, you know, X amount of dollars or, or a percentage of a sale with another

Tomer Hen:

brand, I think if a creator really wants to level up their game, both

Tomer Hen:

personally, financially, professionally, is to build their own brand.

Tomer Hen:

You know, I, I, I know how to build consumer brand.

Tomer Hen:

So it could be any type of brand, it could be an, uh, a digital product brand,

Tomer Hen:

it could be a physical product brand.

Tomer Hen:

Um, but creators who are starting to build, and we see this more

Tomer Hen:

and more in the creator economy where, um, creators say, Hey, I

Tomer Hen:

don't want to work for that brand.

Tomer Hen:

I wanna say whatever I wanna say, and my content is my product, and

Tomer Hen:

I could attach a physical product.

Tomer Hen:

To my content and my audience and share whatever I believe

Tomer Hen:

in, not just for my content, but also through physical product.

Tomer Hen:

It could be a makeup brand, it could be a supplement brand, it

Tomer Hen:

could be a food brand, it could be, um, you know, uh, a car organizer.

Tomer Hen:

It could be.

Tomer Hen:

All sorts of brands that relate to the audience that you serve.

Tomer Hen:

Not necessarily just your following, but the person, again, coming

Tomer Hen:

back to that person who follows you, who is your biggest fan?

Tomer Hen:

What can you produce to him?

Tomer Hen:

What can you bring to the world that would serve them as a person?

Tomer Hen:

Um, that would.

Tomer Hen:

That would probably be way more successful by all means than any brand that you

Tomer Hen:

could collaborate with just because you can get as specific to saying whatever

Tomer Hen:

it is that you specifically want to say and you want to bring to the world.

Tomer Hen:

And as a creator, you have, you know, you have a very specific voice

Tomer Hen:

and this is the reason why you.

Tomer Hen:

So many views than your competitors.

Tomer Hen:

You then you get, you know, the attention of other followers.

Tomer Hen:

Once you find that voice and you realize who is that person, why they are special,

Tomer Hen:

and why they follow you, what they believe in, what's the journey that they go with.

Tomer Hen:

Um, it's very easy to build a physical product brand around that person.

Tomer Hen:

And because you have, you already have the attention and you have the cred.

Tomer Hen:

It, it would be pretty easy for you.

Tomer Hen:

Um, well, I would say it's pretty simple.

Tomer Hen:

It's not always easy to build a physical product brand around, around that person.

Tomer Hen:

So I'm, I'm really fascinated by all those creators, uh, at different

Tomer Hen:

stages where they said, I don't wanna work for those bigger brands.

Tomer Hen:

I don't wanna work, I don't want to promote something that I don't believe in.

Tomer Hen:

Um, they, they do, um, they do state a very bold statement and decision

Tomer Hen:

where they know they might give up.

Tomer Hen:

Immediate income, but for the sake of being truly independent with the

Tomer Hen:

messaging that they, they convey to their audience, uh, the amount of money

Tomer Hen:

they can make and the product that they wanna promote on their channels.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, I

Matt Edmundson:

mean that's, that's really fascinating that, and we've talked about this

Matt Edmundson:

before on the show, um, when it comes to influences and, and using influences and,

Matt Edmundson:

uh, Why brands, why the brand themselves, you know, do they wanna use influence?

Matt Edmundson:

Because actually now the power is starting to, with the influences

Matt Edmundson:

going, actually I'm not quite sure I wanna work with that brand anymore.

Matt Edmundson:

And like, and like you said, I think it's quite fascinating the turn

Matt Edmundson:

of events now and the technology.

Matt Edmundson:

Like we had, uh, the get car on the show, uh, David from Get Car and he was talking

Matt Edmundson:

about this, you know, and about how you can um, you can now start to leverage

Matt Edmundson:

technology to build out platforms.

Matt Edmundson:

That enable you to create your own website, you're, you're an influencer.

