Turn your best-selling products into compelling email campaigns that drive customer engagement and boost sales.
Daniel Budai shares insightful strategies on effective email marketing, shedding light on the crucial role of best-selling products, SMS, and customer account emails. Discover why what sells online sells in your emails too.
Well, hello and welcome to the e commerce podcast with
Speaker:me, your host, Matt Edmundson.
Speaker:We are in our August little series here where we're talking about lessons
Speaker:that we have learned from our cohort workshop experts and explain more
Speaker:about what cohort is in just a minute.
Speaker:But first let me welcome my sidekick for these conversations, uh, the
Speaker:show's producer, uh, Sadaf Beynon.
Speaker:Did you like that?
Speaker:The sidekick.
Speaker:I liked it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Sadaf the sidekick.
Speaker:Oh, yes.
Speaker:So welcome to the show.
Speaker:It's great to have you.
Speaker:Uh, if you are watching the podcast, you will notice that I'm wearing the
Speaker:same t shirt that I wore last week because it is a fairly, it's a fairly
Speaker:distinctive t shirt that I'm wearing.
Speaker:I'm wearing a tie dye Goonies t shirt.
Speaker:Um, and that's, if I'm honest, that's because we're batch recording.
Speaker:It's not because I only have one t shirt.
Speaker:Uh, and so we're doing episode four today.
Speaker:And after we've recorded this, we are going to do next week's
Speaker:episode, episode five straight after.
Speaker:Uh, just full disclosure, I'm full, uh, full honesty, full
Speaker:transparency, because you know we like to be fully transparent here.
Speaker:Um, so yeah, so why don't you, uh, explain what cohort is set up this
Speaker:week, because I think I've probably talked about it enough, and I think
Speaker:people want to hear your voice more than they want to hear mine, so go for it.
Speaker:Um, so cohort is a series of, uh, workshops that we do.
Speaker:Am I getting this right?
Speaker:We need to cut this.
Speaker:I'm totally not cutting this.
Speaker:You are cutting this because I am I just
Speaker:need another coffee right now.
Speaker:So I'm like, what is going on right now?
Speaker:This
Speaker:is really, so ladies and gentlemen, let me explain what's going on.
Speaker:Sadaf does actually know what cohort is, I do want to be clear.
Speaker:Oh my gosh.
Speaker:Um, but, Sadaf and I were scheduled to record these podcasts.
Speaker:And, um, she's in Canada at the moment, on an extended vacation.
Speaker:I'm in England, so the time zones have screwed her up a little bit.
Speaker:And so, we were due to start, and Sadaf sent me a text message saying, I am
Speaker:really, really sorry, I have overslept.
Speaker:So.
Speaker:turned up to the, to the call like 30 minutes late.
Speaker:And bless you, the coffee's not quite kicked in yet, has it?
Speaker:It hasn't, no, I'm so sorry.
Speaker:I'm so
Speaker:sorry.
Speaker:It's just that level of professionalism that I quite like.
Speaker:So we'll see whether that final cut makes it into the podcast because
Speaker:Sadaf is in fact the show's producer, has the power to cut those things.
Speaker:Me, I'm going to leave it in, but that's just me.
Speaker:I'm not, I'm not hitting the pause button.
Speaker:We're just going to carry on.
Speaker:So if you are tuning in for the first time, we are a little
Speaker:bit more professional than this on the e commerce podcast.
Speaker:We are having a little bit of fun to be fair over the August episodes where Sadaf
Speaker:and I are just chatting about lessons that we've learned from the cohort.
Speaker:Cohort, by the way, uh, Sadaf Beynon the Butcher, Beynon the Butcher,
Speaker:uh, is a monthly mastermind group that we run and every month we, uh, we have.
Speaker:Uh, we have experts come in, uh, people that we know from the world of e commerce.
Speaker:They come in, they do a workshop, super practical, super helpful.
Speaker:And all we're doing is talking about some of the lessons that we have learned on
Speaker:e commerce, from the e commerce cohort.
Speaker:If you'd like to know more about e commerce cohort, do
Speaker:check out ecommercecohort.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:You can find out all the information that you need to know there.
Speaker:And if you're in e commerce, do come and join us.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:That is a slightly more professional introduction.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Thank you, Matt.
Speaker:I think we rescued that.
Speaker:I don't think anyone noticed.
Speaker:No, not at all.
Speaker:Come on sidekick, wake up.
