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Quit Stalling and Build Your eCommerce Brand with Ben Leonard
Episode 17616th May 2024 • eCommerce Podcast • Matt Edmundson
00:00:00 00:47:37

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Welcome to our Podcast episode with Ben Leonard, the visionary behind the fab eCommerce book "Quit Stalling and Build Your Brand." In this episode as we explore Ben's journey from ideation to a successful exit, accumulating a wealth of knowledge and actionable insights along the way.

In This Episode, You’ll Discover:

  1. The Pitfalls of Fake Gurus: Understand why real-world experience trumps theoretical knowledge in the eCommerce landscape.
  2. The Art of Building a Brand vs. Selling Products: Ben Leonard dissects the crucial differences and why focusing on brand building can be a game-changer for your business.
  3. A Simplified Definition of Brand: Ben shares a compelling definition that cuts through the complexity to highlight what truly matters in branding.
  4. The Role of Emotions in Branding: Discover the importance of making your customers feel a certain way about your brand and the lasting impact it can create.
  5. Practical Advice from Ben’s Journey: Ben doesn’t just share theory; he gives practical advice from his own experiences in building and selling Beast Gear, including achieving $6 million in annual revenue and a mid-seven-figure exit.

My Thoughts about Ben's Book:

  • A firsthand account of why "Quit Stalling and Build Your eCommerce Brand" is a must-read for anyone serious about making their mark in the eCommerce world.
  • Why this book stands out in a sea of generic advice and how it can serve as a roadmap for both budding entrepreneurs and established business owners.

Join us in this episode as Ben Leonard unravels the essence of what it takes to build a brand that resonates deeply with your target audience, transcending mere transactions to create a legacy in the eCommerce space.

Transcripts

Matt Edmundson:

Hello and welcome to the eCommerce Podcast with

Matt Edmundson:

me, your host, Matt Edmundson.

Matt Edmundson:

This is a show all about helping you deliver eCommerce wow.

Matt Edmundson:

And to help us do just that, today we're chatting with the legendary

Matt Edmundson:

Ben Leonard, a regular on the show, about his brand new book.

Matt Edmundson:

This book here, if you're watching the video "Quit

Matt Edmundson:

Stalling and Build Your Brand."

Matt Edmundson:

You don't need an MBA to crush it in eCommerce is the title of the book.

Matt Edmundson:

Got some amazing reviews on Amazon already, even in its launch phase.

Matt Edmundson:

So we're going to be getting into it.

Matt Edmundson:

All of that.

Matt Edmundson:

Grab your notebooks.

Matt Edmundson:

Now, before we do, let me just remind you to sign up to the email newsletter

Matt Edmundson:

if you haven't done so already, and we will email you the show notes,

Matt Edmundson:

the links, all the guest links, all the stuff that they mention.

Matt Edmundson:

Like today, we'll send you a link to Ben, his book, and all that sort of good stuff

Matt Edmundson:

straight to your inbox, totally for free.

Matt Edmundson:

All you've got to do is head over to ecommercepodcast.

Matt Edmundson:

net.

Matt Edmundson:

Fill out the little form.

Matt Edmundson:

And we'll send that to you every week.

Matt Edmundson:

And of course, if this is your first week with us, a very warm welcome to you.

Matt Edmundson:

I've been saying this the last few weeks, actually on, on the podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

I am really stoked about all the new people joining the show

Matt Edmundson:

subscribing and downloading.

Matt Edmundson:

There's a slight ego boost because we like bigger numbers, but it's just good.

Matt Edmundson:

It's just good that so many more people are connecting with us and

Matt Edmundson:

getting more stuff out of this.

Matt Edmundson:

So if you are new to the show, a very warm welcome to you.

Matt Edmundson:

It's great that you're here.

Matt Edmundson:

Do connect with me on LinkedIn or social media.

Matt Edmundson:

You'll find me through the website.

Matt Edmundson:

And just let me know what you think, because we're just generally interested.

Matt Edmundson:

Now today we're diving into the riveting world of online entrepreneurship with a

Matt Edmundson:

guest who doesn't just talk the talk, no, but he walks the walk and occasionally has

Matt Edmundson:

stumbled a few times a bit like myself.

Matt Edmundson:

Now joining us.

Matt Edmundson:

eCommerce is the illustrious, the legendary, the one, the only Ben Leonard

Matt Edmundson:

the mastermind behind the insightful book"Quit Stalling and Build Your Brand."

Matt Edmundson:

With a journey that includes navigating the treacherous waters of eCommerce

Matt Edmundson:

and has achieved a staggering six million in annual revenue himself

Matt Edmundson:

and a mid sev mid seven figure exit.

Matt Edmundson:

The dream.

Matt Edmundson:

Now Ben is here to share.

Matt Edmundson:

Here's pearls of wisdom, sprinkled with a dash of humor and a

Matt Edmundson:

truckload of practical advice.

Matt Edmundson:

I love this bio, Ben.

Matt Edmundson:

So grab your favorite brew, lean in, grab a notebook, grab a pen

Matt Edmundson:

and let's chat to the man himself.

Matt Edmundson:

Ben, welcome to the show, man.

Matt Edmundson:

How are you doing?

Ben Leonard:

It's good to be here.

Ben Leonard:

I didn't write that, but I'll take it.

Ben Leonard:

Yeah, good to be here.

Ben Leonard:

Thanks, Matt.

Matt Edmundson:

No problem at all.

Matt Edmundson:

No, it's it's great because the bio is one of those things that

Matt Edmundson:

sort of gets put onto my system.

Matt Edmundson:

And I sit usually when I'm, when I do the intro on the podcast like I just have

Matt Edmundson:

with you, it's the first time I see it.

Matt Edmundson:

Which is why I giggled to myself.

Matt Edmundson:

'cause I just think this, these things are so well written by the production team.

Matt Edmundson:

It's really cool.

Matt Edmundson:

Anyway, we're here.

Matt Edmundson:

Whereabouts in the world are you?

Matt Edmundson:

For those that dunno.

Ben Leonard:

I am in Aberdeen, in North East Scotland, and today I really am

Ben Leonard:

in Aberdeen, because as we were just saying off air I've had to come somewhere

Ben Leonard:

different today, because they're digging up the road outside my house, but

Ben Leonard:

usually I live in a nice little town about twenty miles south of Aberdeen.

Matt Edmundson:

And is it, at the time of recording, it's what,

Matt Edmundson:

it's the, it's February 12th.

Matt Edmundson:

And we've got little breaks in the crowd clouds here, crowds,

Matt Edmundson:

little breaks in the crowds.

Matt Edmundson:

So the sunshine's breaking through, the skies are blue.

Matt Edmundson:

What's it like up, very up north?

Ben Leonard:

Similar, but today is one of the first days

Ben Leonard:

I can actually see blue sky.

