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Can you massively increase perceived value or is it just American Hype?
17th November 2022 • eCommerce Podcast • Matt Edmundson
00:00:00 00:48:38

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A lot of people think that they need to massively increase the price of their product in order to make it more valuable, but that's not always true. There are a lot of ways that you can manipulate the perception of your product to make it more appealing and increase sales.

Norm Farrar, the host of the popular Amazon podcast, Lunch with Norm, joins Matt in this episode to unpack whether perceived value can really be increased significantly or is it just an American Hype?

ABOUT NORM

Entrepreneur and businessman Norman “The Beard Guy” Farrar stands at the forefront of the economic mega-machine known as Amazon Marketplace. As a leading expert with over 25 years of product sourcing, development, and branding expertise, Norm is an advisor to many and is the host of the podcast Lunch With Norm, a Live Interactive Podcast For All Entrepreneurs

Throughout his career, Norm has sold over 100 million dollars in sales between his own products and services and the opportunities he has brokered for clients. Today, in addition to running a diverse catalog of companies including AMZ Club and PRReach (The world’s first video press release company), and he focuses on guiding individual sellers, brands, and manufacturers to worldwide dominance on Amazon, Amazon Podcast, and top-earning sales sites.

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

  • Perceived Value is the customers' evaluation of the merits of a product or service, and its ability to meet their needs and expectations, especially in comparison with its peers. It is the overall customer experience from the second that they're typing what they're looking for into a search field.
  • With any business venture, you need to have the resilience and become the authority figure to really succeed and grow. But you also need to build your brand’s perceived value so that people want to keep coming back to your brand and your products.
  • It begins with competitor research and finding out what you can do to make your product stand out and what makes your product more value adding for the customer every single time and just doing it consistently.

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

Transcripts

Matt Edmundson:

Well, welcome to the eCommerce podcast with

Matt Edmundson:

me, your host, Matt Edmundson.

Matt Edmundson:

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

Matt Edmundson:

And to help us do just that.

Matt Edmundson:

I am chatting with my very special guest today, Norm Farrar from the Lunch with

Matt Edmundson:

Norm Podcast about perceived value.

Matt Edmundson:

Is it all just American hype or is there something to it?

Matt Edmundson:

We're gonna get into that.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, if this is your first time here, a warm welcome to you

Matt Edmundson:

here, the eCommerce podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, you can find the notes, the transcript, everything for free on

Matt Edmundson:

our website, eCommercepodcast.net.

Matt Edmundson:

And what I'll do there, you can sign up for our newsletter, and each week we

Matt Edmundson:

will email you, uh, the links, the notes, the transcript from the conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

You can get that totally to your inbox, totally free.

Matt Edmundson:

Totally amazing.

Matt Edmundson:

Love that technology.

Matt Edmundson:

So make sure you sign up for that.

Matt Edmundson:

This episode is brought to you by the ecommerce cohort, uh, which helps you to

Matt Edmundson:

deliver e-commerce Wow to your customers.

Matt Edmundson:

Now, I was on a podcast earlier on Norm, and they said to me, You know,

Matt Edmundson:

some of the biggest lessons that you've learned, I said, Well, one

Matt Edmundson:

of the most expensive mistakes was when I got siloed in e-commerce.

Matt Edmundson:

In other words, I just worked on one or two.

Matt Edmundson:

Of my business and I missed the bigger picture.

Matt Edmundson:

Well enter e-commerce cohort to solve this problem.

Matt Edmundson:

It is a membership group, uh, with guided monthly sprints that cycle

Matt Edmundson:

through all the key areas of e-commerce.

Matt Edmundson:

So the sole purpose of cohort is to provide you with clear actionable

Matt Edmundson:

jobs to be done so you'll know what to work on as well as get the

Matt Edmundson:

support you need to get it done.

Matt Edmundson:

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

Matt Edmundson:

well established eCommerce, I would encourage you to definitely check it out.

Matt Edmundson:

eCommerce cohort.com is the website.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, more information is available, uh, on the site.

Matt Edmundson:

Explains it in much better vernacular than I've just used.

Matt Edmundson:

But go ahead, check it out.

Matt Edmundson:

eCommerce cohort.com.

Matt Edmundson:

If you're involved in e-commerce, you'll probably want to

Matt Edmundson:

join, so head on over there.

Matt Edmundson:

Let's chat with Mr.

Matt Edmundson:

Norman Farrar.

Matt Edmundson:

He is an entreprevwe.

Matt Edmundson:

An entreprever, or an entrepreneur.

Matt Edmundson:

Take your pick.

Matt Edmundson:

We don't mind.

Matt Edmundson:

who provides online marketing and managed eCommerce solutions for brands.

Matt Edmundson:

Check this out, folks.

Matt Edmundson:

He has worked with Fortune five under companies such as Coca-Cola,

Matt Edmundson:

Mercedes-Benz, and 20th Century Fox, uh, since the early 1990s.

Matt Edmundson:

Norm.

Matt Edmundson:

Focused on helping entrepreneurs optimize their operations and

Matt Edmundson:

unlock their business potential.

Matt Edmundson:

Presently, he is the host of the popular Amazon Podcast Lunch With Norm.

Matt Edmundson:

I actually have been on Norm's podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

That's how we met.

Matt Edmundson:

We had a great time and a great conversation, and I knew actually

Matt Edmundson:

following on from that conversation on, we needed to get you onto the

Matt Edmundson:

eCommerce podcast cause I thought.

Matt Edmundson:

You've got some great value to add to what we do here, so thank you for coming on.

Matt Edmundson:

Great to, great to see you again.

Matt Edmundson:

How are we

Matt Edmundson:

doing?

Norm Farrar:

Uh, it's the first time I've ever been called an entreprevert.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, I'm, I'm, I'm not sure if I, how I would feel about that.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, so I'm sorry about that.

Matt Edmundson:

You can put that on your business cards going forward.

Norm Farrar:

Exactly.

Matt Edmundson:

Now, if you are listening

Matt Edmundson:

to the podcast, the one thing that you won't know about Norm, uh, is Norm has the

Matt Edmundson:

most incredible beard you have ever seen.

Matt Edmundson:

Right?

Matt Edmundson:

And so, uh, and actually in all your branding is obviously, you know, the

Matt Edmundson:

beard is a, is a big feature norm.

Matt Edmundson:

It's something that you are remembered by.

Matt Edmundson:

So how long have you done the beard thing?

Matt Edmundson:

I'm curious.

Norm Farrar:

Well, uh, I've done it.

Norm Farrar:

About five years.

Norm Farrar:

I've burnt it off right down the middle.

Norm Farrar:

Cooking hamburgers one night, so I look like you down.

Norm Farrar:

And it took about two and a half years to grow back.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

That portion of it.

Norm Farrar:

But, uh, yeah, it's, yeah, it's been growing for a long time.

Matt Edmundson:

Wow.

Matt Edmundson:

Well, it's great, man.

Matt Edmundson:

I, I have beard envy, I'm not gonna lie.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, it's, uh, it's an awesome, it's an awesome piece of, So, whereabouts

Matt Edmundson:

in the world are you, Let's tell the good folks a bit about you.