Speaker:So let's, let's talk about what workshop are we talking about today?
Speaker:So we're talking about email marketing, which was delivered by Daniel Budai.
Speaker:He's also been on, um, on the podcast as a guest as well.
Speaker:Yes, Budai, Dan, uh, Dan from Budai Media, um, delivered a workshop called the 10.
Speaker:Commandments of email marketing, I think was the exact title.
Speaker:Um, and this was great.
Speaker:And I remember this because of the, the opening, uh, slide from his presentation
Speaker:was Moses standing there with tablets, you know, the 10 commandments.
Speaker:Uh, and so I thought that was very good.
Speaker:And that sort of stuck into my head.
Speaker:Um, so yeah, he's, he did the 10 commandments of
Speaker:email marketing, didn't he?
Speaker:Um, and so he went through these 10 things.
Speaker:And again, on Cohort, the way it works is you go through
Speaker:this workshop, super practical.
Speaker:And my advice to everybody doing it is listen, pick four, no more than four
Speaker:things that really stick out to you.
Speaker:Because.
Speaker:Um, your brain won't really cope with more than four.
Speaker:You're a bit like sat at first thing in the morning without coffee.
Speaker:It's just not working.
Speaker:not working as it should.
Speaker:Um, but stick with four, um, uh, or less.
Speaker:Uh, is the, is the, is the tip.
Speaker:Three to four is, is usually a good thing.
Speaker:You can normally work on three to four things on your business
Speaker:that month.
Speaker:So you would have listened to Dan's workshop.
Speaker:You'd have gone through the email marketing, gone, what three or
Speaker:four things can I implement in my business this month that's going
Speaker:to have the biggest difference?
Speaker:It's going to help me move the needle, um, and it's something
Speaker:that we can consistently do.
Speaker:So we kind of go through that a little bit.
Speaker:So yes, Dan's workshop, the 10 commandments of email marketing
Speaker:so, Matt, maybe we can start by talking about the role of best selling
Speaker:products in your email marketing.
Speaker:Yeah, because this came out, didn't it?
Speaker:This came out in one of his, um, in one of his things.
Speaker:Dan mentioned this comment, which I thought was really interesting.
Speaker:And email marketers, listen up, because we're all guilty of this.
Speaker:His comment was, if people don't buy it online, why are they going to buy
Speaker:it when you put it in your email?
Speaker:And so what tends to happen is we...
Speaker:We have some stock of some products.
Speaker:People aren't buying it on our website for whatever reason.
Speaker:So our stock is not going down as quickly as we think it should.
Speaker:So we then go, I'll tell you what we should do.
Speaker:We should throw this in an email and email it out to people just to let
Speaker:them know and see if they'll buy it.
Speaker:Um, only to discover actually sales of it are pretty low and the conversion rates
Speaker:on those emails have been pretty low.
Speaker:And this was something that Dan pulled out from the data.
Speaker:He's like, if people don't buy it online, they're not going
Speaker:to buy it from your email.
Speaker:And so if you want your email marketing to convert, which you do because the more
Speaker:people that open your email, the more people that read it, the more that signals
Speaker:to the email providers such as Google.
Speaker:Gmail being the main one that the email is interesting that people want to read
Speaker:it that people want to open it So your deliverability rates go up, you know your
Speaker:your spam Filters go down as such whereas if you just deliver nonsense and people
Speaker:can't even be bothered to read through because it's like well That's the product.
Speaker:I didn't want to buy on the website.
Speaker:It's in the subject line of your email I don't want to buy it now.
Speaker:Um, i'm not really that interested.
Speaker:It does have an impact on your Uh email score for one for better expression So
Speaker:dan was very much like, you know, your best selling products play a pivotal
Speaker:role in your email marketing Don't just use email marketing to try and sell The
Speaker:stuff that is pretty rubbish and that no one wants to buy anyway, because it
Speaker:just doesn't work Uh, and so yeah, that was a role of best selling products.
Speaker:Does that make sense?
Speaker:Is that have I answered that?
Speaker:Okay I think I have.
Speaker:I'm just reviewing what I've said in my head.
Speaker:I think that's okay.
Speaker:I think Dan would be happy with that answer.
Speaker:So promoting what's already popular is.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah, You're wanting people to buy.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So go with what is popular, um, rather than just trying to offload your
Speaker:crap for once for better expression.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So things that aren't as popular where what they just don't appear in.
Speaker:In the email, but do they do upsells?