Ben Leonard:

It's been miserable up here.

Ben Leonard:

It's normally, if there's any Americans listening to this, we are

Ben Leonard:

like fulfilling, like the absolute British stereotype, aren't we?

Ben Leonard:

Because we're chatting about the weather,

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah,

Ben Leonard:

but but it, yeah it's been pretty, pretty rubbish this winter.

Ben Leonard:

So I'm looking forward to to spring and summer for sure.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, no doubt.

Matt Edmundson:

No doubt.

Matt Edmundson:

You can't actually get much further north, can you?

Matt Edmundson:

There are still places you can go further up from Aberdeen, but not

Matt Edmundson:

many when you think about the British Isles and how far up you can go.

Matt Edmundson:

So I, my son's he's at uni at St Andrews.

Matt Edmundson:

And ah, a stunning, beautiful place, on the coast there, just amazing.

Matt Edmundson:

But I'm never envious of the weather he has to deal with being in that place.

Matt Edmundson:

When it's beautiful and sunny, it is stunning, but when it's grey and

Matt Edmundson:

cold, man, is it grey and cold, right?

Ben Leonard:

Yeah.

Ben Leonard:

Correct.

Ben Leonard:

Yeah.

Ben Leonard:

It could be worse.

Ben Leonard:

It could be on the west coast where it just rains all the time.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, that's true.

Matt Edmundson:

That's very true.

Matt Edmundson:

Anyway, weather over.

Matt Edmundson:

We're just bringing you the weather update, courtesy of

Matt Edmundson:

your local weather service.

Matt Edmundson:

Let's talk about the, we've had you on the show a couple of times.

Matt Edmundson:

We've talked about buying and selling businesses, eCom businesses, we know you

Matt Edmundson:

involved in brokerage and stuff like that, but for some reason one day you obviously

Matt Edmundson:

woke up and thought, my life's not complicated enough I need to deepen the

Matt Edmundson:

complexity and the emotional heartbreak of my life and decide to write a book.

Matt Edmundson:

What was that all about?

Ben Leonard:

Yeah.

Ben Leonard:

The book came out October 2023, and it took me about 18 months to write,

Ben Leonard:

so in Spring of 22, I finally pulled the trigger on writing it, and I'd had

Ben Leonard:

the idea brewing away for probably 18 months, 2 years before that, but the

Ben Leonard:

thing that made me pull the trigger was this, it was Spring 2022, I was

Ben Leonard:

sitting at an eCommerce conference.

Ben Leonard:

It was a packed room, and this bloke on stage was mesmerizing the audience.

Ben Leonard:

And I took a step back, metaphorically speaking, and took my attention

Ben Leonard:

away from him and looked around the room at everybody else.

Ben Leonard:

And they were fixated on him, reading, reading his lips, listening

Ben Leonard:

to everything he had to say, eating out the palm of his hand.

Ben Leonard:

And here's the thing that kind of got to me, was this guy, everything he was

Ben Leonard:

saying was okay, most, basically correct.

Ben Leonard:

It wasn't all that special, and there was no evidence of

Ben Leonard:

anything he had actually done.

Ben Leonard:

It was all theory, and smoke and mirrors, you could do this, you could do that.

Ben Leonard:

And I've actually done a bit more digging on this guy, and I think

Ben Leonard:

he's a fake guru, to be honest.

Ben Leonard:

And I thought, it's time to come out of stealth mode.

Ben Leonard:

And write a valuable book for eCommerce business owners or indeed would be

Ben Leonard:

eCommerce business owners that actually shows people, yes, here's everything

Ben Leonard:

you can do, and here's what I did.

Ben Leonard:

I think that there was space for that.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Ben Leonard:

And I just felt like I had a book in me.

Ben Leonard:

I wrote it.

Matt Edmundson:

on you.

Matt Edmundson:

Good on you.

Matt Edmundson:

I love this.

Matt Edmundson:

I've come across this so many times, Ben, where people will go to

Matt Edmundson:

people for, eCommerce entrepreneurs.

Matt Edmundson:

So you're running an eCommerce business, or you're thinking about

Matt Edmundson:

setting one up and you're going to go and get some advice from somebody.

Matt Edmundson:

And the people you get advice from have rarely run.

Matt Edmundson:

Their own eCommerce business themselves.

Matt Edmundson:

And it used to be years ago the trend is slightly different now, I think

Matt Edmundson:

with social media, but it used to be that if you wanted to know something

Matt Edmundson:

about eCommerce, you would go and talk to your web designer, you'd go and

Matt Edmundson:

talk to your web development company and it's be like hang on a minute.

Matt Edmundson:

Have they ever actually ran an eCommerce business?

Matt Edmundson:

Have they ever gone and picked and packed boxes?

Matt Edmundson:

Have they ever had to deal with stock shortages?

Matt Edmundson:

Do they know how to do customer service?

Matt Edmundson:

And it always used to intrigue me that we would, as eCommerce as we would go

Matt Edmundson:

and seek advice from people that hadn't actually walked the walk or talk the

Matt Edmundson:

talk, mainly because I think there was a lack of people that had at that point.

Matt Edmundson:

There are a few people that are emerging now.

Matt Edmundson:

Yourself being one of them.

Matt Edmundson:

And.

Matt Edmundson:

So I'm really stoked you've written a book from a point of view of this

Matt Edmundson:

is what I did, this is what I would do again kind of thing because

Matt Edmundson:

it's not just all theory, is it?

Matt Edmundson:

This is actual practical in the trenches kind of stuff, as I like to call it.

Ben Leonard:

Yeah, it, what I've tried to create is a roadmap from

Ben Leonard:

idea all the way through to exit.

Ben Leonard:

With strategies that are timeless.

Ben Leonard:

So it's not, the minutiae and the nitty gritty technical of build a

Ben Leonard:

landing page using this tool, right?

Ben Leonard:

Because that's gonna go outta date in five months.

Ben Leonard:

I want it to be useful in five, 10 years.

Ben Leonard:

And what I've tried to create.

Ben Leonard:

Are these timeless business principles but applied to our world of eCommerce?

Ben Leonard:

Whether you are somebody who has an idea and hasn't started yet, or you're

Ben Leonard:

already turning over, 7, 8, 9, 15 million, whatever it is, I believe that

Ben Leonard:

there's nuggets in there for everybody.

Ben Leonard:

So that's what I've set out to create.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, and a cracking job you've done too.

Matt Edmundson:

I remember when you sent me the first chapter of the book, you said, I'm

Matt Edmundson:

going to write a book, here's the first chapter, what do you think?

Matt Edmundson:

I think I sent my, I can't remember what I said exactly, but something

Matt Edmundson:

along the lines of, I thought actually you were writing really well.

Matt Edmundson:

Because the thing that I've noticed is a lot of people who write

Matt Edmundson:

books don't always have the skill to write, if that makes sense.