Matt Edmundson:

Whereabouts are.

Norm Farrar:

I live in a very small town about two hours north of Toronto.

Matt Edmundson:

Okay.

Matt Edmundson:

And so is it colder for you than it is for me?

Matt Edmundson:

You must be quite far north, right?

Norm Farrar:

Ah, don't even bring that up.

Norm Farrar:

I had a foot of snow last

Norm Farrar:

night.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh, it's definitely colder for you than it is for me.

Matt Edmundson:

That's impressive.

Matt Edmundson:

Foot of snow.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Not happy.

Matt Edmundson:

No.

Matt Edmundson:

Well, you know, uh, it's, it's always nice speaking to people that

Matt Edmundson:

maybe have slightly colder weather than what we have here in England.

Matt Edmundson:

I, I feel slightly better about myself.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, it doesn't happen often, . So how did you, how did you get started with,

Matt Edmundson:

um, let's start with the podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

What kick started that?

Matt Edmundson:

The lunch with Norm.

Norm Farrar:

That's a covid

Norm Farrar:

thing.

Norm Farrar:

I had my kids back, so I had to, my three boys were outside, two of us were smoking

Norm Farrar:

cigars and, uh, anyways, uh, we were just talking and phone rang and started helping

Norm Farrar:

out somebody, and then phone rang again.

Norm Farrar:

Somebody had a problem.

Norm Farrar:

Phone rang three times while we were having the cigar.

Norm Farrar:

And my one son.

Norm Farrar:

You know, you should do a podcast or something.

Norm Farrar:

And I, anybody who knows me, especially back then, I'm scared to death talking.

Norm Farrar:

I don't like public speaking.

Norm Farrar:

I don't, Oh really?

Norm Farrar:

I would never, ever have done a podcast.

Norm Farrar:

I don't like it.

Norm Farrar:

Um, now, It's different.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, I've done it enough that, uh, you know, I'm okay.

Norm Farrar:

But back then it was, I, I couldn't even watch, like the first time we

Norm Farrar:

did it, our guest showed up late.

Norm Farrar:

So people position dropped to the floor not knowing what to say, you know, just,

Norm Farrar:

just feeling sick, like, oh, he was like, pure, you know, that you're just kind

Norm Farrar:

of pulling myself back up to the chair.

Norm Farrar:

But, uh, that's how I got started.

Norm Farrar:

It was the guys, my boys, and then we tried to find different angles.

Norm Farrar:

So, uh, we, you know, we wanted it to sound, uh, professional.

Norm Farrar:

So my son is a musician.

Norm Farrar:

He put every, everything together, the graphics Kelsey did.

Norm Farrar:

Then we came up with this thing called Wheel of Kelsey, and.

Norm Farrar:

It's a giveaway that we give out every, every, every episode.

Norm Farrar:

You saw that And, yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

This kind of people know us now for, you know, information and

Norm Farrar:

also this Wheel of Kelsey thing.

Matt Edmundson:

It's brilliant because your podcast is, is live, right?

Matt Edmundson:

It's an interactive live podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

And so people get to comment, they go on this, uh, Wheel of Kelsey

Matt Edmundson:

and you pick out a winner and the winner will usually win something.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, I thought it was all good fun and obviously you, you draw in an

Matt Edmundson:

audience, but you are prolific, right?

Matt Edmundson:

This is not like once a month you are doing this.

Matt Edmundson:

This is, this is quite a regular podcast.

Norm Farrar:

three times a week.

Norm Farrar:

Yep.

Norm Farrar:

Live at noon, Monday, Wednesday, Friday.

Norm Farrar:

It's, it's a bit of work.

Matt Edmundson:

Does it, does it, does it suck the life out of your,

Matt Edmundson:

or do you find an energy in it now?

Norm Farrar:

Oh.

Norm Farrar:

It's like I own a variety of different businesses.

Norm Farrar:

I find good people.

Norm Farrar:

I can, I can oversee the larger picture, but they run the business for me.

Norm Farrar:

And that's the same thing with lunch with Norm.

Norm Farrar:

When I go and sit down with somebody, I get the, the facts or the bio

Norm Farrar:

or the information about who I'm interviewing, about five to 10

Norm Farrar:

minutes before I get in and I, I talk.

Norm Farrar:

So everything is done where we've got.

Norm Farrar:

A VA sending out and looking out, like outreach to try to find people.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, we have back and forth, you saw probably the, uh, emails

Norm Farrar:

that went back and forth mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, uh, to try to get the information.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, and then, uh, Kelsey comes on and he takes care of, you

Norm Farrar:

know, all the back and forth.

Norm Farrar:

So we have a producer, which is him, and then one other

Norm Farrar:

person that does the outreach.

Norm Farrar:

And then we do have, we spend a lot of time and money on, um, social media.

Norm Farrar:

So we have another person doing that as well.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. But, uh, yeah, my, my role in this, I, because I, I can't

Norm Farrar:

spend hours doing it every day.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, mine is sit down Monday, Wednesday, Friday for an hour, and I'm, I get

Norm Farrar:

prepped about 10 minutes beforehand.

Norm Farrar:

That's fantastic.

Norm Farrar:

And, and you do, you just have these conversations with people, don't you?

Norm Farrar:

And it, it's really intriguing where.

Norm Farrar:

It's just what we didn't want it to be is like, uh, we, we just wanted a

Norm Farrar:

casual, um, Very casual interview and, uh, I used to have this other pod, like

Norm Farrar:

I told you before, I hated podcasts.

Norm Farrar:

Well, we didn't launch one, We launched two . That's the sign behind me.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, it's called, I Know This Guy.

Norm Farrar:

And all it was, was talking about the, uh, the, the person's, uh, their backstory,

Norm Farrar:

but I called it failure to Succeed.

Norm Farrar:

What it takes, Like what was your failure that brought you

Norm Farrar:

to where you are right now.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah, and it's kind of interesting that that happened.

Norm Farrar:

It was just so casual.

Norm Farrar:

We were bringing out all this information and.

Norm Farrar:

We just kind of applied it over to lunch with Norm.

Norm Farrar:

It's just sit back, relax, we go down a ton of different rabbit holes.

Norm Farrar:

And at the end of the day, you know, uh, we've got a really great community

Norm Farrar:

that, uh, that is very engaging.

Norm Farrar:

So we know a lot of people by name.

Norm Farrar:

We know where they live.

Norm Farrar:

We, you know, it's, it's a, it's a really engaged community.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah, it is.

Norm Farrar:

It is.

Norm Farrar:

And so, um, who, who's the podcast aimed at or.

Norm Farrar:

Well, we're, we're trying to mix it up.

Norm Farrar:

So originally it was Amazon FBA sellers.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, however, the bigger audience and where people are going.

Norm Farrar:

So it's evolved, especially over covid.

Norm Farrar:

What we're finding is the people who have been on Amazon, uh, they're

Norm Farrar:

tired of being a one-legged stool.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, Amazon can come and they can, you know, close their account down or they can make

Norm Farrar:

it tougher, put inventory restrictions on, so they need it to spread.

Norm Farrar:

Okay.

Norm Farrar:

What's the next step?