Matt Edmundson:

You've got the content out there where you can now sell, uh, product

Matt Edmundson:

directly off the back of that.

Matt Edmundson:

So if you were, um, Toma, if you were launching an e-commerce business

Matt Edmundson:

today, Is this how you would start?

Matt Edmundson:

Would you go right, I'm, I'm gonna, I have a product.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, uh, and I know you've got a supplement brand, haven't you?

Matt Edmundson:

So I've got this product here.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm gonna go and find a community that that product connects with and I'm gonna

Matt Edmundson:

go, uh, connect with that community.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm gonna speak to that community.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm be consistent in my content creation.

Matt Edmundson:

That reaches out to that community, and that's how I'm gonna grow my brand.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm gonna be authentic.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm gonna be consistent.

Matt Edmundson:

It might not make money today, but ultimately I know I'm gonna

Matt Edmundson:

win if I'm in there every day.

Matt Edmundson:

Is that how you would do it?

Tomer Hen:

Yes.

Tomer Hen:

I, I would even, I would even go.

Tomer Hen:

Deeper and and perhaps do whatev what you said, but I would even flip

Tomer Hen:

that around and say, I want to find that community that I want to serve.

Tomer Hen:

And then I would build a brand around them.

Tomer Hen:

And what most people do is trying to develop product, or they already develop

Tomer Hen:

and produce the product and then say, Okay, now let's find who wants to.

Tomer Hen:

Or let's find influencers or the communities or the groups that

Tomer Hen:

would be interested in my product rather than just going and say,

Tomer Hen:

Hey, there's a community here.

Tomer Hen:

They are very loyal to that journey.

Tomer Hen:

They are very, um, they are very, uh, uh, excited about these kind of

Tomer Hen:

products or they have these very urgent problems and I could really resonate.

Tomer Hen:

Person with that journey, with that problem.

Tomer Hen:

Now let's find the solutions that we could create in order to help them.

Tomer Hen:

And those solutions could turn into content.

Tomer Hen:

They could turn into physical product, they can tell into a book,

Tomer Hen:

a digital product, and it could turn into a brand that consists all

Tomer Hen:

of these aspects together, right?

Tomer Hen:

You can launch a book that sells a supplement brand.

Tomer Hen:

When, uh, uh, as a, as an apps you can, uh, launch, uh, uh, you can

Tomer Hen:

work with an influencer to create, uh, uh, an Instagram, uh, uh, uh,

Tomer Hen:

uh, content that would, uh, that would serve that, that audience and

Tomer Hen:

that would promote your food brand.

Tomer Hen:

So, one, but it's the same person, It's the same audience, it's

Tomer Hen:

the same community, it's just different form of solutions.

Tomer Hen:

And once that person.

Tomer Hen:

Have seen your, your content on Instagram and they read your book and they got

Tomer Hen:

this email from you, they would probably buy your product because they believe

Tomer Hen:

that you are the best person and this is the best brand for them to solve their

Tomer Hen:

problem or to progress on their journey.

Tomer Hen:

And this is how I see brand building as opposed to just trying to sell products

Tomer Hen:

in this highly competitive market.

Matt Edmundson:

I, I wish I could just hit listeners.

Matt Edmundson:

If you're listening, just hit the rewind button and just listen to that

Matt Edmundson:

paragraph again because I think I was writing about this this morning

Matt Edmundson:

where, where 99% of e-commerce businesses fail is they will just go

Matt Edmundson:

and get any old product and then go.

Matt Edmundson:

I now need to figure out how to sell this, right?

Matt Edmundson:

Mm-hmm.

Matt Edmundson:

, and it's, it's, it's totally backwards.

Matt Edmundson:

It's totally the wrong way around.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, and the classic bond, you know, was with the drop shipping for years.

Matt Edmundson:

We've talked about this before in the show.