Matt Edmundson:

And I think the way you do write and the way you tell your stories and the

Matt Edmundson:

way you get the points across in the book is actually quite captivating.

Matt Edmundson:

And so you've in effect become the proverbial guy on the stage, haven't you?

Matt Edmundson:

Which is which is memorize you're, and you're mesmerizing,

Matt Edmundson:

I think was the word you used.

Matt Edmundson:

But obviously you're not the fake guru.

Matt Edmundson:

At least I hope you're not.

Matt Edmundson:

I don't think

Ben Leonard:

I'm trying I'm definitely not a guru.

Ben Leonard:

But thanks.

Ben Leonard:

I have an unfair advantage because I have a background in academia,

Ben Leonard:

very different science, right?

Ben Leonard:

I studied zoology and then ecology.

Ben Leonard:

So I was always good at writing scientific reports and that, that

Ben Leonard:

type of writing, which obviously is not what's in the book, but.

Ben Leonard:

Once you're half decent at any kind of writing, you can tweak.

Ben Leonard:

And of course, I had, I then had the book edited, right?

Ben Leonard:

We would take my pretty good writing and basically make it better so that it's in

Ben Leonard:

a state that people people can digest.

Ben Leonard:

So the editing process basically took my half decent writing and made

Ben Leonard:

sure that we translated it from British English into American English.

Matt Edmundson:

Especially if you want to sell to an international market, right?

Ben Leonard:

oh, yeah and we would take, it's hilarious because my editor

Ben Leonard:

would be like and what does this phrase mean and I'd have some ridiculously

Ben Leonard:

quaint British phrase in there and she'd be like yeah, no one knows what that

Ben Leonard:

means so we'd translate it so That was

Matt Edmundson:

We should maybe do that on this show.

Matt Edmundson:

We should maybe have an AI filter that does it in real time.

Matt Edmundson:

This is what Matt said.

Matt Edmundson:

This is what Matt means a thing.

Ben Leonard:

Yeah.

Ben Leonard:

Yeah.

Ben Leonard:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh, that's brilliant.

Matt Edmundson:

He had to get it edited to the American English.

Matt Edmundson:

We totally off track, totally off piste Ben, but one of the things that I've

Matt Edmundson:

been married 26 years this year, right?

Matt Edmundson:

And people often ask me, what, why have you been so happily married for so long?

Matt Edmundson:

It's one of the, the big questions I get asked quite regular.

Matt Edmundson:

And I remember very early on in our relationship, Sharon and

Matt Edmundson:

I read the book, Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus, okay?

Matt Edmundson:

Which is, if you've never read it, it's a fascinating book,

Matt Edmundson:

I can summarize it for you.

Matt Edmundson:

Because there's a fair bit of waffling, but it's a good book.

Matt Edmundson:

But in essence, the best bit of the book was, the concept was men are from

Matt Edmundson:

Mars, women are from Venus, therefore we talk very different languages, right?

Matt Edmundson:

And so what the man says was in, he had this page, what the man said, what

Matt Edmundson:

the man means and what the woman hears.

Matt Edmundson:

All three things were different, right?

Matt Edmundson:

And then they did the same for the women.

Matt Edmundson:

What the woman says, what the woman means, what the man hears.

Matt Edmundson:

And so this was very good for me because it was like data

Matt Edmundson:

that I could feel into my brain.

Matt Edmundson:

So when Sharon said something, I would run it through this algorithm in my head

Matt Edmundson:

and she would just look at me and go, Oh, you're translating right now, aren't you?

Matt Edmundson:

And I go, yes, I am.

Matt Edmundson:

So then we'd have conversations about it, which was just great.

Matt Edmundson:

But I love the fact that you're actually doing this.

Matt Edmundson:

Americans are from America, British people are from England,

Matt Edmundson:

and we need to translate.

Ben Leonard:

Pretty much.

Ben Leonard:

Yeah.

Ben Leonard:

Yeah.

Ben Leonard:

But it's important when you think about it, just from, most of the quote unquote

Ben Leonard:

target audience are probably either in the U S or Canada or are from elsewhere in the

Ben Leonard:

world, but have learned American English.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Ben Leonard:

The only thing that will be interesting is when I record

Ben Leonard:

the audiobook, which I haven't done yet, and I'm reading things back,

Ben Leonard:

and I'm saying cell phone, and hating myself for not saying mobile phone.

Matt Edmundson:

ha.

Matt Edmundson:

Maybe you just have to do an anglicized version, I don't know.

Ben Leonard:

I might have to do it, yeah.

Ben Leonard:

Translate it back.

Matt Edmundson:

So one of the good things I like about your American English

Matt Edmundson:

book here and this is one of those things that people would never know.

Matt Edmundson:

But for someone like me, it's brilliant because as you can see on the screen if

Matt Edmundson:

you're watching the video, the book has really quite nice margins and it's got

Matt Edmundson:

a little bit of space between the stack.

Matt Edmundson:

I don't know if this was deliberate, but it means that I can underline

Matt Edmundson:

and which is I'd like to do in books.

Matt Edmundson:

I like to draw around things.

Matt Edmundson:

I like to make notes in the margin.

Matt Edmundson:

So just thank you for that because that's actually quite helpful.

Matt Edmundson:

The wide margins, the one thing that people never think about, but

Matt Edmundson:

it's actually really important.

Ben Leonard:

And you know what's quite interesting is when I look

Ben Leonard:

at the sales I thought that most sales would come through Kindle

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Ben Leonard:

it's 2024, right?

Ben Leonard:

But still, paperback is still winning.

Ben Leonard:

So it goes paperback, then Kindle, then hardback.

Ben Leonard:

So hopefully plenty of people have got lots of notes in the margins.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Absolutely.

Matt Edmundson:

Absolutely.

Matt Edmundson:

So let me let's dig into the book a little bit and let me just start by

Matt Edmundson:

saying there was this bit right at the start, which I thought was great.

Matt Edmundson:

In the sense that you said, That you were telling the story about when because

Matt Edmundson:

you used to own run a company called Beast Gear right and you're telling the

Matt Edmundson:

story about how You're watching the TV.

Matt Edmundson:

What was it you get a text message don't you that's it your cell

Matt Edmundson:

phone It's a very first sentence in the book my cell phone pinged

Matt Edmundson:

It was an

Ben Leonard:

Before they translated that, I'd probably written, somebody texted me.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, somebody texted me, it was an acquaintance texting.

Matt Edmundson:

Isn't this your mouthguard?

Matt Edmundson:

Curious, I opened the text and saw what appeared to be a photo of his TV screen.

Matt Edmundson:

I looked more closely, it was a freeze frame from that night's fight.

Matt Edmundson:

The MMA fighter was grinning widely and he was obviously wearing your mouthguard

Matt Edmundson:

and there is, beast gear on there.

