Step into the realm where creativity meets strategy in 'Mastering Multi-Channel Marketing in the Family and Women's Wear Sectors'. In this episode of the eCommerce Podcast, discover how to brilliantly navigate the multi-faceted world of digital marketing, specifically tailored for family-oriented audiences. Learn from Anna's expert insights on leveraging platforms like Facebook and Google Ads, and find strategies that will elevate your brand's online presence.
Key Takeaways:
ABOUT ANNA:
Marketing maestro with a knack for making e-commerce brands shine, especially in the family and womenswear realms – and no, she absolutely refuses to believe that over 25 years have zipped by in her marketing adventures. She's a digital wizard at conjuring up growth spells through the mystical arts of paid traffic and email marketing. Her secret power? Making brands go from unnoticed to unmissable!
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For complete show notes, transcript and links to our guest, check out our website: www.ecommerce-podcast.com.
Well, hello and welcome to the eCommerce Podcast
Matt Edmundson:with me, your host, Matt Edmundson.
Matt Edmundson:Now this is a show that's basically here to help you deliver eCommerce wow.
Matt Edmundson:And to help us do just that, today we are chatting with Anna Fratwell from
Matt Edmundson:Neon Digital Clicks about mastering multi channel marketing with a slight
Matt Edmundson:bent on how we do that to families.
Matt Edmundson:Oh yes, I am looking forward to this one.
Matt Edmundson:We're going to get into it.
Matt Edmundson:Baby four.
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Matt Edmundson:Let's talk about today's guest, shall we?
Matt Edmundson:Uh, we are talking to Anna Fratwell.
Matt Edmundson:Yes, we are.
Matt Edmundson:The marketing maestro with a knack for making eCommerce brands shine.
Matt Edmundson:Especially, as I said, in the whole family and even, dare I say, I should
Matt Edmundson:probably whisper, women's wear realms and no one, and no, no, no, no.
Matt Edmundson:She absolutely refuses to believe that anyone over 25 years have zipped
Matt Edmundson:by in their marketing adventures.
Matt Edmundson:Oh yes, she's a digital wizard at conjuring up growth spells
Matt Edmundson:through the mystical arts of paid traffic and email marketing.
Matt Edmundson:Her secret power is making brands go from unnoticed to unmissable.
Matt Edmundson:Oh yes, Anna, great to have you on the show.
Matt Edmundson:Thank you for joining me.
Matt Edmundson:How are we doing today?
Anna Frapwell:Thank you so much for having me here.
Anna Frapwell:And yeah, no, all's good.
Anna Frapwell:Um, I love the intro.
Anna Frapwell:Thank you for that.
Anna Frapwell:That was a brilliant
Matt Edmundson:start.
Matt Edmundson:I wish I could take credit for it, but I genuinely can't.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, that is the production team.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, I have no doubt working their secret magic powers.
Matt Edmundson:Um, but, uh, that said, I mean, it's, you know, This is what you do, isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:Um, you are called Neon Digital Clicks.
Matt Edmundson:Now, you know what, Anna, let me just start by saying that 98 percent of
Matt Edmundson:people that consume the content of this podcast do it in an audio format, right?
Matt Edmundson:So they listen to it, say, on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.
Matt Edmundson:Occasionally, uh, we have people either watch on YouTube, um,
Matt Edmundson:I think there's about 400 odd people that watch on YouTube.
Matt Edmundson:And we also do, you know, the usual sort of.
Matt Edmundson:Instagram Reels and things like that.
Matt Edmundson:So we have a few people that watch on video, but most people are listening.
Matt Edmundson:The reason why I'm mentioning this is because your company
Matt Edmundson:is called Neon Digital Clicks.
Matt Edmundson:And I feel like, uh, you have got this neon background thing pretty much set up.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, I feel like.
Matt Edmundson:I feel like I'm back in a 1980s sort of, uh, something, I'm not quite sure.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, and we've got, uh, in the background, We Glow Together,
Matt Edmundson:uh, in a, in a neon form.
Matt Edmundson:So, uh, I think it's, uh, I think it's
Anna Frapwell:great.
Anna Frapwell:You're supposed to then go straight into Greece and start singing.
Anna Frapwell:That's what you're supposed to do.
Anna Frapwell:You're supposed to get an earworm now.
Matt Edmundson:Just as long as I know what I'm supposed to.
Matt Edmundson:Here, here's the thing, uh, and full disclosure, Anna, no one...
Matt Edmundson:No one, not even the angels want to hear me sing, right?
Matt Edmundson:It's just, if my wife is to believe it's something that is
Matt Edmundson:not blessing humanity in any way.
Matt Edmundson:Okay, you
Anna Frapwell:can stick with the earworm then, you'll have it all
Matt Edmundson:day.
Matt Edmundson:Absolutely.
Matt Edmundson:Whereabouts in the UK are you?
Anna Frapwell:Uh, we're kind of just between Bath and Salisbury, so southwest.
Matt Edmundson:Okay, Dan South, we like
Anna Frapwell:Dan South.