Matt Edmundson:

Again, it's, you know, the, the, you go to Alibaba or wherever,

Matt Edmundson:

you know Ali Express, and you find some sunglasses, which are like $2.

Matt Edmundson:

And you think I can sell those for 20.

Matt Edmundson:

So I'm gonna make 18 bucks for a pair of sun glasses.

Matt Edmundson:

And you've just gone and grabbed any old nonsense.

Matt Edmundson:

The triple is 30,000.

Matt Edmundson:

Other websites are selling that same pair of sunglasses, right?

Matt Edmundson:

How have you differentiated yourself?

Matt Edmundson:

You just haven't your beige or vanilla, right?

Matt Edmundson:

You're just blending in.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, but I, I just, I, this is why I love it, because actually no, no, no.

Matt Edmundson:

The other way around is like, Understand who the community

Matt Edmundson:

is that you are gonna serve.

Matt Edmundson:

What's it, what do they need?

Matt Edmundson:

How can I help them?

Matt Edmundson:

How can I best serve them?

Matt Edmundson:

Much, much better way.

Matt Edmundson:

Because then you're finding products that actually people want to really buy

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

You know, and it's, and it, and it's that kind of, that, that

Matt Edmundson:

to me just makes a lot of sense.

Matt Edmundson:

An awful lot of sense.

Matt Edmundson:

I, I, I'm, I'm, I'm sat here listening to the podcast, right?

Matt Edmundson:

I've, let's assume I've already got an e-commerce business up and running.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, I've already got a, so I've got a small community.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, I'm, I'm selling a, a product.

Matt Edmundson:

I, I'm just looking around my desk for what it is.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, I have, uh, , I dunno if I should show you this.

Matt Edmundson:

I have here, uh, my Lego Indiana Jones.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, I'm a, I'm a bit of a fan of Lego Indiana Jones for reasons

Matt Edmundson:

which I won't bore you with, but I, I do like my, my little indie,

Matt Edmundson:

uh, Indiana Jones Lego there.

Matt Edmundson:

So let's say I'm selling, you know, sort of unique Lego.

Matt Edmundson:

Sort of things.

Matt Edmundson:

And I've got, I've got my community going on and, and, you know, people

Matt Edmundson:

are buying from me and what are sort of some of the things that I should

Matt Edmundson:

be thinking about from a content creation here, um, that's gonna help

Matt Edmundson:

me from an e-commerce point of view.

Tomer Hen:

Right.

Tomer Hen:

Yeah, that's, that's a great, uh, case study.

Tomer Hen:

So let's say that you already have your, your Indiana John, Lego store and you

Tomer Hen:

just solve it because you could find it, you're passionate about it or whatever.

Tomer Hen:

It's, So I would do two things.

Tomer Hen:

I would first, the first step that I would do is I would find

Tomer Hen:

out who are your best customers?

Tomer Hen:

And I would speak to them.

Tomer Hen:

I would have phone calls with them.

Tomer Hen:

I would send questionnaires.

Tomer Hen:

I would counter their house, whatever you can.

Tomer Hen:

To find out who is that person and by saying who is that person?

Tomer Hen:

Sometimes brand owners or store owners mistake by saying, Okay,

Tomer Hen:

my audience is a 20 to 55 year old male from the United States

Tomer Hen:

Right.

Tomer Hen:

That's not a person.

Tomer Hen:

, that's,

Matt Edmundson:

Sorry, I'm laughing cause I'm agreeing with you.

Matt Edmundson:

Sorry.

Tomer Hen:

That's no, I mean that's, that's really not a person and you don't

Tomer Hen:

have someone who is between 20 to 55.

Tomer Hen:

You have a person.

Tomer Hen:

At a certain age with a certain interest and certain reasons.

Tomer Hen:

That's the main thing and that's the main thing that you need to find out.

Tomer Hen:

What is the reason they're buying your products?

Tomer Hen:

Because there is a reason.

Tomer Hen:

They are buying this product.