Speaker:Like, how do they, how
Speaker:do they?
Speaker:It's not that you can't market those.
Speaker:I mean, obviously you've got stock and you need to get rid of it.
Speaker:Um, the, the, it's not that you don't market it.
Speaker:It's not that you don't try and sell it with your cross sells or your upsells.
Speaker:It's not that you don't try and put it in bundles.
Speaker:It's not that maybe you'd take that products and do a gift with purchase.
Speaker:You maybe rebadge it.
Speaker:You maybe rebrand it.
Speaker:You maybe talk about it from a different point of view to try and get people
Speaker:more interested in the product.
Speaker:So I get that there are other things that we.
Speaker:can do and that there are other things that we should do.
Speaker:I think what Daniel was saying and what I wholeheartedly agree with
Speaker:is that that product should not be the sole purpose of your email.
Speaker:And we've done it in the past.
Speaker:We've had products where we've got way too, we've ordered way too much stock.
Speaker:We've just got it in and it's not going as fast as some of the other products.
Speaker:And so we've done emails to try and shift that product.
Speaker:And it's just fallen flat on its face.
Speaker:Um, so we've had to do other things to try and get people interested in that product.
Speaker:To try and move it.
Speaker:To be a bit more creative than just trying to blank bang it on an
Speaker:email and hope that people buy it.
Speaker:Which is, you know, it's never really a successful strategy, is it?
Speaker:But, um, but that would be, that would be, yeah, um, my advice.
Speaker:Find other ways to market that product.
Speaker:There's a thousand other ways to do it.
Speaker:Just don't rely solely on email.
Speaker:You know, about that product to be the source of the sale.
Speaker:Of course, there's going to be someone listening to this because, you know, we've
Speaker:got a lot of people listen to e commerce podcasts now, thousands of listeners
Speaker:all over the world, which is awesome.
Speaker:Wherever you are in the world, you're awesome.
Speaker:Absolutely awesome.
Speaker:Love the fact you're listening to the show.
Speaker:Keep listening.
Speaker:We do enjoy it.
Speaker:Um, one of the interesting things is somebody's going to email me
Speaker:in and go, Matt, you're totally wrong because I had this product.
Speaker:We couldn't sell it.
Speaker:I sent an email out and I sold out overnight.
Speaker:So I appreciate there's going to be the outliers.
Speaker:I appreciate there's going to be the one that is the exception to the
Speaker:rule, but it's not the rule itself.
Speaker:And so it's, it's, again, it's not me saying don't test it or trial it.
Speaker:It's me just saying, be, you know, ask yourself the obvious question.
Speaker:If people are going to, aren't going to prepare to buy it online,
Speaker:are they really going to be prepared to buy it in an email?
Speaker:I don't think so.
Speaker:Are they?
Speaker:So yeah, that was the whole point.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Cool.
Speaker:Um, all right.
Speaker:So switching gears a little bit.
Speaker:He also talked about SMS marketing.
Speaker:And, um, it's relationship to email marketing.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It's interesting.
Speaker:Or customers count emails or...
Speaker:Yeah, no, he, he definitely with SMS, he, you know, talked about
Speaker:the link with email and SMS.
Speaker:Um, and I know he's a big fan of doing email and SMS together, um,
Speaker:and running those campaigns together.
Speaker:Obviously, you don't send the same information in the SMS that you send in
Speaker:the email because you've not got that many characters, um, but you can and should
Speaker:run the campaigns alongside each other.
Speaker:Um, and don't see them as two mutually exclusive things.
Speaker:Um, see them as something that's interconnected if you can, uh, and
Speaker:when you do, you usually get more.
Speaker:So you get the conversion from, if I just run text messages, I'd get conversion X.
Speaker:If I just run emails, I'd get conversion Y.
Speaker:When I run them both together, I don't get X plus Y, I get Z, if that makes sense.
Speaker:You get something new, which is bigger and better than the, you get
Speaker:this sort of synergistic effect.
Speaker:Um, and so, and I know SMS is one of those things that's.
Speaker:It still scares a lot of people, actually.
Speaker:It feels a bit cumbersome.
Speaker:It feels like, I don't know if I want to do that.
Speaker:Um, I know exactly how you feel.
Speaker:Um, we today, actually to this very day, just signed off, uh, for one of our
Speaker:e com businesses doing SMS marketing.
Speaker:And I've always been a bit twitchy about it.
Speaker:I know Michelle at the office who heads up that.