Norm Farrar:

Okay.

Norm Farrar:

Walmart, Shopify.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, today we had a really great guest, Steve Wiedman on

Norm Farrar:

about SEO content marketing.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

so.

Norm Farrar:

Anyways, uh, we are, we are still targeting Amazon.

Norm Farrar:

Our audience is made up a third or third or third.

Norm Farrar:

People who know very little are just coming off of a course, the intermediate

Norm Farrar:

and then the advance we've got.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, I know for a fact we've got some sellers that are a million dollars a month.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, I know one person that's there who, um, has had over

Norm Farrar:

a billion dollars in sales.

Norm Farrar:

Actually, there's a couple people.

Norm Farrar:

A billion dollars in sales.

Norm Farrar:

And um, you know, I've sat down, I like, after I heard about them because

Norm Farrar:

we interview some of our brands sometimes that, that are listeners

Norm Farrar:

and to hear their stories and you're sitting there going, Oh my gosh.

Norm Farrar:

First of all, you gotta become on the podcast.

Norm Farrar:

You gotta tell me your story and tell me what I need to know because yeah, I

Norm Farrar:

can learn so much from all these other.

Norm Farrar:

. Matt Edmundson: Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

And in interviewing people that have turned, you know, sold a billion dollars

Norm Farrar:

of products through Amazon, uh, what are some of the lessons that you've learned?

Norm Farrar:

Resilience, number one.

Norm Farrar:

Mm.

Norm Farrar:

So, you know, uh, I always say, uh, when you, and it doesn't have to be Amazon.

Norm Farrar:

It could be with licensing, it could be with any business venture

Norm Farrar:

that you get into that you have to become that authority figure.

Norm Farrar:

Because authority, p figures, uh, builds trust, but the resilience

Norm Farrar:

factor comes in is when you get hit between the legs and you drop to your

Norm Farrar:

knees and you think it's over for me.

Norm Farrar:

And to be able to stand up and do it again.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

And you know, a hundred times over when you say, Please kick me between the

Norm Farrar:

legs, um, you know, . But that's it.

Norm Farrar:

What I found is that first of all, It's being resilient.

Norm Farrar:

Second of all, it's being the authority.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Authority equals trust equals sales and jumping on opportunities.

Norm Farrar:

So don't say no, you don't have to go after every shiny object.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. But you have a system in place, systems standard operating, uh, systems so you

Norm Farrar:

can automate and scale your business.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. And then at the end of the.

Norm Farrar:

You just wanna make sure that you have what we'll be talking about in a bit,

Norm Farrar:

building a brand, building perceived value, that people want to come

Norm Farrar:

back based on a customer experience.

Norm Farrar:

That's, that's everybody I've talked to is basically the same.

Matt Edmundson:

Well,

Matt Edmundson:

that's, It's a mic drop moment, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

I don't have a mic in my hand, but it's that kind of.

Matt Edmundson:

It's, it's funny, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

How, um, when you talk to people who were mega successful, um, and you are

Matt Edmundson:

kind of curious as to how they did it.

Matt Edmundson:

It's, it's not, it's not rocket science.

Matt Edmundson:

There's just consistency.

Matt Edmundson:

Like you say, there's resilience right place, right time.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, there's, there's no real silver bullet.

Matt Edmundson:

Is there, Uh, I dunno if you've, if you've sort of found this, . But there

Matt Edmundson:

is something quite inspiring, usually about the person that you are talking to.

Matt Edmundson:

There's usually some massive obstacle they've had to overcome.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and you, and you think, Wow, okay.

Matt Edmundson:

That's maybe why you are where you are at.

Matt Edmundson:

Right.

Matt Edmundson:

. Norm Farrar: Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, and the other part to this is I think every major seller or

Matt Edmundson:

every major business person I've ever met is in that give to get.

Matt Edmundson:

So they share.

Matt Edmundson:

So they're either mentoring people or they're starting out and they're looking

Matt Edmundson:

for mentor, they're going to campaigns, they're trying to become excellent in

Matt Edmundson:

whatever they're doing, and they're not afraid to share that information.

Matt Edmundson:

Mm.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, that's a very good point actually.

Matt Edmundson:

That is a very good point.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, uh, thank you for bringing that up.

Matt Edmundson:

So let's talk then about, um, perceived value.

Matt Edmundson:

I said to you, I said, Norm, we need to get you on the show.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, we decided to get you to come on the show without any idea

Matt Edmundson:

of what we're gonna talk about.

Matt Edmundson:

I just knew we'd have a great conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and you said, Well, let's talk about perceived value, uh, and how

Matt Edmundson:

to double your profits in a month on Amazon, and is it all American

Matt Edmundson:

height, which I thought was great.

Matt Edmundson:

So hence the reason why I've robbed that at the start.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, so let, What do you mean when you talk about perceived.

Norm Farrar:

I'm talking about the overall customer experience from the

Norm Farrar:

second that they're typing what they're looking for into a search field, seeing

Norm Farrar:

the products, and look, when you're going on to Amazon, I'll just, and I'm gonna

Norm Farrar:

use Amazon, but it could be any platform.

Norm Farrar:

It could be Walmart, it could be on Google, it could be anything.

Norm Farrar:

But when you, when you have the search results, Which one are you gonna click on?

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. It doesn't have to be the reviews.

Norm Farrar:

The very first thing you're gonna be looking at is either there's

Norm Farrar:

something different in that image.

Norm Farrar:

So either it's going left or right, and everybody else is going right to left.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, you know, something that brings out a, could be color, it could be

Norm Farrar:

the quality of the overall, um, image.

Norm Farrar:

It's usually that the one that stands out is the person that split test that image.

Norm Farrar:

Against three or four other images that they may have had in product photos.

Norm Farrar:

Does it have, is it doing, The customer research is going

Norm Farrar:

left to right, Right to left.

Norm Farrar:

Is it filling the frame?

Norm Farrar:

Is it Sometimes every one of the products is filling the frame, so

Norm Farrar:

you make it a little bit smaller.

Norm Farrar:

That's really bizarre cuz everybody says, Oh, you gotta fill the frame.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. Try making a bit smaller to draw your attention.

Norm Farrar:

It might be all, all the boxes are black.

Norm Farrar:

Well make it with a one with a yellow stripe.

Norm Farrar:

Something to grab the eye.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

The other thing is some are just great with just having the product,

Norm Farrar:

others with the packaging, some with having the cap off or cap on.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, it's, it's, it's just the perfect, uh, product photo.

Norm Farrar:

That's where I start.

Norm Farrar:

And within the product photo.

Norm Farrar:

There's other things.

Norm Farrar:

So on Amazon, if you think about it, or Shopify, you have a storyboard.

Norm Farrar:

So it's a slide deck and a lot of people just throw it up there.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, a lot of people will put a book up there, like you're reading

Norm Farrar:

a book and you've seen it.

Norm Farrar:

It's a book.

Norm Farrar:

Nobody's gonna read your book.

Norm Farrar:

That's over for like, that's.

Norm Farrar:

on the bullet points, what you do is you highlight information, but

Norm Farrar:

like Bert's Bees does this real uh, uh, uh, really does this well.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Where they have a chocolate or a honey, uh, Bert's bees wax, right.