Tomer Hen:

It's not just because it's not random choices.

Tomer Hen:

There's a reason why they wanted to exchange or hard earn, hard earned dollars

Tomer Hen:

for that product from us specifically.

Tomer Hen:

And you need to find out why is that Once you find out why they buy your product

Tomer Hen:

and what problem does it solve for them or what, how does it improve their life?

Tomer Hen:

This is where you, the next step would be is to find out where they hang out.

Tomer Hen:

Content do they consume?

Tomer Hen:

What TV shows do they watch?

Tomer Hen:

What podcast do they listen to?

Tomer Hen:

What Instagram pages do they follow and what communities do they hang out?

Tomer Hen:

Right?

Tomer Hen:

If you have a product, a fitness product, and you realize that your best customers,

Tomer Hen:

the ones that always buy your product are, uh, CrossFit trainers, right?

Tomer Hen:

You can find out where do they hang out?

Tomer Hen:

Do they hang out at their CrossFit gyms?

Tomer Hen:

Do they hang out in.

Tomer Hen:

Three groups on Facebook and go to these communities and find out

Tomer Hen:

how you can better serve people who are like them, people who are

Tomer Hen:

from that same, um, uh, profile or the same persona as your audience.

Tomer Hen:

And.

Tomer Hen:

Talk about why you do what you do.

Tomer Hen:

Talk about why your product is the best product for these people.

Tomer Hen:

And you have this data.

Tomer Hen:

If you, if you have this data because you already interviewed your best customers,

Tomer Hen:

the ones that always come back and buy again and again and again, they don't

Tomer Hen:

buy because you, your product costs $5 less than the cheapest one on Amazon.

Tomer Hen:

Otherwise only the cheapest product on Amazon or in the internet would sell.

Tomer Hen:

But that's the case.

Tomer Hen:

There's a reason why people buy a certain item.

Tomer Hen:

Even if it's a higher price.

Tomer Hen:

So, or even if it's not the first result on the Amazon search result, right?

Tomer Hen:

So once you know this information and you get to understand it, just go in these

Tomer Hen:

communities, go talk to these creators.

Tomer Hen:

Go talk to these influencers or those community leaders and find out how

Tomer Hen:

you can serve them and the community that they manage if you don't have

Tomer Hen:

your own community, but, If you wanna build your own community, that's

Tomer Hen:

also something that you can do by understanding how you can serve them.

Tomer Hen:

So, for example, if they, um, bought your product because they want to spend

Tomer Hen:

more quality time with their children, find out how else you could help them

Tomer Hen:

spend more quality time with their children regardless of your product.

Tomer Hen:

Just because, you know, we all know that people don't buy.

Tomer Hen:

Your product, they buy what your product makes them feel.

Tomer Hen:

Mm-hmm.

Tomer Hen:

once figure out what it makes them feel, or at least what they want

Tomer Hen:

this product to make them feel.

Tomer Hen:

Just find out how you can make them feel that in, regardless of your products.

Tomer Hen:

If so, if you were able as a brand or as a person to make them feel a

Tomer Hen:

certain way, they will always remember.

Tomer Hen:

That feeling and they would connect your brand to that feeling, and

Tomer Hen:

then the decision making would be so much easier and clear to them

Tomer Hen:

that they would not even look for any other cheaper product in Amazon.

Tomer Hen:

They would go on Amazon and look for your brand and if your brand would not

Tomer Hen:

be there, they will go and look for it in Google and go to your website and buy it.

Tomer Hen:

Because whenever someone goes on Amazon and not looking for your

Tomer Hen:

brand, but is looking for Indiana.

Tomer Hen:

You know, Lego is a brand, but let's say that they want a Indiana Jones, uh,

Tomer Hen:

uh, figure or uh, a doll or whatever it is, they are Amazon's customer.

Tomer Hen:

If your product would not be there, they will buy for someone else

Tomer Hen:

that Amazon Choses to promote, But.