Matt Edmundson:

And so you talk about that and you say that this was the moment I knew

Matt Edmundson:

I had arrived as an entrepreneur.

Matt Edmundson:

And here's the best line in the whole book.

Matt Edmundson:

I already knew that Liverpool Football Club used my products.

Matt Edmundson:

Now I'm saying that just because I'm a big Liverpool football club

Matt Edmundson:

fan and I thought that's brilliant.

Ben Leonard:

Thanks.

Ben Leonard:

I didn't, and again, that, the funny thing about that is, so the MMA

Ben Leonard:

fighter there, he used a mouth guard.

Ben Leonard:

His name was Michael "Venom" Page.

Ben Leonard:

I had no commercial relationship with him.

Ben Leonard:

He chose my product.

Ben Leonard:

And the same with Liverpool.

Ben Leonard:

So I found out that they were using my products in their gym.

Ben Leonard:

And then I saw, they'd had some photo shoot done, I think I don't know.

Ben Leonard:

It was Virgil van Dijk was coming back from injury and so somebody went into

Ben Leonard:

their gym with a camera and was in the press and there were B-Skill's products

Ben Leonard:

in there and I could see them and Joe Hart was at Man City at the time and

Ben Leonard:

he'd been posting pictures on Instagram of my stuff as well so I had all these

Ben Leonard:

athletes using my stuff and most of these were not actually commercial

Ben Leonard:

relationships and that was yeah, that was a weird but phenomenal feeling.

Matt Edmundson:

It's a bit, weird but phenomenal, but it's, I mean it's almost

Matt Edmundson:

like, how can I, it's almost like the holy grail, isn't it, that we try and attain,

Matt Edmundson:

we spend hours plotting and planning how can we get celebrities to use our

Matt Edmundson:

products, now we've got endorsements, we've got influencer marketing, we've got

Matt Edmundson:

all that sort of stuff, and yet somehow.

Matt Edmundson:

You've got all these people using your products.

Matt Edmundson:

There's no commercial arrangement, but there's photographs of

Matt Edmundson:

it all over social media.

Matt Edmundson:

That to me seems like an absolute gold mine in a lot of ways.

Matt Edmundson:

We, like I say, we try and achieve that kind of thing, but was that luck?

Matt Edmundson:

Was that happenstance?

Matt Edmundson:

Was that planned?

Matt Edmundson:

Was that something that you deliberately set out to do?

Ben Leonard:

I think that it definitely, it was probably none of those, so In the

Ben Leonard:

sense that it wasn't really luck because you make your own luck, like you had to,

Ben Leonard:

for those people to use those products, you had to have a quality product in the

Ben Leonard:

first place, and they had to have heard about it, and they've heard about it

Ben Leonard:

because it's a quality product, and you've marketed it well, and it markets itself

Ben Leonard:

well because it's a quality product,

Matt Edmundson:

yeah,

Ben Leonard:

and then it shows up on their radar and they start using your

Ben Leonard:

products I certainly didn't set out I always wanted to create a brand that

Ben Leonard:

people would use and that hopefully athletes would use and from the start,

Ben Leonard:

I did work with, I did have commercial relationships with, influencers and

Ben Leonard:

athletes, but at a much lower level, I wasn't getting on the Bellator MMA,

Ben Leonard:

primetime TV or anything like that.

Ben Leonard:

But I think once you If you're setting out to build a legit consumer products

Ben Leonard:

brand rather than just sell stuff on the internet, You've got to almost

Ben Leonard:

have an unrealistic goal, if you like, that's always going to keep

Ben Leonard:

pulling you in the right direction

Ben Leonard:

For instance in, there's a part in the book where I'm talking about something

Ben Leonard:

called brand DNA I talk about the vision for your brand, which is a statement of

Ben Leonard:

Where you're going as a result of your brand's purpose and for B Skier, the

Ben Leonard:

vision was to become the go to brand A fitness slash strength training equipment.

Ben Leonard:

And if you read that and you think about that and that's completely unrealistic.

Ben Leonard:

Some bloke running a relatively small eCommerce business become

Ben Leonard:

the go to fitness training brand.

Ben Leonard:

No, it's never going to happen.

Ben Leonard:

It doesn't matter.

Ben Leonard:

It's not the point.

Ben Leonard:

It's a, an aim for the moon and you'll land in the stars kind of scenario.

Ben Leonard:

It's gotta be something that's just going to pull you constantly

Ben Leonard:

in the right direction.

Matt Edmundson:

yeah, nah, super, and actually let's dig in this a

Matt Edmundson:

little bit more because one, there's a sort of theme in the book, this

Matt Edmundson:

sort of golden thread, one of the golden threads that comes through is

Matt Edmundson:

This differential you have between building a brand versus just selling

Matt Edmundson:

stuff online and selling more stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

And it's even in the title, quick stall and build your brand.

Matt Edmundson:

It's not quit stalling and sell loads of stuff online, right?

Matt Edmundson:

There's a real intentionality here in the title, I'm assuming.

Matt Edmundson:

What?

Matt Edmundson:

Let's talk about that a little bit.

Matt Edmundson:

Why?

Matt Edmundson:

Why do you make that distinction?

Matt Edmundson:

I agree with it, by the way, I just want to point that I'm not

Matt Edmundson:

being awkward from the start.

Matt Edmundson:

But I'm just curious, why did you?

Matt Edmundson:

Why is that such a key distinction for you?

Ben Leonard:

I think that unfortunately in the eCommerce space, there Is this

Ben Leonard:

toxic side hustle culture that is being promoted through social media, YouTube,

Ben Leonard:

et cetera, of Hey, you can make money online all you have to do is drop ship

Ben Leonard:

and set up a Shopify website to do it, or sell on Amazon, or sell on Walmart,

Ben Leonard:

or, now it's sell on TikTok shop.

Ben Leonard:

All of those channels are absolutely fine, but if you want to actually build

Ben Leonard:

a real sustainable business that's going to last into the future, that you can be

Ben Leonard:

proud of, that's really going to generate a decent amount of money that can replace

Ben Leonard:

your income, and eventually you can sell for potentially life changing money.

Ben Leonard:

You've got to treat it like a big boy grown up a business

Ben Leonard:

and treat it like a real brand.

Ben Leonard:

And the way I encourage people to think about it is, ask yourselves how your

Ben Leonard:

favorite brands look and feel and behave.

Ben Leonard:

So that could be like a brand related to one of your favorite

Ben Leonard:

hobbies, or your day job, or even the food products in your cupboard.

Ben Leonard:

What do those brands do?

Ben Leonard:

First of all, they make you feel a certain way.

Ben Leonard:

And that could be, they make you feel, it could be a brand that

Ben Leonard:

makes you feel very calm, or a brand that makes you feel very excited.