Norm Farrar:

Or uh, you know the lip bum.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

They don't anything.

Norm Farrar:

Except high, high, high quality graphics that bring out, like you want to eat

Norm Farrar:

the picture, you know, the chocolate or whatever illustration that they have.

Norm Farrar:

Well, it's the same thing here.

Norm Farrar:

It's being able to bring across that storyboard where,

Norm Farrar:

okay, what is the benefit?

Norm Farrar:

Why am I buying, What pain point am I solving that a lot

Norm Farrar:

of people put out the features?

Norm Farrar:

Well, okay, that's nice, but make that a second or third, or third or fourth pitch.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Lifestyle pictures.

Norm Farrar:

Showing somebody that you've solved their problem, that they're happy.

Norm Farrar:

A lot of the times I see the people that have used user-generated content,

Norm Farrar:

and its like grumpy old men like , Why?

Norm Farrar:

Why did you put that picture up there?

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

That make sense?

Norm Farrar:

And then a video.

Norm Farrar:

Everything is video nowadays, so you wanna make sure that you have, It doesn't

Norm Farrar:

have to be a Hollywood production.

Norm Farrar:

There's tons and tons of really good video content out there that you, or video

Norm Farrar:

apps that you can get very inexpensive.

Norm Farrar:

And Amazon has their own video creator right now, which is new, that you can

Norm Farrar:

go in there, put in some slides, make it into a gif or gif, whatever you wanna call

Norm Farrar:

it, and put, you know, The bullet points there, so everything's pointing that way.

Norm Farrar:

But the next step with this, and you don't have to do it right off the bat,

Norm Farrar:

I do, when I do my product research, I know that if I'm gonna buy a thousand or

Norm Farrar:

something, I wanna be the best out there.

Norm Farrar:

I know I can get sales right off the bat because I'm gonna do that

Norm Farrar:

research, I'm gonna do the slides, the slide deck properly, and

Norm Farrar:

I'm gonna spend the time to be.

Norm Farrar:

And let me, let me use a case study.

Norm Farrar:

I just, That'd be amazing.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Beforehand, but there's, there's actually two that are really crazy, but

Norm Farrar:

the first one is every single search, every single search that you look at

Norm Farrar:

on Amazon, you'll see that people enter into three different price points.

Norm Farrar:

You've got.

Norm Farrar:

Usually the Chinese manufacturers who just are remming it through at the

Norm Farrar:

lowest price, they don't care about images, They, everything is the lowest.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

And sometimes you'll see that people are using the same manufacturer's

Norm Farrar:

pictures, which is kind of funny.

Norm Farrar:

But, um, Dead Sea Mud is one that I took a look at just recently.

Norm Farrar:

Betsy Mud.

Norm Farrar:

The entry point is $6 and 78 cents around a $14 range.

Norm Farrar:

That's your first price tier, eight ounce to 16 ounce.

Norm Farrar:

The next tier up is 24 to 44.

Norm Farrar:

And the same thing, 16 ounce.

Norm Farrar:

But what you'll notice is those pictures, and if you click into those

Norm Farrar:

listings, they're much better research.

Norm Farrar:

They've got better quality design, and the packaging is starting

Norm Farrar:

to take, uh, it's not just in a, uh, an ugly white plastic jar.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Then the highest one, and this was unbelievable, $78.

Norm Farrar:

To $95.

Norm Farrar:

And the $95 brand was 3.5 ounces.

Norm Farrar:

Wow.

Norm Farrar:

But it was really, it looked great.

Norm Farrar:

It was just in, in a frosted glass, um, container.

Norm Farrar:

It looked really high end.

Norm Farrar:

It was everything about the listing and everything about the

Norm Farrar:

images were high perceived value.

Norm Farrar:

Now, there's a trick here if your images are.

Norm Farrar:

And you have great perception, then that's great.

Norm Farrar:

You'll end up with a very high, um, user or uh, uh, customer experience.

Norm Farrar:

If you have really great pictures and your product is terrible,

Norm Farrar:

expect one star reviews all the way, people are gonna be very upset.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

And then at the end, you're doing yourself a disservice if you're coming in at price

Norm Farrar:

level two or one with really crappy images and you've got a really great product.

Norm Farrar:

If you're going in, That's why I say you have to go in at the tier

Norm Farrar:

level that you wanna achieve.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Now perceive value.

Norm Farrar:

Everything.

Norm Farrar:

Every time I look at it comes down to the brand.

Norm Farrar:

Is the brand consistent?

Norm Farrar:

If I go in and coffee mug rise of the micro brands,

Norm Farrar:

that's what we are on Amazon.

Norm Farrar:

Everybody is a micro brand.

Norm Farrar:

They're not a huge brand.

Norm Farrar:

Nobody knows you.

Norm Farrar:

What are they gonna do?

Norm Farrar:

They're gonna search you on Google.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. Okay.

Norm Farrar:

If you come up and you're not consistent, if, if you've got certain colors and now.

Norm Farrar:

If they're completely different or you're using 10 different fonts or you

Norm Farrar:

don't have a great message out there, people are looking for red flags.

Norm Farrar:

And if you don't become the authority or if you don't become trustworthy.

Norm Farrar:

So authority equals trust equals sales people will click off very

Norm Farrar:

quickly, so you don't have to have an expensive website, one pager.

Norm Farrar:

Just make it look nice.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah, you don't have to have a ton of social media.

Norm Farrar:

Pick one.

Norm Farrar:

Make it look nice, Do a press release, write a bit of

Norm Farrar:

content, become the authority.

Norm Farrar:

So once people see that and they go back, now they wanna

Norm Farrar:

make sure, okay, it looks great.

Norm Farrar:

The packaging, the overall like, Like let's say there's an outside package and

Norm Farrar:

an outer package, that's gonna be a lot.

Norm Farrar:

Most people don't, especially in the beauty category, don't even put package.

Norm Farrar:

It costs pennies to create a really beautiful package.

Norm Farrar:

And I'll give you an example about that one.

Norm Farrar:

So, uh, I was working with a knife company and they came in

Norm Farrar:

a, just a plastic clam shell.

Norm Farrar:

Cost of the knife was 16 bucks.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, he was selling it at $49.

Norm Farrar:

He was making money.

Norm Farrar:

However, I looked at it and I said, Why don't we put it in a different package?

Norm Farrar:

Let's make it a rigid box.

Norm Farrar:

People, when they open it up, it kind of unveils the, the product.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, and then there's a nice message there.

Norm Farrar:

You have a sheath.

Norm Farrar:

Um, but it's just everything is, is a nicer look.

Norm Farrar:

And we improved the images.

Norm Farrar:

Well, we, we were able to take that from $49 up to $124.

Norm Farrar:

Wow.

Norm Farrar:

And the traffic didn't.

Norm Farrar:

It was, it was very low decrease.

Norm Farrar:

So this guy went from 49 to 124, and then I said, like, I, I knew the manufacturer.

Norm Farrar:

I said, This is the same knife at $16.

Norm Farrar:

Why don't we hammer it instead of have these 67 layers of steel, why don't

Norm Farrar:

we hammer it and put it into a wood container and see what we can do with it?