Tomer Hen:

If, uh, uh, but as long as they go on Amazon and not looking specifically

Tomer Hen:

for your brand, and even if they bought directly from you and Amazon,

Tomer Hen:

they, they are still Amazon customers.

Tomer Hen:

The day you want to be on Amazon, they will buy for someone else.

Tomer Hen:

So if you created a brand that, that made them feel a certain way, that is

Tomer Hen:

way stronger than, you know, any amount of money, uh, up to a certain point

Tomer Hen:

that, uh, they can find on Amazon.

Tomer Hen:

And if you made them feel.

Tomer Hen:

You know, a stronger feeling, they would be happy to pay

Tomer Hen:

more just to get that feeling.

Tomer Hen:

And a brand is basically a symbol for them to feel something they wanna, mm-hmm.

Tomer Hen:

feel a part of a certain community.

Tomer Hen:

They wanna, they want the brand to say something about them.

Tomer Hen:

And that is the reason why we see, you know, clothing brands.

Tomer Hen:

Could sell the same T-shirt, but just with the tiniest logo or even, not

Tomer Hen:

even something that you can see on the outside, but someone who bought it

Tomer Hen:

knows that when they buy this specific closing brand, even if they can buy the

Tomer Hen:

same shirt with a different store at half the price or quarter the price,

Tomer Hen:

they know and they feel something, something about themselves when they buy.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, that's, Are there any brands that sort of

Matt Edmundson:

come to mind that do this for you?

Matt Edmundson:

As in, you know, it could be any brand, uh, , but where you think they've,

Matt Edmundson:

they've done that story really well and they've just sort of captured

Matt Edmundson:

you and, and you've bought into it?

Tomer Hen:

Um, I could say, I could say something about

Tomer Hen:

Starbucks, you know, you could buy probably better.

Tomer Hen:

Cheaper coffee in many other locations, many other places.

Tomer Hen:

But something about the consistency, something about the fact that he created

Tomer Hen:

sort of a community or a place for you to be anywhere you go out in the

Tomer Hen:

world and you'll be able to go and get the same experience and get a sense

Tomer Hen:

of, um, I would say staying at home, but something that is familiar to you.

Tomer Hen:

I think that made it way better than any other coffee chain out there, although.

Tomer Hen:

Could agree that you could get probably better coffee in so

Tomer Hen:

many other, so many other places.

Tomer Hen:

. Mm-hmm.

Tomer Hen:

. Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm sure you can.

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, I, I don't drink coffee, but I, I'm sure you can.

Matt Edmundson:

It's, um, it's interesting that you mentioned Starbucks.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, there I wasn't expecting you to come up with Starbucks.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm not gonna like, so I, That's, that's, that's interesting.

Matt Edmundson:

Um.

Matt Edmundson:

So I've called my customer, right?

Matt Edmundson:

I've researched them.

Matt Edmundson:

I've, uh, I've had lots of conversations with various different people, and I'm

Matt Edmundson:

starting to understand what's going on and how I can serve, uh, my community.

Matt Edmundson:

Is there anything else I need to, um, because we've not really talked about the

Matt Edmundson:

tactics, which I'm quite pleased about.

Matt Edmundson:

I do this on Instagram because, No, no.

Matt Edmundson:

No matter what we talk about in six weeks time, you'll be outta date anyway.

Matt Edmundson:

Right?

Matt Edmundson:

Because the, the, the whole thing just moves on a, at, at a rapid pace.

Matt Edmundson:

But the principles stay the same.

Matt Edmundson:

The tactics change, but the principles stay the same.

Matt Edmundson:

And I like the fact you've, you've talked about the principles.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, what are some of the other, the, the, the key principles

Matt Edmundson:

that I need to be aware of?

Tomer Hen:

Right.

Tomer Hen:

Um, yeah.