Ben Leonard:

It could be that you're fiercely loyal about that brand, to the

Ben Leonard:

point that you'll have that brand's logo tattooed on your leg.

Ben Leonard:

For instance, if you're a Harley Davidson fan, or a Nintendo

Ben Leonard:

fan, or whatever it might be.

Ben Leonard:

And then ask yourself, what is it that those brands do to make me feel that way.

Ben Leonard:

And that is all to do with how they position their products, how

Ben Leonard:

they position their brand and how they speak to you through their

Ben Leonard:

branding and their marketing.

Ben Leonard:

And then say to yourself, there's absolutely no reason I can't

Ben Leonard:

do all of that for my business.

Ben Leonard:

People, I've had conversations with people before and they've said,

Ben Leonard:

Oh yeah, I I sell these things, I'm not really a brand, right?

Ben Leonard:

I'm not like Nike.

Ben Leonard:

And I say no.

Ben Leonard:

It's all just a matter of scale, brand is for anyone.

Ben Leonard:

Once upon a time, Nike was just an idea in somebody's head.

Ben Leonard:

And even when it was more than an idea and it was a business, there

Ben Leonard:

was a day when they hadn't sold anything yet and it was still a brand.

Ben Leonard:

So yeah, that's my take on it.

Matt Edmundson:

it's super powerful too because one of the things that

Matt Edmundson:

I've noticed going back to the YouTube videos and the social media videos

Matt Edmundson:

you mentioned, about go buy this product, sell it on Amazon, make

Matt Edmundson:

a small fortune kind of a thing.

Matt Edmundson:

My experience is that works for maybe one in, I'm going to guess

Matt Edmundson:

maybe five, 10, 000 people.

Matt Edmundson:

It doesn't work.

Matt Edmundson:

It's not like a foolproof system.

Matt Edmundson:

I But somebody somewhere has gone and probably made a lot of money

Matt Edmundson:

just going and buying a widget off Alibaba and then selling it

Matt Edmundson:

on Amazon without any real care.

Matt Edmundson:

And it, and we like it because it feels easy, right?

Matt Edmundson:

We like things that make that feel easy to do.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh, I can just go find this product put it on Amazon.

Matt Edmundson:

I don't have to think about anything else and the money is just gonna roll in.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, the reality of life, I think is often quite different

Matt Edmundson:

and building a brand feels to me, Ben, like it's a bit more effort.

Matt Edmundson:

It's a bit more intentional.

Matt Edmundson:

I've gotta, I've gotta do something a little different.

Matt Edmundson:

Would that be fair?

Ben Leonard:

It would be fair, but here's a really important

Ben Leonard:

distinction I would make.

Ben Leonard:

It's a few years ago, going back to probably between about 2015

Ben Leonard:

and 2018, we'll say, if we take, you mentioned Amazon there, if

Ben Leonard:

we take that as an example, and even like running Instagram ads to

Ben Leonard:

dropshipping sites as well, actually.

Ben Leonard:

It really was as easy as you described

Ben Leonard:

It.

Ben Leonard:

Grab a product, slap a logo on it, stick on the internet, sales will

Ben Leonard:

roll in, literally do nothing else.

Ben Leonard:

And so trying to sell people the idea that they should go to the effort of building

Ben Leonard:

a real brand was the argument that was just more effort and they didn't need

Ben Leonard:

to do that, yeah, that kind of stood up.

Ben Leonard:

But now I would say that doesn't apply, build, going to the effort of building

Ben Leonard:

the brand actually makes the business easier because that is how you stand out.

Ben Leonard:

If you are just selling stuff, you are stuck on a hamster wheel of chuck it on

Ben Leonard:

Amazon, have a half decent listing, run pay per click ads, rinse and repeat.

Ben Leonard:

Whereas, if you do that, but also sell a quality product that genuinely solves a

Ben Leonard:

problem, build a relationship with that customer outside of the Amazon ecosystem.

Ben Leonard:

Provide them with helpful, compelling, useful, engaging, free content in

Ben Leonard:

whatever form they want, whether that's Blog articles or podcast episodes or

Ben Leonard:

videos show up regularly wherever they are on social, providing all of that

Ben Leonard:

value and make them know and trust you and actually potentially love your

Ben Leonard:

brand and make them view you and your brand as an authority in your niche.

Ben Leonard:

Then, next time they need to buy another widget related to your niche,

Ben Leonard:

they won't just go buy something random on Amazon, they'll come back

Ben Leonard:

to you and that might be on Amazon or it might be on your own website.

Ben Leonard:

And that makes the whole thing easier and it makes your customer

Ben Leonard:

acquisition cost cheaper.

Ben Leonard:

And it means you're going to grow your brand bigger and faster.

Ben Leonard:

And it also means that ultimately one day when you want to sell it, somebody is

Ben Leonard:

going to want to pay more for it because they can see you've got a tribe of raving

Ben Leonard:

fans who'll buy any product you launch.

Ben Leonard:

Whereas somebody that's just stuck on that hamster wheel is just

Ben Leonard:

selling stuff and nobody wants to, that's a very risky business.

Ben Leonard:

Who would want to buy that?

Ben Leonard:

Let alone pay you a lot of money for it.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

No it's very true.

Matt Edmundson:

Very true.

Matt Edmundson:

In fact, if I fast forward to the end of the book almost at the end

Matt Edmundson:

of the book you have something called the value pyramid, right?

Matt Edmundson:

So this page here and you've got this diagram.

Matt Edmundson:

And this is in the chapter you call Plan Your 8 Tip.

Matt Edmundson:

So you're building this business and you're thinking about selling it and a

Matt Edmundson:

lot of people want to build businesses to sell them, which is fair enough.

Matt Edmundson:

At the bottom of that value pyramid is brand.

Matt Edmundson:

And you say to drive home the point you've seen throughout the book,

Matt Edmundson:

the bottom layer of the pyramid brand is your most important lever.

Matt Edmundson:

With no brand identity, there's no hook, there's no excitement, there's no

Matt Edmundson:

legion of fans waiting for your launch.

Matt Edmundson:

Etc, etc, so what, why is, I know you've got to read the whole book

Matt Edmundson:

in some essence to find out, but let's talk about this a little bit.

Matt Edmundson:

Why have you got brand as this very first layer of your pyramid?

Matt Edmundson:

Why is that the critical one at the bottom?

Ben Leonard:

Yeah.

Ben Leonard:

So just to describe the value pyramid a bit for people listening.

Ben Leonard:

It looks like a Mayan pyramid rather than an Egyptian pyramid, so

Ben Leonard:

it seems like five layers, right?

Ben Leonard:

So you've got brand at the bottom, then growth and profitability, then risk, then

Ben Leonard:

transferability, and then documentation.