Norm Farrar:

So, Hammered the steel and it looked like it was completely different.

Norm Farrar:

It was still $16 and we, we brought it out at $224.

Norm Farrar:

Wow.

Norm Farrar:

That's perceived value.

Norm Farrar:

The wood case cost us a couple of bucks.

Norm Farrar:

It was like, I think it was $3 with all the packaging included for an extra

Norm Farrar:

a hundred on top of the a hundred.

Norm Farrar:

That's incredible.

Norm Farrar:

. Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

And those are the things that you're, you're looking at.

Norm Farrar:

So if you took a look at this, what did the what?

Norm Farrar:

What did the mess when?

Norm Farrar:

Like when the customer received it, it comes down now to building the

Norm Farrar:

brand to do it for every product that you have with that brand.

Norm Farrar:

So, The person received this outer box, which looked like an iPhone box.

Norm Farrar:

It had a silhouette of, uh, the knife on the one side,

Norm Farrar:

and then it had a full color.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, it, it looked like a full color knife on the other side.

Norm Farrar:

When they opened it up, there was a, it was a black package

Norm Farrar:

with yellow, so it stood out.

Norm Farrar:

Every other knife was in a black package.

Norm Farrar:

We just put a yellow strip on it, so, Oh, yep.

Norm Farrar:

There's a, your IU is drawn to it and it's magnetic class.

Norm Farrar:

You open it up.

Norm Farrar:

People love the customer experience.

Norm Farrar:

And then we had an insert in there that drove them over to a 52, uh,

Norm Farrar:

week meal plan, and we took, we went to culinary schools with it, and

Norm Farrar:

we gave them all these students.

Norm Farrar:

One condition that they give us recipes and they hold up the knife.

Norm Farrar:

And so now we started to get, and all these young guy, I'm an old guy,

Norm Farrar:

everybody's on social media tagging each other with these knives, sharing

Norm Farrar:

these recipes, and he was able to take those recipes with permission.

Norm Farrar:

Put them on Amazon for his user generated content and in Amazon

Norm Farrar:

Post, which is Amazon Social Media.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, which he had one image that had 200,000 impressions.

Norm Farrar:

Wow.

Norm Farrar:

What did that do for his sales?

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. So I'm not gonna go down the, like, that's something else that is really

Norm Farrar:

cool, but you get lots of, um, you can convert very easily using these Amazon

Norm Farrar:

sales, uh, the way that Amazon set it up.

Norm Farrar:

But because he built in this customer experience because, Instead of the

Norm Farrar:

knife, just in a plastic container, you put E Eva foam around it.

Norm Farrar:

So it's a dye cut with an area for your finger to go in to pop

Norm Farrar:

up the knife to make sure that it had this really beautiful sheath.

Norm Farrar:

Now what did he do?

Norm Farrar:

He came out with a multipurpose knife, a pairing knife, a bread knife.

Norm Farrar:

Now the whole, every single one is consistent with the brand.

Norm Farrar:

He's got thousands and thousands and thousands of emails every time

Norm Farrar:

he wants to, uh, sell another.

Norm Farrar:

It's a no brainer.

Norm Farrar:

He can sell it for 10%, send it out there, 10% off, and he's got a ton of people with

Norm Farrar:

his launch because people know the brand.

Norm Farrar:

It's consistent.

Norm Farrar:

So that's a few things.

Norm Farrar:

Now the other thing is safety, so, or the little things I call it.

Norm Farrar:

So I own a soap company.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. And one of the little things that we do is we write an individual note

Norm Farrar:

to every person that buys the soap.

Norm Farrar:

There's lots of soap.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, there's thousands and thousands of orders coming in.

Norm Farrar:

How do you do it?

Norm Farrar:

We don't, We order them from China.

Norm Farrar:

We order our notes and there's, we, they're all generic notes.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. Oh, thanks so much for your soap.

Norm Farrar:

Enjoy your day.

Norm Farrar:

Okay.

Norm Farrar:

20,000 of those come in at a time and you know, it costs us pennies.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, we put them in each order and guess what?

Norm Farrar:

On our reviews.

Norm Farrar:

Oh.

Norm Farrar:

It's such, such a nice personal touch that this company gave us a personalized note.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

You know, making sure, And this is psychological shampoo.

Norm Farrar:

You wanna talk about perceived value again, somebody goes and

Norm Farrar:

they, I don't know about you, but you're reaching for shampoo.

Norm Farrar:

Now, don't make any jokes about hair

Norm Farrar:

I have to wash my beard.

Norm Farrar:

So you're, you got your shampoo and it's got the same cap as your conditioner,

Norm Farrar:

or they're in the same bottle.

Norm Farrar:

Well make one cap different or make the color of the

Norm Farrar:

bottle a little bit different.

Norm Farrar:

So, you know.

Norm Farrar:

Oh, that's the conditioner.

Norm Farrar:

That's the shampoo.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Psychological thing.

Norm Farrar:

Shrink wrap.

Norm Farrar:

You know, just, uh, especially like supplements.

Norm Farrar:

I don't know about you, but nowadays if you don't see that seal or if you don't

Norm Farrar:

see the shrink wrap, you get nervous.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

You get nervous.

Norm Farrar:

So all these little things add up and then, Pricing optimization.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, you, you have to play with that at launch.

Norm Farrar:

I have a trick.

Norm Farrar:

I take a look at that second tier level, and there's lots in between.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, the first and the second, and the second and the third.

Norm Farrar:

But let's say it's that 24 to $44 level.

Norm Farrar:

Is it The second is the second row.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. I give a coupon that shows my, my mine is in the upper side, so let's say it's

Norm Farrar:

$124 that I'm selling it for, and it has dropped a 99, so it's 99 to 1 24.

Norm Farrar:

I'll give a 20 or $30 coupon that could drop it down to the second.

Norm Farrar:

So people look at it and they go, Wow, I can get this high perceived.

Norm Farrar:

So this first tier product, And it's only gonna cost me in that second tier.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, it's, it's a psychological thing, but if you go back to the Dead Sea,

Norm Farrar:

let's say I can get that $95, uh, Dead Sea Mud for $48, I would do it.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

You know, you see the big slash it's 50% off now with the knives, it's

Norm Farrar:

not that much, it's not that big.

Norm Farrar:

A dramatic difference with Thaty mother is.

Matt Edmundson:

That's really

Matt Edmundson:

interesting, Norm.

Matt Edmundson:

So I I, I, I feel like I could listen to your stories all day long.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, you're in essence taking products, which people are selling on Amazon and

Matt Edmundson:

going, How can I add value to this?

Matt Edmundson:

The, the knife was in effect, the same, The, the Dead Sea Mud is in fact the same

Matt Edmundson:

mud in all of the, the, the products.

Matt Edmundson:

But the way you've, the way you've charged it, the way you do it is you're asking

Matt Edmundson:

yourself, Well, how can I improve it?

Matt Edmundson:

How can I modify it?

Matt Edmundson:

How can I increase the perceived value of this?

Matt Edmundson:

And there's a lot of lessons I think to learn here, uh, on that, whether it's

Matt Edmundson:

Amazon or whether it's across eCommerce.