Speaker:A side of the business, she's, she's like, we're going to do SMS marketing, but I've
Speaker:got this rule, this rule, and this rule that everybody has to sort of listen to.
Speaker:Uh, and so, yeah, it's, um, it's an interesting one.
Speaker:It's an interesting one.
Speaker:SMS marketing and email.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:so diversifying those channels, you're getting, you're getting a
Speaker:whole new, um, batch of customers.
Speaker:I don't know if the batch is the right word, but, uh, Zed, you're getting Zed.
Speaker:You're getting
Speaker:Zed, yeah.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:not XOR, you're getting Zed.
Speaker:Hey, well done.
Speaker:That's algebra.
Speaker:First thing in that.
Speaker:Was there anything else Matt that stuck out to you in that workshop?
Speaker:Obviously not had his coffee either.
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:I mean, one of the things we've been talking about a lot is Uh, in, in
Speaker:our company and we're trying to get up and running and it came out again
Speaker:through this workshop is this whole idea of customer account emails.
Speaker:What I mean by this is, um, we have got so used to automation now that
Speaker:we just like everything on autopilot.
Speaker:So if customer does this, a sequence fires off, you know, they get
Speaker:10 emails over the next 10 days.
Speaker:So I have to spend time writing one email, uh, one, the sequence, but
Speaker:once it's written, it's gone, right?
Speaker:Dush, the way it is.
Speaker:All automated.
Speaker:And news letters, automated, they're just going to go out,
Speaker:bang, just the way it is, alright?
Speaker:One email is going to 10, 000 people, or however many people are on your list.
Speaker:And so, email has become, I think, synonymous in some
Speaker:respects with quick and easy.
Speaker:It's like we just want to get it, don't get it out, get it, don't get it out.
Speaker:Where customer account emails differ and what I'm intrigued by is this old
Speaker:time print, this old school principle of customer account management.
Speaker:So pre internet, which I appreciate for some listeners is very hard to imagine.
Speaker:But I grew up in a world where there was no internet and
Speaker:the first part of my career.
Speaker:A lot of it was customer account management.
Speaker:It was a lot of calling people going, Hello, it's Matt here.
Speaker:Are you happy?
Speaker:Um, and just trying to figure out where they are, and if there was anything else
Speaker:that we could do, or any services or any products that we had that could help them.
Speaker:So when we were doing saunas and steam rooms, we would, um, contact the
Speaker:customers and go, Hey, listen, do you want any essence for your steam room?
Speaker:Which is the stuff they pump in which makes it smell nice.
Speaker:Uh, it's been six months.
Speaker:Can we send an engineer out to service it?
Speaker:And so with customer account, It's that old customer account management.
Speaker:It's that, how do you, how do you deliver that in a world that is?
Speaker:Occupied with automation that is just so set on automation.
Speaker:And so we're looking at ways now to use automation to help us a little bit,
Speaker:but also to bring back some of that old school customer account management skills.
Speaker:You know, we're just emailing customers and saying, Hey, so we now do it
Speaker:where Jen or Michelle or Anna Grace.
Speaker:So they'll be assigned when we get a new customer, they're assigned a customer
Speaker:account manager, that customer account manager will send them an email going,
Speaker:Hey, Anna Grace here, I'm your, uh, account manager, just wanted to reach
Speaker:out, connect, say hi, you got any questions, then do reach out to me.
Speaker:And I'll tell you who started doing this, um, that I've noticed, Apple.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So, um, I am an Apple business customer.
Speaker:I think I've single handedly keep the share price above
Speaker:where it is at the moment.
Speaker:The amount of Apple products we, uh, we purchase.
Speaker:But we have a, we have a business account, and they have account
Speaker:managers who call me just every six months, just out of the blue.
Speaker:Matt, how's it going?
Speaker:Do you need anything?
Speaker:And what happens now is, if I want to buy anything from Apple, rarely
Speaker:do I go on the website to buy it.
Speaker:Um, I just email my account manager.
Speaker:Um, whatever his name is.
Speaker:Let's say Dave for the sake of argument.
Speaker:Dave, listen, this is what I need.
Speaker:This is what I need it to do.
Speaker:What do you reckon?
Speaker:He's going to email me something back saying this is the spec you need.
Speaker:Here's the invoice.
Speaker:Click this link, pay for it and I'll make sure you get it out next day.
Speaker:I don't have to do anything.