Ben Leonard:

And the argument that I make, and this is a model that we use at

Ben Leonard:

Ecom Brokers, is that to sell your business you need at least three of

Ben Leonard:

those layers to be in good standing.

Ben Leonard:

The reason brand is at the bottom is if you pull it out, then the whole

Ben Leonard:

thing more or less comes tumbling down because it's as you just described there.

Ben Leonard:

If you don't have a brand, you don't have longevity or sustainability.

Ben Leonard:

Because you're just selling stuff and you're on the hamster wheel.

Ben Leonard:

You don't have that army of fans who'll buy your stuff.

Ben Leonard:

You don't have repeat custom.

Ben Leonard:

You don't have anyone on any sort of subscribe option, whether that's on

Ben Leonard:

Amazon or it's on your own website.

Ben Leonard:

You can't just post a new video showing a new product on YouTube and suddenly

Ben Leonard:

have people coming and buying it.

Ben Leonard:

You haven't got waiting lists.

Ben Leonard:

You haven't got people devouring your newsletter or listening to your podcast

Ben Leonard:

or consuming the content that the influencer you've got a partnership

Ben Leonard:

with is putting out every week.

Ben Leonard:

It's just a business that sells products, and if I'm an investor, and I'm Dave

Ben Leonard:

from M& A, at a private equity backed firm who's buying eCommerce businesses,

Ben Leonard:

or even a strategic organization who wants to buy an eCommerce business

Ben Leonard:

in your niche to bolt on, And I've got a pot of money, and I've got two

Ben Leonard:

businesses that are virtually the same size, selling virtually the same stuff,

Ben Leonard:

and everything else is basically equal.

Ben Leonard:

Profit's the same, year over year growth is the same.

Ben Leonard:

Which one would I rather spend that money on?

Ben Leonard:

The one with a legit brand identity with raving fans who I know will help grow the

Ben Leonard:

business bigger and faster in the future with the product pipeline that's planned?

Ben Leonard:

Or the business that is basically just a bunch of products on a hamster wheel

Ben Leonard:

relying on paid traffic over and over again to rinse and repeat that cycle?

Ben Leonard:

I'm gonna buy the one that's way more sustainable and less risky, right?

Ben Leonard:

Actually, the risk layer of the pyramid, which is further up, is

Ben Leonard:

actually intricately tied to brand.

Ben Leonard:

Because when you have a brand, immediately you have lower risk.

Ben Leonard:

So brand ties the whole thing together.

Ben Leonard:

You have a brand, you have more growth and profitability.

Ben Leonard:

You have a brand, you have less risk.

Ben Leonard:

And this was, for me, was one of the things that everyone else in the

Ben Leonard:

mergers and acquisition space as it relates to eCommerce was missing.

Ben Leonard:

They were talking about profit and growth, but they forgot all about brand.

Matt Edmundson:

yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

That's a really powerful point and I'm curious then Ben, let's

Matt Edmundson:

talk about this a little bit.

Matt Edmundson:

Let's say I'm launching a new skincare brand and I'm reading your book.

Matt Edmundson:

What are some of the key things that I'm going to learn about building?

Matt Edmundson:

What are some of the lessons in there that are going to be super helpful for me?

Matt Edmundson:

Because it building brand is just one of those phrases that kind

Matt Edmundson:

of rolls off the tongue for many people, but in real practical

Matt Edmundson:

terms, what does it actually mean?

Ben Leonard:

I think there's a lot of different ways we can look at this.

Ben Leonard:

So we can, because the way I define a brand and I got uninvited on a podcast

Ben Leonard:

a few weeks ago because of this.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Sorry about that.

Matt Edmundson:

It

Ben Leonard:

I promise I'll come back, but I'll just go off on a slight tangent for

Ben Leonard:

a second because I promise it's relevant.

Ben Leonard:

A lady on LinkedIn looked up what I was doing and sent me an

Ben Leonard:

invite to come on her podcast.

Ben Leonard:

She had a PhD in stuff to do with branding.

Ben Leonard:

And I sent her a couple of chapters from the book.

Ben Leonard:

This was before the book had come out.

Ben Leonard:

And she read them and came back and said sorry, I can't have you on.

Ben Leonard:

And so basically her point was she was an academic.

Ben Leonard:

She had a PhD in this stuff and she knew better than me.

Ben Leonard:

And my definition of brand and branding was all wrong.

Ben Leonard:

And I said wouldn't that be a really interesting episode for your guests?

Ben Leonard:

No, was the answer.

Ben Leonard:

I'll come back now to what you were saying.

Ben Leonard:

Look, my definition of a brand is this.

Ben Leonard:

It's a group of products or services, it solves products for

Ben Leonard:

a particular group of people.

Matt Edmundson:

tells

Ben Leonard:

So solves problems, sorry.

Ben Leonard:

Yeah.

Ben Leonard:

Solves problems for a particular group of people through the

Ben Leonard:

products that they sell.

Ben Leonard:

So that could be a boxing brand or a brand of high-end tools for dentists, right?

Ben Leonard:

Doesn't matter.

Ben Leonard:

And branding is how you make those people feel.

Ben Leonard:

And marketing is how you tell 'em about it.

Ben Leonard:

So if people want to talk about brand, there's several lines you can go down.

Ben Leonard:

You can go down the business side.

Ben Leonard:

So we can talk about when they're building the brand, they're going to

Ben Leonard:

need to think about, and this is one of the key things I see people messing up.

Ben Leonard:

They don't properly calculate their unit economics on their actual products.

Ben Leonard:

And then they wonder why they're a few months in and

Ben Leonard:

they run into cashflow problems.

Ben Leonard:

So you're going to learn about that in the book.

Ben Leonard:

You're going to learn about the business side of understanding how

Ben Leonard:

this whole thing's going to actually work from All the way from sourcing

Ben Leonard:

your products and understanding if this stacks up and you can make money out

Ben Leonard:

of this, right the way into the whole, the overarching value of the business

Ben Leonard:

and understanding what it is that's going to make your business valuable.

Ben Leonard:

And understanding your growth and your profitability and all that good stuff.

Ben Leonard:

And then we've got the more branding side of it.

Ben Leonard:

The emotional part.

Ben Leonard:

How we're going to make our brand appeal to people and make it connect

Ben Leonard:

to people and make them want to love our brand and keep coming back to us.

Ben Leonard:

And then we've got the marketing side, how we're going to tell people about it.

Ben Leonard:

So the book kind of ties together all those three threads, if you like,

Ben Leonard:

at every stage from ideation through to developing your first product,

Ben Leonard:

launching your product, launching more products, scaling your business.

Ben Leonard:

And then getting it ready to sell.

Matt Edmundson:

Love it.

Matt Edmundson:

And I love the simplicity of it in terms of branding is how people are gonna feel.

Matt Edmundson:

Marketing is telling them about it.