Tomer Hen:

I, I, I like talking about principles because, because I think you could just

Tomer Hen:

implement it across different channels.

Tomer Hen:

It's.

Tomer Hen:

Probably timeless.

Tomer Hen:

And you know, whether if, if we go back to, to being creators, so whether you are

Tomer Hen:

a creator in TikTok, whether you have an email list, whether you have a Facebook

Tomer Hen:

group, whether you just run, um, you know, your, your neighborhood community meetups.

Tomer Hen:

It's the same principle where once you find out that, Person needs

Tomer Hen:

and you are able to fulfill it.

Tomer Hen:

Then you have a business that's like something that was never changed, but

Tomer Hen:

it's so basic and that people sometime overlook this very basic principle that

Tomer Hen:

could make everything else so much easier.

Tomer Hen:

Once you realize that, because then.

Tomer Hen:

Your hesitation around, um, uh, what product should they sell?

Tomer Hen:

What should be my headline?

Tomer Hen:

What kind of colors should I use?

Tomer Hen:

They all go by because you know that the, the decor of your business is that need.

Tomer Hen:

So I think that if you go back to being a creator, I think

Tomer Hen:

that, uh, having the audience.

Tomer Hen:

A part of your brand journey is something that we've seen across multiple

Tomer Hen:

brands that rally people together, and instead of you just launching a

Tomer Hen:

brand saying, Hey, I've just worked on it for seven months, and here is

Tomer Hen:

my makeup brand, please buy this now.

Tomer Hen:

They have no idea why you created this brand.

Tomer Hen:

It just seemed like very transactional content or very

Tomer Hen:

transactional relationship.

Tomer Hen:

And, and I, I've not done this enough, but the one thing that I would do, um,

Tomer Hen:

launching my, my supplement brand for entrepreneurs would be to, uh, document

Tomer Hen:

my journey, share it with an audience.

Tomer Hen:

And if I, if any creator that, that I consult to where I work with, I always

Tomer Hen:

tell them, Whenever you came up with this idea, this, this initial thought

Tomer Hen:

of launching the brand, share it.

Tomer Hen:

Share it because.

Tomer Hen:

People who would follow you, even if these are just five people who would resonate

Tomer Hen:

with it or remember what you just said.

Tomer Hen:

Even if it's just a glimpse, it will build up and you create this, uh, curiosity,

Tomer Hen:

You create this sense of why you tell people about the entire process of, you

Tomer Hen:

know, hey, this is, this has been taking me 7, 8, 9 month of my life working on it

Tomer Hen:

since I just came up with, you know, the inception of the idea until you can see.

Tomer Hen:

In your hands and, and people have followed you.

Tomer Hen:

People know the struggles.

Tomer Hen:

People know how much thought you've put onto it.

Tomer Hen:

So sharing your journey, whether it would be through your content, your

Tomer Hen:

emails, uh, just talking with a lot of people in your, in your community or

Tomer Hen:

your friends, your colleagues, whoever.

Tomer Hen:

You can just talk about your brand.

Tomer Hen:

And I think that also comes, uh, you know, most people.

Tomer Hen:

Do the opposite.

Tomer Hen:

They feel that once they have an idea, they need to be very, uh, they

Tomer Hen:

need to keep it as a secret, right?

Tomer Hen:

Mm-hmm.

Tomer Hen:

, I, I, someone would steal my idea.

Tomer Hen:

They would copy me, they would this and that.

Tomer Hen:

And I think that once you realize that you have a very strong why, you know, and you

Tomer Hen:

have this confidence, then no one could.

Tomer Hen:

Copy you.

Tomer Hen:

No one can really do what is the one thing that you do because mm-hmm.

Tomer Hen:

, you build a relationship with those people once you share.

Tomer Hen:

Your journey and you share your why with a certain person.

Tomer Hen:

And people sometimes mistake that they speak to an audience, but they don't

Tomer Hen:

speak to an audience or to a niche.