Matt Edmundson:

It's like, um, how can I reinvent this product or what can I add to it?

Matt Edmundson:

And I love that example that you talked about with a knife.

Matt Edmundson:

You know, this one's got a sheath and a nicer box.

Matt Edmundson:

This one's got a wooden box and we've smacked it a little bit with a hammer.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, it's just, it's.

Matt Edmundson:

It's really fa So is, is it the way your brain works?

Matt Edmundson:

Do you just see something on Amazon and instantly know I can increase

Matt Edmundson:

value here by dot, dot, dot.

Norm Farrar:

I think it's the time we take on doing competitive analysis and asking

Norm Farrar:

our manufacturer, we, we had no idea.

Norm Farrar:

That, What the heck is a hammered Damascus knife?

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

I, I've never, you know, heard of it.

Norm Farrar:

We asked them, what can we do different?

Norm Farrar:

And they just happened to have this, Oh, well we have this

Norm Farrar:

knife and we have this knife.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Other same price.

Norm Farrar:

Um, I, this is, um, this is another quick one that I absolutely love.

Norm Farrar:

We had a person approach and say that they, over 18

Norm Farrar:

months, they sold 1000 bucks.

Norm Farrar:

This was to fungus remover.

Norm Farrar:

That's sexy.

Norm Farrar:

to fungus.

Norm Farrar:

Wow.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

Okay.

Norm Farrar:

So yeah, I got excited, uh, . So why wasn't it moving anyways?

Norm Farrar:

Well, I knew why it wasn't moving because the box.

Norm Farrar:

Was powder blue.

Norm Farrar:

Imagine this a powder blue box with a yellow.

Norm Farrar:

It was a yellow circle with a foot with toe fungus.

Norm Farrar:

Okay?

Norm Farrar:

Yellow and underneath it were two yellow drops that looked like it

Norm Farrar:

was oozing out of the toe fungus.

Norm Farrar:

And the logo, you could not read, you couldn't read it if you wanted to,

Norm Farrar:

you could even read what this was for.

Norm Farrar:

So, Then when you opened it up in a cheap tuck box, like a cart stock,

Norm Farrar:

tuck box, these two bottles popped out.

Norm Farrar:

They were brown and they had sort of the same look on these bottles.

Norm Farrar:

They were ugly.

Norm Farrar:

They were absolutely nobody would buy them.

Norm Farrar:

So we said, Okay, this really looks like it's medicinal.

Norm Farrar:

You know, it looks ugly.

Norm Farrar:

It looks like you gotta put your head between your knees and kinda

Norm Farrar:

walk in or head down into a pharmacy.

Norm Farrar:

No, let's turn.

Norm Farrar:

When we did the product research, we found out that the same solution helps

Norm Farrar:

strengthen and beautify your nail.

Norm Farrar:

So now we said, Well, let's make this a wellness and health product.

Norm Farrar:

So we did it, we turned it around and we put it in a white box.

Norm Farrar:

Greens, blues, no feed on it.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

. We put the logo on it and we, you know, and loud and proud.

Norm Farrar:

It was a tofus remover, but, uh, everything was about beauty.

Norm Farrar:

Everything was about be beautiful nails, and it was a sideline

Norm Farrar:

being this tofus remover.

Norm Farrar:

The first month we brought it out and they were in green bottles.

Norm Farrar:

By the way, this time, like really, it was, it looked really beautiful and when

Norm Farrar:

you opened it up, the, the bottle, the, the, We went from top opening up and

Norm Farrar:

kind of shaking it out to opening it up from the side and unveiling the product.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

So there was a message there from the manufacturer, you know, talking

Norm Farrar:

about beautiful nails and how you.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, you know, strengthen these nails on day to day usage.

Norm Farrar:

So that just increased cuz day to day usage is not just when

Norm Farrar:

you have to toenail fungus.

Norm Farrar:

We went the very first month we launched it, it went, uh, to $6,800.

Norm Farrar:

The second month went to 28, the third month went to 68.

Norm Farrar:

67 68, we topped off at $124,000 a month.

Norm Farrar:

Wow.

Norm Farrar:

And then it ran out of inventory.

Norm Farrar:

And this is all 100% because we just changed the perception of the product.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

And.

Norm Farrar:

And it went from the, the, the guy, uh, the manufacturer or the brand owner

Norm Farrar:

refused to allow me to put the price up.

Norm Farrar:

He said, Nobody's going to get over 9 99.

Norm Farrar:

Well, yeah, the product looked great.

Norm Farrar:

If you wanna swim with this horrible looking competitors, go for it.

Norm Farrar:

We went from like, the average price was 9 99.

Norm Farrar:

We took it 24 99.

Norm Farrar:

Oh wow.

Norm Farrar:

And.

Norm Farrar:

The guy made a, a ton of money.

Matt Edmundson:

That's really, yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

And yet another story.

Matt Edmundson:

No.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, of this whole idea of perceived value.

Matt Edmundson:

And I can, I, I can, I know what people are thinking cuz

Matt Edmundson:

I'm thinking the same thing.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm thinking, Oh, I've got some products.

Matt Edmundson:

How do I, how do I increase the value of this?

Matt Edmundson:

Now you talked about doing competitor research.

Matt Edmundson:

Is that where you start?

Matt Edmundson:

Do you start looking around and go, Right, well I've got this product here,

Matt Edmundson:

let me see what everybody else is doing and figure out how I can make this

Matt Edmundson:

better.

Norm Farrar:

Yes, absolutely.

Norm Farrar:

So it's not just on Amazon.

Norm Farrar:

Amazon's a good place to take a look, but, and to make, to

Norm Farrar:

look for different products too.

Norm Farrar:

Don't forget, you've got all these crowdfunding sites.

Norm Farrar:

You've got Sharks Tank, you've got Dragons.

Norm Farrar:

Then you've got, uh, Kickstarter, you've got Indigogo.

Norm Farrar:

You can check those out for really cool products and then improve.

Norm Farrar:

And again, go back and ask the manufacturer or if you've got a

Norm Farrar:

plastic shoe stretcher that everybody else has, figure out how you can

Norm Farrar:

first, if is it a good product?

Norm Farrar:

So if not competitors, see what, what their images are.

Norm Farrar:

See what the competitors are saying.

Norm Farrar:

What are the good things?

Norm Farrar:

What are the bad things?

Norm Farrar:

What are the good things and bad things are they saying about your product?

Norm Farrar:

And try to improve on them.

Norm Farrar:

And that's one thing a lot of people forget every time you put in an.

Norm Farrar:

You should be improving.

Norm Farrar:

You should be evolving the product to be a little bit better each time.

Norm Farrar:

Is it on the packaging?

Norm Farrar:

Oh, the QR code.

Norm Farrar:

Can I do something to grab an email address somehow?

Norm Farrar:

Uh, you know, and that's a, that's such an easy way to grab and maintain a customer.

Norm Farrar:

Getting a new customer is really tough.

Norm Farrar:

Repeat customers are uber easy.

Norm Farrar:

When you say, when you have a, when you drive them over to your website and it's

Norm Farrar:

a, a PDF on something stupid, um, are you gonna, will people nowadays give

Norm Farrar:

up their email or their phone number?