Matt Edmundson:

And I love the simple definition.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm curious, I dunno if you remember the lady that declined you to come on

Matt Edmundson:

her podcast, what was her definition and how is it different to yours?

Ben Leonard:

We didn't really get into much of a back and forth about

Ben Leonard:

it, but she basically made the point that my definition of a brand being a

Ben Leonard:

group of products that solves problems for a particular group of people

Ben Leonard:

was wrong because it didn't have to be a physical product or a service.

Ben Leonard:

It could be related to, for instance, a charity for argument's sake.

Ben Leonard:

And to which I would say I don't particularly disagree with you,

Ben Leonard:

but I'm framing this in the context of consumer products brands.

Matt Edmundson:

Yes.

Ben Leonard:

The it was a bit bizarre, I think that she, the way

Ben Leonard:

she ran her podcast was she wanted people to come on and agree with her.

Ben Leonard:

And that was that.

Ben Leonard:

So there we are.

Matt Edmundson:

and you love those kind of podcasts where all the guests are

Matt Edmundson:

the same and every bit of information is the same, but listening to it,

Matt Edmundson:

in some respects charities exist to solve problems for a specific group of

Ben Leonard:

Yeah, precisely.

Ben Leonard:

Yeah, they do.

Ben Leonard:

Exactly.

Ben Leonard:

The World Wildlife Fund exists to solve problems related to environmental

Ben Leonard:

conservation for A, humanity, but B, people who care about that type of thing.

Ben Leonard:

Yeah.

Ben Leonard:

So it does fit.

Matt Edmundson:

interesting.

Matt Edmundson:

What has been some of the most surprising feedback you've had since

Matt Edmundson:

the book has launched a few months ago?

Ben Leonard:

Other than Ben, there's a typo on page 234.

Matt Edmundson:

Let's blame the editor.

Ben Leonard:

yeah, absolutely.

Ben Leonard:

That's what I'll do.

Ben Leonard:

Mostly just people have liked it, which is great.

Ben Leonard:

I just would love more people to read it.

Ben Leonard:

So just trying to spread the word really because I think that it's proud of it.

Ben Leonard:

It's a valuable book.

Ben Leonard:

I think that people, whether they're just starting or they're quite experienced

Ben Leonard:

we'll take something away from it.

Ben Leonard:

And my intention is that.

Ben Leonard:

Yeah, you might read it cover to cover the first time, but then I want it to be

Ben Leonard:

a book that will get really worn out and battered, because it's going to be on your

Ben Leonard:

shelf, or on your desk, and you're going to refer back to it quite frequently.

Ben Leonard:

Just specific little bits.

Ben Leonard:

I think the most surprising feedback has been when There's been a couple

Ben Leonard:

of people in my network who are actually very experienced at doing

Ben Leonard:

pretty astronomical numbers and they've come back and said, actually,

Ben Leonard:

I really like what you said here.

Ben Leonard:

We've just passed that on to my CMO and we're actually going to be doing that.

Ben Leonard:

Wow, holy cow.

Ben Leonard:

That's pretty cool.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah,

Ben Leonard:

Yeah something funny did happen actually this was pretty hilarious.

Ben Leonard:

So the book came out at the start of October, at the end of October

Ben Leonard:

Stephen Bartlett was speaking in Aberdeen at the music hall.

Ben Leonard:

1500 people paid well over 100 quid to go and see him,

Matt Edmundson:

yeah,

Ben Leonard:

and I had managed to blag my way through the organisers

Ben Leonard:

into being the support act, so I got 15 minutes before he came on.

Matt Edmundson:

oh well done,

Ben Leonard:

Thanks,

Matt Edmundson:

a pretty impressive thing to do, I'm not gonna

Ben Leonard:

It was pretty mental and so afterwards, went off stage, and I

Ben Leonard:

managed to get 10 minutes with him.

Ben Leonard:

One of the brands that I co own is a boxing brand, so I'd made some custom

Ben Leonard:

boxing gloves for him, and I gave him a copy of my book, and this was hilarious.

Ben Leonard:

He goes, would you sign it for me?

Ben Leonard:

Bearing in mind, this is Stephen Barclay, who is now an A list celebrity, and

Ben Leonard:

there's me, and I'm like don't have a pen.

Ben Leonard:

And he goes don't worry, I've got one.

Ben Leonard:

He pulls out a sharpie and gets me to sign it.

Ben Leonard:

That was pretty funny.

Matt Edmundson:

that's quite incredible.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, I like that.

Matt Edmundson:

Steve Bob, there's a friend of mine actually called Andy Kent, and his, he did

Matt Edmundson:

this thing, he's been doing it for years.

Matt Edmundson:

Whenever he sees someone famous, he just goes up to them and gives them

Matt Edmundson:

his autograph, and he gets someone to take a picture of it whilst it happens,

Matt Edmundson:

and just the look on the celebrity's faces, it's just What's going on here?

Matt Edmundson:

It's

Ben Leonard:

is very funny.

Matt Edmundson:

He's just done it with some crazy

Ben Leonard:

start doing that.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, here's my autograph.

Matt Edmundson:

I love that though, you had custom boxing gloves made and

Matt Edmundson:

gave them a copy of your book.

Matt Edmundson:

There's a guy, a friend of mine actually, called Ram Gidoomal.

Matt Edmundson:

He's CBE.

Matt Edmundson:

He ran several years ago to be the mayor of London and he's written a book

Matt Edmundson:

called, I think it's called The Silk Road, about his sort of journey from

Matt Edmundson:

from India through to Kenya to being an Indian immigrant in the UK and what that

Matt Edmundson:

was like and then how they built this 500, I think it was like half a billion

Matt Edmundson:

dollar empire, I don't know, it was massive, it was worth a lot of money.

Matt Edmundson:

How the family went from this corner shop to this massive thing and he sent

Matt Edmundson:

me a Photo a couple of months ago.

Matt Edmundson:

He just sent it to me on whatsapp and it basically he was in New York and The

Matt Edmundson:

mayor of New York his name has totally slipped my mind the mayor of New York

Matt Edmundson:

was at the same event and so Rams like Quick, give me a copy of the book and

Matt Edmundson:

he goes over to the mayor of New York.

Matt Edmundson:

He gives the mayor his book.

Matt Edmundson:

Do you mind if we take a photo, because Ram's just like this, and he had somebody

Matt Edmundson:

take a photo and of course then it's all over the everything, now the Mayor of New

Matt Edmundson:

York has read Ram's book, so I thought, so you've reminded me of that story.

Matt Edmundson:

Here Stephen, have a copy of this book which is great oh well done, that's

Matt Edmundson:

no mean feat getting on the stage I don't think, with someone like Steve

Matt Edmundson:

Bartlett, that's quite impressive.