Tomer Hen:

They speak to multiple individual human beings who listen to you and

Tomer Hen:

create this kind of relationship with you, and this relationship that you

Tomer Hen:

build is something that no one could ever copy, even if they sell the exact

Tomer Hen:

same product and use the same ads.

Tomer Hen:

This relationship, the combination of your why, your journey,

Tomer Hen:

your struggles, your thought.

Tomer Hen:

And the product is something that is very unique to you.

Tomer Hen:

Um, so you, you also build that confidence that no one could ever copy you.

Tomer Hen:

The, the opposite is true.

Tomer Hen:

You want to collaborate with your competition.

Tomer Hen:

You want them to be rallied on your, your cause and your journey

Tomer Hen:

because you know that once you have more people on board, they would

Tomer Hen:

share your jour, they will share.

Tomer Hen:

And they will share, uh, um, uh, the value that your brand is

Tomer Hen:

uniquely providing to the market.

Tomer Hen:

Mm-hmm.

Tomer Hen:

. And that's, that's an amazing feeling.

Tomer Hen:

And I've been, you know, being an entrepreneur for

Tomer Hen:

so long, I've been in, in.

Tomer Hen:

This state of mind where you have to be very envy of your ideas.

Tomer Hen:

You have to keep them as a secret.

Tomer Hen:

You can't share with them with anyone.

Tomer Hen:

You're afraid that your team, your parents, your sister, your, you

Tomer Hen:

know, anyone would just copy you if you just tell them about it.

Tomer Hen:

And that's a, this is not as part with the fun factor because it's not fun.

Tomer Hen:

And b, it just very, very, very stressful.

Tomer Hen:

Being on the other side of it, knowing that you would get more value by

Tomer Hen:

sharing more and talking more about it.

Tomer Hen:

And people sense this excitement, whether it's a one on one conversation and whether

Tomer Hen:

it's a one to a hundred thousand people.

Tomer Hen:

People sense this excitement.

Tomer Hen:

Again, coming back to being authentic, being yourself.

Tomer Hen:

When you are excited about what you're doing and why you're doing it, and

Tomer Hen:

the products that you sell, it shows out to the world and people really

Tomer Hen:

buy into that, that excitement.

Tomer Hen:

People go on social media because basically they wanna be excited.

Tomer Hen:

They wanna see someone who is excited about something and

Tomer Hen:

get some of that excitement.

Tomer Hen:

Um, so just, just give it out to them.

Tomer Hen:

But if you sell something just because you saw it on Jungle Scout

Tomer Hen:

and you feel that it would rank up better on Amazon, people would sense

Tomer Hen:

that it's not very exciting for you.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

And I, There's no

Matt Edmundson:

longevity to it either.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, whereas what you are talking about, actually there's

Matt Edmundson:

some real longevity to that.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, I just wanna circle back to, uh, I'm aware of time here, Tomer, so I,

Matt Edmundson:

I, but I, I do wanna circle back to something that you said, which I think is

Matt Edmundson:

quite important, document your journey.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, I, I know that a lot of, uh, entrepreneurs out there break out

Matt Edmundson:

into a cold sweat when you talk to 'em about social media or, you

Matt Edmundson:

know, creating content and it's just like, I dunno what to say.

Matt Edmundson:

I dunno what to Do, you know, what I mean?

Matt Edmundson:

And, and it's like this thing just.

Matt Edmundson:

This wall just instantly goes up.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, and actually for me, what I found at one of the keys here is, is

Matt Edmundson:

like you say, Document the journey.

Matt Edmundson:

I came across this great phrase, document Don't create.

Matt Edmundson:

And I thought that was quite a fascinating, I dunno where it came from,

Matt Edmundson:

but I thought it was a fascinating phrase.

Matt Edmundson:

And I've been doing a little bit of an experiment recently.