Anna Frapwell:Nice part of the world, yeah, just outside Longleat actually, that's
Anna Frapwell:usually our marker, we can quite often hear the lions sometimes, so.
Anna Frapwell:Ooh,
Matt Edmundson:roar.
Matt Edmundson:For those who don't know, there's a big safari park, isn't there, in Longleat?
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, yeah, huge safari park.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, you just don't have lions roaming around in your garden.
Anna Frapwell:No, no, we're not in some kind of stately,
Anna Frapwell:bizarre, Tiger King, I don't know.
Anna Frapwell:Well,
Matt Edmundson:that's good to know.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, yeah, that's good to know.
Matt Edmundson:It'd be an interesting, I say interesting, I don't think it would
Matt Edmundson:be as interesting, you know, Longleat versus the Tiger King or whatever it was.
Matt Edmundson:But yes, no, fascinating.
Matt Edmundson:Well, so you're, um, you're with a company, Neon Digital Clicks.
Matt Edmundson:Is that your company or is that a company you're part of?
Matt Edmundson:Nope, that's my company.
Matt Edmundson:And how long has it been floating around?
Matt Edmundson:So,
Anna Frapwell:probably about five years now.
Anna Frapwell:Um, we've kind of, last three years we've scaled quite significantly.
Anna Frapwell:But yeah, total five years now we're a small team of specialists within
Anna Frapwell:kind of each field of the marketing mix that we deliver for our clients.
Anna Frapwell:So, it's...
Anna Frapwell:Yeah, about five years and we've, uh, grown quite a lot in the
Matt Edmundson:last three.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, it's interesting, isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:The whole world has changed in the last sort of three years, really.
Matt Edmundson:And, um, it, it sort of intrigues me.
Matt Edmundson:Neon Digital Clicks, it's a marketing agency, I'm guessing,
Matt Edmundson:just from the, you know, the title.
Matt Edmundson:And also what we're going to be talking about, to be fair.
Matt Edmundson:Um, yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Is that something that you've been involved with for a while or
Matt Edmundson:did you just wake up one day and thought you know what I'm just
Matt Edmundson:going to start a marketing agency?
Matt Edmundson:No,
Anna Frapwell:so I mean I've, I've worked in marketing for sort of 25 odd
Anna Frapwell:years and I started out actually in PR and worked for some of the world's
Anna Frapwell:biggest ad agencies, working in PR and then worked in house for a couple of
Anna Frapwell:companies and I think one of the things that Traditionally, back 25 years ago,
Anna Frapwell:which was quite frustrating about PR was that, you know, it was very difficult to
Anna Frapwell:kind of prove your worth within that mix.
Anna Frapwell:And it was always kind of a challenge.
Anna Frapwell:I mean, we're talking.
Anna Frapwell:Back then we were getting rulers out and measuring the content within a
Anna Frapwell:magazine to then try and put some advertising cost against it to prove,
Anna Frapwell:you know, that article would have cost this as an ad and things like that.
Anna Frapwell:So that was always kind of a big frustration, um, and I remember
Anna Frapwell:setting up a Facebook page for a big retail company that I was working
Anna Frapwell:for, and it was kind of a start.
Anna Frapwell:of the moment at which I started to become really passionate about
Anna Frapwell:digital marketing and what could be achieved through digital marketing.
Anna Frapwell:And kind of that's where it started.
Anna Frapwell:Um, and then fast forward a bit, I had my second child, um, about Six, five and
Anna Frapwell:a half years ago, and it was that point at which I thought, do you know what?
Anna Frapwell:I've always wanted to set up my own thing.
Anna Frapwell:Now is the opportunity to take everything I've learned and gathered
Anna Frapwell:through working in some really big agencies working in house, and actually,
Anna Frapwell:what was it that I loved about that?
Anna Frapwell:What was it as a someone in-house?
Anna Frapwell:that I didn't like about working with agencies, what did I do, you know, what
Anna Frapwell:did I like about working with agencies, and now it's my opportunity to create
Anna Frapwell:something myself, so that's what I did.
Matt Edmundson:Oh, well done.
Matt Edmundson:It's, um, it's quite a common story, uh, for a lot of agency owners.
Matt Edmundson:It's like, Oh, I did this, but I just wanted to do it myself.
Matt Edmundson:And I thought, why not give it a go?
Matt Edmundson:Had what Michael Gerber calls an entrepreneurial seizure, uh, which
Matt Edmundson:I think is such a great phrase.
Matt Edmundson:Um, and, um, away you go.
Matt Edmundson:So here we are some sort of five years later.
Matt Edmundson:I'm curious, right?
Matt Edmundson:Because you said that you did a lot of PR.
Matt Edmundson:There's a, there's a phrase which I have heard banded around a lot recently.
Matt Edmundson:And I'd love your insights, your thoughts on this.
Matt Edmundson:And that phrase is digital PR.
Matt Edmundson:We should be investing in digital PR.
Matt Edmundson:Now I know that's not the title of the podcast, but I'm kind of
Matt Edmundson:curious, this is your background.