Ben Leonard:

Yeah,

Matt Edmundson:

write a book on how you did that, ha,

Ben Leonard:

I just asked,

Matt Edmundson:

oh it's a short book,

Ben Leonard:

what, actually, it's funny, if you watch, I don't, I stopped

Ben Leonard:

watching Dragons Den for a while, but I've started watching it again

Ben Leonard:

because it's quite good entertainment.

Ben Leonard:

And there was an episode a few weeks ago, these ladies, they have a business,

Ben Leonard:

they produce artificial diamonds, and they managed to get Steve Bartlett to

Ben Leonard:

invest quarter of a million for 3%.

Ben Leonard:

And during their pitch, they were 3%, yeah, bananas, right?

Matt Edmundson:

Wowsers.

Ben Leonard:

But I guess that's the diamond industry although the economics

Ben Leonard:

of the diamond industry are up for debate.

Ben Leonard:

But anyway, during their pitch, they said that Meghan Markle wore their diamonds.

Ben Leonard:

And and he said Stephen Barlow said, how did you manage to

Ben Leonard:

get her to wear your diamonds?

Ben Leonard:

And they said, oh, we just asked.

Ben Leonard:

Cold email.

Ben Leonard:

And he loved it.

Ben Leonard:

And that's a really important thing, lesson, I think, that if

Ben Leonard:

you don't ask, you don't get.

Ben Leonard:

So just ask.

Ben Leonard:

Worst that happens is somebody says no.

Matt Edmundson:

It's very true.

Matt Edmundson:

The power of asking.

Matt Edmundson:

You have not because you ask not is that old famous wisdom, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

And it's so so true.

Matt Edmundson:

So so true.

Matt Edmundson:

Listen, I've got one more question for you Ben, as I'm aware of time and I'm

Matt Edmundson:

gonna go straight to the back of the book.

Matt Edmundson:

And the very last words you wrote were on the Acknowledgements page, Thanks To, and

Matt Edmundson:

there's a whole bunch of people on that list, Stephen Butler being one of them.

Matt Edmundson:

And then you said, No thanks to Fake Guru's Porsche Guy.

Matt Edmundson:

Tell me about Porsche guy.

Ben Leonard:

You're the first person that's asked me this.

Ben Leonard:

I would love to tell you about Porsche guys, so I will.

Ben Leonard:

It was twenty I think it was about 2018.

Ben Leonard:

So I still own my first brand and I went on my mate's stag do.

Ben Leonard:

And my mate, he lives in Edinburgh.

Ben Leonard:

And there's a lot of kind of bankery types that he's become friends with.

Ben Leonard:

And so one of these bankery types turns up at the stag do.

Ben Leonard:

It is Porsche.

Ben Leonard:

And I turned up in my VW Polo.

Ben Leonard:

And over the course of the weekend, he, He asked me what I do, and I said, I

Ben Leonard:

think I still work at my day job at the time, so I mentioned what my day job

Ben Leonard:

was, and I said, I'm doing this fitness brand thing, and he looks down his nose

Ben Leonard:

at me, and he says, so basically, you flock skipping ropes on the internet,

Ben Leonard:

and

Matt Edmundson:

Wow

Ben Leonard:

I sold the business I think I texted my mate, I didn't have Porsche

Ben Leonard:

guy's details, but I texted my mate and said tell your mate with the Porsche that

Ben Leonard:

I just sold my business for and then I put in quite a lot of money and yeah.

Ben Leonard:

So I put Porsche guy on the no thanks page.

Matt Edmundson:

Very good.

Matt Edmundson:

Very good.

Matt Edmundson:

What a great story and I would love to have seen his face

Matt Edmundson:

when he got that text message.

Matt Edmundson:

That would have been, that would have been brilliant.

Matt Edmundson:

Ben, listen, thanks for coming on man and love chatting to you about

Matt Edmundson:

the book and obviously all the best with it and what's going on with it.

Matt Edmundson:

If people want to buy the book, if they want to find out more about

Matt Edmundson:

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

Ben Leonard:

Best thing to do is search on Amazon for quit stalling and build

Ben Leonard:

your brand or just my name, Ben Leonard.

Ben Leonard:

You'll find the book on there.

Ben Leonard:

And then in terms of, getting in touch and if you want any help with

Ben Leonard:

anything I'm all over social, my handle's benleonardpro, I'm on LinkedIn.

Ben Leonard:

If you want to sell your business, ecombrokers.

Ben Leonard:

co.

Ben Leonard:

uk and yeah I'm here to help them.

Ben Leonard:

Very much keen to hear from other eCommerce entrepreneurs.

Matt Edmundson:

Absolutely, brilliant.

Matt Edmundson:

We will of course put all of those links in the show notes which you

Matt Edmundson:

can get along with the transcript for free on the website ecommercepodcast.

Matt Edmundson:

net or of course it'll be coming to your inbox if you sign up to the

Matt Edmundson:

newsletter which I mentioned earlier.

Matt Edmundson:

Listen Ben, loved it man, it's been great having you back on the show.

Matt Edmundson:

Love the stories, love the book, think it's such a great thing you've done and

Matt Edmundson:

I, all the best man with that and I wish you all the success and seriously if you

Matt Edmundson:

listen to the podcast, go out and buy Ben's book, you definitely won't regret

Matt Edmundson:

it if you're involved in eCommerce.

Matt Edmundson:

It's a great book.

Ben Leonard:

Thanks, Matt.

Matt Edmundson:

Huge thanks to Ben again for joining me today.

Matt Edmundson:

And also a big shout out to the sponsor of this show, eCommerce Cohort.

Matt Edmundson:

If you're not yet a member or if you want to find out more about what this is

Matt Edmundson:

all about, just go to eCommerceCohort.

Matt Edmundson:

com, enough said, as they say.

Matt Edmundson:

Now be sure to follow the eCommerce Podcast wherever you get your podcasts

Matt Edmundson:

from because we've got yet more great conversations lined up and I

Matt Edmundson:

don't want you to miss any of them.

Matt Edmundson:

And in case no one has told you yet today, let me be the first, you are awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

Yes, you are created awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

It's just a burden you have to bear.

Matt Edmundson:

Ben's got to bear it.

Matt Edmundson:

I've got to bear it.

Matt Edmundson:

You've got to bear it as well.

Matt Edmundson:

Now, the eCommerce 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 and Tanya Hutsuliak.

Matt Edmundson:

Our theme music was written by Josh Edmundson.

Matt Edmundson:

And as I mentioned, the transcript, the show notes, they're all

Matt Edmundson:

available on the website.

Matt Edmundson:

ecommercepodcast.

Matt Edmundson:

net.

Matt Edmundson:

That's it from me.

Matt Edmundson:

That's it from Ben.

Matt Edmundson:

Thank you so much for joining us.

Matt Edmundson:

Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world.

Matt Edmundson:

I'll see you next time.

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