Norm Farrar:

You have to make it something of either an added value, something

Norm Farrar:

that's gonna solve a problem, uh, like.

Norm Farrar:

The knife guy.

Norm Farrar:

Two recipe books that were rock solid.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, um, a weekly meal plan that gets sent to the person every week.

Norm Farrar:

And oh, by the way, this is what's happening.

Norm Farrar:

Oh, here's a recipe.

Norm Farrar:

It's just p Now if we would've just with this, we could have

Norm Farrar:

done, uh, an extended warranty.

Norm Farrar:

Mm-hmm.

Norm Farrar:

, that's okay.

Norm Farrar:

But if you can find something that people want, In exchange for their email address.

Norm Farrar:

Man, that's where I think the stats are.

Norm Farrar:

40, 44% of your sales can come from repeat customers, just on email candidates.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah,

Matt Edmundson:

that would be, I think it would depend on the industry, but

Matt Edmundson:

yeah, I totally agree with you.

Matt Edmundson:

That would be my experience.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

And you can grow more if you look after that customer.

Matt Edmundson:

Well, yeah, definitely.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, totally.

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, we saw our repeat customer rates go through the roof with one of the, with

Matt Edmundson:

my beauty company that we sold last year.

Matt Edmundson:

We saw the repeat order rates go go significantly higher.

Matt Edmundson:

When we took out of the boxes, you know, the big plastic bubbles and like

Matt Edmundson:

the plastic pillows, we took those out because we realized people were a

Matt Edmundson:

bit more sustainably minded and they were buying a gift for themselves.

Matt Edmundson:

So we, we wrapped the whole, the whole order in tissue paper, but the

Matt Edmundson:

packaging material, we took out the plastic bubbles and we put in popcorn.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and it was phenomenal.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and the repeat rates went through, The people were posting pictures

Matt Edmundson:

all on social media just because it had a much more interesting story.

Matt Edmundson:

And so, um, I, I get the, the value of this perceived value norm, you've, you've

Matt Edmundson:

got my, um, you've got my gray matter.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, whatever the official term is now norm, listen, uh, one of the things that

Matt Edmundson:

we touched on before the podcast that I really, I wanted to dig into for at

Matt Edmundson:

least a couple of minutes, cause I'm aware of time here, but, um, you've got

Matt Edmundson:

this mad influencer challenge, uh, going on and, um, just tell the good folks

Matt Edmundson:

what, what this is, what your, what your, what your son's challenged you to.

Matt Edmundson:

All right.

Matt Edmundson:

So there seems to be a lot of stories norm in your life where

Matt Edmundson:

your son said you should do this, and you, you kind of go and do it.

Matt Edmundson:

, Norm Farrar: I, I know, I, I gotta

Matt Edmundson:

the Amazon side, I would consider myself somewhat of an influencer.

Matt Edmundson:

Not the biggest, not the small kind of, you know, Goldilocks right in between.

Matt Edmundson:

Mm-hmm.

Matt Edmundson:

. So I've got a really great following over there, but as a

Matt Edmundson:

buyer, I don't have a single, not a single one follower, not one.

Matt Edmundson:

So that's a problem.

Matt Edmundson:

They told me about becoming an influencer and I said, There's no way

Matt Edmundson:

that I can do just like the podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

It was like, I'm not gonna do a podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

And then I ended up, I ended up liking it.

Matt Edmundson:

One of the things we were talking about is how.

Matt Edmundson:

Influencers or this whole influencer side of things using influencers.

Matt Edmundson:

How do you find them?

Matt Edmundson:

Where do you find them?

Matt Edmundson:

How do you communicate with them is very difficult or it

Matt Edmundson:

looks like it's very difficult.

Matt Edmundson:

I wanna end that.

Matt Edmundson:

I want to go on TikTok.

Matt Edmundson:

It hasn't even started yet, by the way.

Matt Edmundson:

Mm-hmm.

Matt Edmundson:

. But I want go on TikTok.

Matt Edmundson:

I wanna do a video diary just telling people this is what I did today,

Matt Edmundson:

this is what I'm doing the next day.

Matt Edmundson:

This is, and just keep going.

Matt Edmundson:

365 days showing people exactly.

Matt Edmundson:

What I did, how I did it, and to grow the base.

Matt Edmundson:

But while I'm doing that, this is the stupid part.

Matt Edmundson:

I am becoming an influencer with no following.

Matt Edmundson:

I am going out there doing the video diary and saying, Hey, if

Matt Edmundson:

you wanna become an influencer, everybody's becoming an influencer.

Matt Edmundson:

Everybody's got a podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

All right, so now on the influencer.

Matt Edmundson:

It was tough to get an Amazon or affiliate account.

Matt Edmundson:

It was confusing.

Matt Edmundson:

Maybe it's just cuz I'm old, but then the influencer side and you know,

Matt Edmundson:

getting, getting to be approved.

Matt Edmundson:

What did I need?

Matt Edmundson:

What did I not need?

Matt Edmundson:

What was the equipment that I needed?

Matt Edmundson:

I had to build a studio just right over there.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, that's different than the broadcast studio.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, what do we need for.

Matt Edmundson:

All the problems, all the hurdles that are happening and, alright, so

Matt Edmundson:

they challenged me to go from zero to a hundred thousand followers.

Matt Edmundson:

So what I need to do is I need, I took the challenge up and I said

Matt Edmundson:

like, I got nothing else to do.

Matt Edmundson:

. Yeah, I'm going to become an Amazon influencer.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm gonna go on TikTok, I'm gonna do Facebook, I'm gonna

Matt Edmundson:

do YouTube, and I need product.

Matt Edmundson:

Anybody, include anybody who's listening if you want free of charge.

Matt Edmundson:

So I'm waiving set of fees.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm not doing this.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm doing it more of a challenge.

Matt Edmundson:

Set up fees, video production fees, uh, photo fees.

Matt Edmundson:

If I write content, it's all waived.

Matt Edmundson:

It's free.

Matt Edmundson:

We're just doing it, and I'm just doing it all like every, every night or on

Matt Edmundson:

the weekend, I'm just doing videos and videos and videos and hopeful.

Matt Edmundson:

People like what I'm doing and they see the products and they give me a

Matt Edmundson:

follow, or they put me into a group that want to get deals and I, you

Matt Edmundson:

know, pick up some followers that way.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, that's my challenge.

Matt Edmundson:

So it's called Lunch with Norm deals, uh, you'll be seeing it

Matt Edmundson:

more the, the web, the actual.

Matt Edmundson:

Is gonna be launching probably next week.

Matt Edmundson:

Okay.

Matt Edmundson:

I just started going on to Amazon Live and we're planning the TikTok video

Matt Edmundson:

journal, uh, probably starting next week.

Matt Edmundson:

Wow.

Matt Edmundson:

So by the time this podcast comes out, that will in theory be all

Matt Edmundson:

live and so people can go and follow you and connect with you and,

Matt Edmundson:

and see what the hell's going on.

Norm Farrar:

Yeah.

Norm Farrar:

And oh, I should mention the only thing.