Speaker:They've sort of taken care of everything for me.
Speaker:And as a result, I, I mean I'm quite loyal to Apple as it is.
Speaker:You know, I'm sucked into their ecosystem.
Speaker:Um, but the fact is that I...
Speaker:I now have someone that I can talk to at Apple.
Speaker:So I've made, it's funny, isn't it?
Speaker:Cause it makes you feel a little bit more connected, a
Speaker:little bit more special maybe.
Speaker:Um, and so we're looking at doing this customer account management
Speaker:email thing, certainly with our high value customers, tying it back with
Speaker:what we talked about last week or 10 minutes ago about Neil Hoyne.
Speaker:Um, and.
Speaker:Do you know what I mean?
Speaker:Just investing more in your high value clients, so maybe this is one
Speaker:of the ways that we could do that.
Speaker:And so, that's a really interesting thing that we're trying, that
Speaker:we're developing at the moment.
Speaker:We've tried all kinds of different things.
Speaker:We're going to keep trying all different types of things.
Speaker:But I'm really excited about it as a concept because I think it
Speaker:could work really well if we get it right without being overwhelming
Speaker:on the customer service team.
Speaker:It's got to be key.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:Sounds like if, um, if it's done right, it can be an excellent
Speaker:customer engagement tool, can't it?
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, it can.
Speaker:It can.
Speaker:I just really like the idea of Kelly or whoever, you know, one of our customers
Speaker:just emailing Anna Grace, going, Anna Grace, listen, I've run out of this.
Speaker:Can you sort something out for me?
Speaker:Uh, because she's, you know, in a rush between something or other and Anna
Speaker:Grace goes, Yeah, Kelly, no problem.
Speaker:I've sorted it out.
Speaker:Just click this link.
Speaker:It'll take you straight through to the, you don't have to log in or anything.
Speaker:It's going to take you straight through to the payment page.
Speaker:So you just.
Speaker:You know, pay with apples.
Speaker:It's all done and dusted.
Speaker:Anna Gracey, Matt Kelly.
Speaker:I've got the order.
Speaker:It's face gone out today.
Speaker:Don't panic.
Speaker:You'll have it tomorrow.
Speaker:I mean, just something like that, I think would be wonderful, you know, and the
Speaker:technology is there to make that happen.
Speaker:So trying to get that work properly is, is, is fun and games is a
Speaker:technical challenge, um, but I think we're getting there and I
Speaker:think it'd be an interesting thing.
Speaker:Yeah, definitely.
Speaker:Um, so I think we can wrap this episode up and, uh, move on.
Speaker:So do you want to do your, your thing?
Speaker:Last episode, if you were listening to the last episode, ladies and
Speaker:gentlemen, this was where Sadaf just went, we're done, time out, that's
Speaker:it, let's press the end button now.
Speaker:And then afterwards she went, oh yeah, wait a minute, you're supposed to do
Speaker:that whole closing thing, aren't you?
Speaker:And so, yeah, this is the professional producer here,
Speaker:ladies and gentlemen, and, um...
Speaker:We always, and I completely forgot about it as well, to be fair, but yes.
Speaker:So should we do the professional closing thing?
Speaker:Thank you so much for joining us.
Speaker:If you would like to know more about e commerce cohort and how it
Speaker:can help you and your e commerce business, check out ecommercecohort.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:That's all one word, ecommercecohort.
Speaker:com, it's a whole bunch of information.
Speaker:on there that will help you, uh, figure it out.
Speaker:And, uh, of course, if you've got any questions, you can
Speaker:email in and let us know.
Speaker:And of course, if no one's told you it's day, Sadaf what do we tell them?
Speaker:See if you're awake.
Speaker:Go for it.
Speaker:You are awesome.
Speaker:I am awesome.
Speaker:We're all awesome.
Speaker:It's just a burden we have to bear.
Speaker:It's a burden we have to bear.
Speaker:It's a little catchphrase.
Speaker:That's right.
Speaker:We're created awesome.
Speaker:It's just a burden we have to bear.
Speaker:So yes, You should do that more often.
Speaker:Uh, I feel it's um, it's a skill that's definitely Definitely there.
Speaker:I guess it just needs to be brought out a little bit more maybe a little bit
Speaker:more practice Well, ladies and gentlemen, that's it thank you so much for joining
Speaker:us have a fantastic week and I hope you're enjoying your August We will be back
Speaker:next week for our fifth And final August episode, but until then have a great week.