Matt Edmundson:

I've been putting out, um, like a seven to ten second video of

Matt Edmundson:

my day, just like with, uh, on Instagram as an Instagram reel.

Matt Edmundson:

Just little snippets like one to one and a half seconds long

Matt Edmundson:

throughout the day, just a with a text comment on there and some music.

Matt Edmundson:

Various numbers of people have watched this from, you know, several

Matt Edmundson:

thousand to just a few hundred.

Matt Edmundson:

I, I don't really care.

Matt Edmundson:

I, what I can tell you is, um, that I've been consistent at doing it and

Matt Edmundson:

it just documents my day and I've connected with some extraordinary

Matt Edmundson:

people as a result, uh, who have got in touch and just gone, Man, that's great.

Matt Edmundson:

And, um, I find that that just something as simple as that document don't

Matt Edmundson:

create, I think will be a big, big help.

Matt Edmundson:

So, How do people reach you?

Matt Edmundson:

How do they get hold of you?

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, what's the best way to do that?

Matt Edmundson:

Because undoubtedly there's gonna be more questions.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, I I have a whole lot more.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, so , how do people, uh, connect with you if they wanna do that?

Tomer Hen:

Yeah.

Tomer Hen:

Thank you so much for that and I'm always happy to speak to excited,

Tomer Hen:

enthusiastic entrepreneurs.

Tomer Hen:

So, uh, I'm pretty active on LinkedIn, so you can, uh, look

Tomer Hen:

for my handle on LinkedIn or you can go on Tomer hand.co co.

Tomer Hen:

Um, uh, to just.

Tomer Hen:

Join my mailing list and get some updates from me.

Tomer Hen:

Some, uh, insights and nuggets, uh, of about brand building entrepreneurship.

Tomer Hen:

Uh, I just do this for fun, to be honest.

Tomer Hen:

Um, my business is to help entrepreneurs and creators build their brands.

Tomer Hen:

Um, but I, and that's what my company does.

Tomer Hen:

So, uh, I always love talking to entrepreneurs, uh, creators, influencer.

Tomer Hen:

Uh, anyone who would like to, uh, to build a business, so,

Tomer Hen:

or, or grow their business.

Tomer Hen:

So very happy to connect.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

And we will of course, put all of those links in the show notes.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, uh, but uh, yeah, do get in touch.

Matt Edmundson:

Do connect with Tomer, I'm sure.

Matt Edmundson:

I'd love to hear from you.

Matt Edmundson:

Tomer, thank you so much for being with us here on the eCommerce podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

Honestly, genuinely loved it.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, you're a top like, and thank you for sharing all your wisdom.

Tomer Hen:

Thank you so much, Matt.

Tomer Hen:

It's been great and thank you for everyone for.

Matt Edmundson:

So there you have it.

Matt Edmundson:

What a fantastic conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Huge.

Matt Edmundson:

Thanks again to Timer for joining me today.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and also a huge thanks and big shout out to today's show

Matt Edmundson:

sponsor e-commerce cohort.

Matt Edmundson:

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

Matt Edmundson:

type of membership, uh, and community.

Matt Edmundson:

I'll be.

Matt Edmundson:

Come along, come and join in now.

Matt Edmundson:

Be sure to subscribe to the e-commerce podcast wherever you get your podcast

Matt Edmundson:

from because we've got some great conversations lined up, let me tell you.

Matt Edmundson:

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

Matt Edmundson:

And in case no one has told you today, you my friend.

Matt Edmundson:

Are awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

Utterly, utterly awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

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 is written by me and my fantastic son Josh Edmundson.

Matt Edmundson:

And if you would like to read the transcript or show notes, head over to

Matt Edmundson:

our website, eCommerce podcast.net where you can also sign up for and newsletter.

Matt Edmundson:

So that's it from me.

Matt Edmundson:

Thank you so much for joining me.

Matt Edmundson:

Have a fantastic week.

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