Norm Farrar:

So it is not like there's a, a string attached, but we are charging if

Norm Farrar:

there, it's all performance based.

Norm Farrar:

So if you get no sales and you just get, you know, a video out of it, that's fine.

Norm Farrar:

But if you do get sales, we charge 10%.

Norm Farrar:

And the reason we're absorbing all the charges for any paid

Norm Farrar:

advertising, any, anything.

Norm Farrar:

So my focus is building up this challenge.

Norm Farrar:

We're not, and this isn't a course.

Norm Farrar:

It's, This is strictly a challenge that I'm trying to do

Norm Farrar:

to see if I can, I can do it.

Norm Farrar:

That's, it.

Matt Edmundson:

Sounds fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm, I'm gonna be following along.

Matt Edmundson:

Norm, I'll be one of your followers.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, I'll be, I'll be commenting in there.

Matt Edmundson:

No problem.

Matt Edmundson:

All right, great.

Matt Edmundson:

That sounds great.

Matt Edmundson:

So, Norm, listen, you know, uh, this show is sponsored by

Matt Edmundson:

the eCommerce cohort, right?

Matt Edmundson:

Which is all about using coaching and peer mentoring to deliver eCommerce well.

Matt Edmundson:

So I want you to imagine you are stood in a room full of cohorts.

Matt Edmundson:

You've just delivered your.

Matt Edmundson:

Beach.

Matt Edmundson:

You've show, you've told your stories, you've shown photographs

Matt Edmundson:

of the Dead Sea mud and the lives and all that sort of stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

The Crowd is giving you a stand innovation.

Matt Edmundson:

It's going wild.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Going on.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and you're, you're up there and you go, Well actually, uh, I'm here

Matt Edmundson:

thankfully because of dot, dot, dot.

Matt Edmundson:

And so you get a chance to thank, uh, those folks who have

Matt Edmundson:

had a big impact on your life.

Matt Edmundson:

You know, family, mentors, authors, software, podcasters, et cetera.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm curious to know who is on the list of people you are thanking and.

Norm Farrar:

Prob outside of family out, probably the number

Norm Farrar:

one, and I highly recommend this.

Norm Farrar:

Always trying to improve.

Norm Farrar:

So the biggest improvement, the biggest group of people that I

Norm Farrar:

can thank is something called eo.

Norm Farrar:

It's an association that I, I, 27 years ago I got involved with.

Norm Farrar:

They're still around.

Norm Farrar:

They're a big organization where you have a monthly meeting,

Norm Farrar:

but then you have a forum.

Norm Farrar:

, our farm group still meets 27 years later.

Norm Farrar:

Wow.

Norm Farrar:

And it's like your board of advisors.

Norm Farrar:

So if something comes up, if you have a problem, they will help you out.

Norm Farrar:

Um, and also just the absolute knowledge and meeting people.

Norm Farrar:

They have universities, they call universities that you go to

Norm Farrar:

different cities and you learn, uh, from other business people.

Norm Farrar:

Um, just how to operate your business and run your business properly.

Norm Farrar:

So that's, that's.

Norm Farrar:

That's one.

Norm Farrar:

But within the group, I mean, just there's so many people, so many

Norm Farrar:

individuals that I've been able to, to meet and talk to and expand.

Norm Farrar:

You are who you hang around with, you know?

Norm Farrar:

Absolutely.

Norm Farrar:

People talk together and I got to meet so many people.

Norm Farrar:

So the, that's probably my number one.

Norm Farrar:

If I was gonna thank anybody, it's, uh, entrepreneurial organization.

Norm Farrar:

It's called e.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, I love those sort of coaching mentoring groups that have been around

Matt Edmundson:

for a while and you know each other well.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and you know, each other's got your back.

Matt Edmundson:

That's just brilliant.

Matt Edmundson:

That's fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Listen, Norm, it's been an absolute pleasure.

Matt Edmundson:

Honestly, I've loved hearing your stories.

Matt Edmundson:

I feel like I've got, you know, a thousand more questions.

Matt Edmundson:

I'd love to pick your brains on it some more, some time.

Matt Edmundson:

But for now, uh, because of time, how do people reach you?

Matt Edmundson:

How do people connect with you if they want to do so?

Norm Farrar:

Well, uh, I'll make it really easy.

Norm Farrar:

Norm at amz, like amazon amz.club, not.com or that would be going to Amazon.

Norm Farrar:

So Norm@AMZ.Club.

Norm Farrar:

amz.club.

Norm Farrar:

And of course if you are from the UK that's amz.club true

Norm Farrar:

uh, which is how the Queen would say it.

Norm Farrar:

Uh, well, had, sorry.

Norm Farrar:

That's how she would've said.

Norm Farrar:

That's probably slightly disrespectful now, uh, being the Queen's English.

Norm Farrar:

So Norm, thank you so much for joining us.

Norm Farrar:

We will of course, uh, put Norm's email in the show notes along with a

Norm Farrar:

link to his podcast, uh, which you.

Norm Farrar:

For free, along with a transcript, e-commerce podcast.net, or if

Norm Farrar:

you'll subscribe to the email, it will come direct to your inbox,

Norm Farrar:

uh, at some point this week.

Norm Farrar:

Yes, it will.

Norm Farrar:

So, uh, Norm, listen seriously, man, really appreciate it.

Norm Farrar:

It's been great getting to know you, uh, to connect both on

Norm Farrar:

your podcast and on this one.

Norm Farrar:

It's been an absolute treat and an absolute pleasure.

Norm Farrar:

Thank you so, so much for coming onto.

Norm Farrar:

Oh, you're very welcome.

Norm Farrar:

And we gotta get you back on lunch with Norm.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, well, we'll be doing this again.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm sure we'll be going back and forth.

Matt Edmundson:

It won't be the first time or the last time rather.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, so there you have it.

Matt Edmundson:

What a phenomenal conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Again, huge thanks to Norm for joining me today, and also a

Matt Edmundson:

big shout out to today's show.

Matt Edmundson:

Sponsor the e-commerce cohort.

Matt Edmundson:

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

Matt Edmundson:

type of e-commerce community you.

Matt Edmundson:

Join, Be sure to follow the e-commerce podcast wherever you get your podcast

Matt Edmundson:

from because we've got yet more great shows, more great conversations

Matt Edmundson:

lined up, and I definitely don't want you to miss any of them.

Matt Edmundson:

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

Matt Edmundson:

Yes you are.

Matt Edmundson:

It's just a burden.

Matt Edmundson:

You have to bear it.

Matt Edmundson:

Norm has to bear it.

Matt Edmundson:

I have to bear.

Matt Edmundson:

You've gotta bear it.

Matt Edmundson:

We may as well just suck it up and get on with it.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, the eCommerce podcast is produced by Orion 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 Josh Edmundson and My Good Self.

Matt Edmundson:

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

Matt Edmundson:

notes, head over to the website eCommercepodcast.net where you can also.

Matt Edmundson:

For the weekly newsletter and get all of this good stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

Direct your inbox totally for free.

Matt Edmundson:

That is it from me and that is it from Norm for this week.

Matt Edmundson:

Thank you so much for joining us.

Matt Edmundson:

Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world, I'll see you next time.

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