Matt Edmundson:What is digital PR and is it something that I really need to think about?
Matt Edmundson:For
Anna Frapwell:me, I mean, we don't actually do any digital PR within
Anna Frapwell:the agency, but for me, it kind of ties very closely in with things
Anna Frapwell:like SEO, um, and it kind of.
Anna Frapwell:You know, if we're working with a client that is hot on their SEO and
Anna Frapwell:they're working with um, a digital PR agency as well as, as one that's
Anna Frapwell:kind of doing it offline as well, we, we will see improved performance.
Anna Frapwell:It's kind of that overall multi channel mix that.
Anna Frapwell:Just enhances and leverages everything for a client.
Anna Frapwell:And I think that, you know, if you've got people who are coming across your
Anna Frapwell:brand, because they've read it in an article online, or they've picked it up
Anna Frapwell:through a blog or something like that, because of the efforts of the digital
Anna Frapwell:marketing team, a digital PR team, it's only going to help through, you
Anna Frapwell:know, tie in and help with your efforts on Google ads and things like that.
Anna Frapwell:So, yeah, I think it's, it's one of those things, isn't it?
Anna Frapwell:You know, you've got to assess.
Anna Frapwell:There are so many things you can do.
Anna Frapwell:Where are you going to start?
Anna Frapwell:Where are you going to stop?
Anna Frapwell:And one of the things that I'm kind of quite passionate about
Anna Frapwell:is making sure you've got all the foundations ready before you start
Anna Frapwell:putting money into something.
Anna Frapwell:And then when you do start to put money into something, making
Anna Frapwell:sure that you do that thing well.
Anna Frapwell:And not spreading yourself too thin across, you know, it's that shiny
Anna Frapwell:object syndrome and thinking, Oh my goodness, do I need to be on TikTok?
Anna Frapwell:Let's head over to TikTok now.
Anna Frapwell:Oh, do I need to be here?
Anna Frapwell:Do I, Oh, I haven't got a Pinterest page.
Anna Frapwell:Maybe I'll set, you know, do your core things really, really well.
Anna Frapwell:And then build from there.
Matt Edmundson:So what would you, what would you say the core things are for you?
Matt Edmundson:I mean, it's sage advice and I'm kind of curious, you know, um, in the
Matt Edmundson:sense of if you're going to do core marketing activities, what are the core
Matt Edmundson:marketing activities every eCommerce business should be thinking about?
Anna Frapwell:Yeah, so, I mean, we have kind of like a process that
Anna Frapwell:we'll go through and it's part of our, our conversations that we have
Anna Frapwell:with leads when they come through.
Anna Frapwell:And we get on that first call to do a bit of it.
Anna Frapwell:Um.
Anna Frapwell:Kind of digging in to find out what they're about, what their
Anna Frapwell:goals are and things like that.
Anna Frapwell:And one of the things, so we'll kind of look at their website, make sure
Anna Frapwell:that's really well optimized, make sure that their conversion rate is strong
Anna Frapwell:and it's, it's a good conversion rate and it's ready for sending traffic to.
Anna Frapwell:So that's kind of number one.
Anna Frapwell:If you've not got a great conversion rate or if your conversion rate
Anna Frapwell:needs some work to it, don't start spending money on anything to
Anna Frapwell:try and get more traffic there.
Anna Frapwell:Focus there first.
Anna Frapwell:So that's kind of step one.
Anna Frapwell:And then we're kind of talking about broadening out those foundations.
Anna Frapwell:And that does include things like SEO.
Anna Frapwell:It does include things like, um, Making sure you've got a really good
Anna Frapwell:email marketing platform set up.
Anna Frapwell:So we work with Klaviyo, making sure that's integrated, making sure that all
Anna Frapwell:those basic flows are set up and ready for you to then, when you are spending
Anna Frapwell:money and sending traffic to your site, you're using every possible opportunity
Anna Frapwell:to either capture someone for a later date if they don't make an instant conversion
Anna Frapwell:or convert them to a sale then and there.
Anna Frapwell:So they're kind of like the foundational elements we look at and then.
Anna Frapwell:our point of view where we see the most success is a combination of Google ads
Anna Frapwell:and Facebook ads together to kind of use them as almost like Facebook as
Anna Frapwell:that top of funnel awareness driver and then Google as that kind of recapture
Anna Frapwell:as well as a bit of kind of picking people up who are actively searching for
Anna Frapwell:something that you've got to sell to them.
Anna Frapwell:Um, so that's kind of the combination that's worked really well for us is
Anna Frapwell:making sure that we've got a really solid Facebook ad strategy, Google ad
Anna Frapwell:strategy, and then underpinning that with some email marketing as well.
Anna Frapwell:well
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, it's, it's interesting, isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:You talk about this.
Matt Edmundson:As a, as the sort of the foundations, um, I think you're right.
Matt Edmundson:I think having, having an optimized website is, is, is a good place to start
Matt Edmundson:because I remember one client came to us and said, listen, um, what do you,
Matt Edmundson:what do you think to our business?
Matt Edmundson:And I looked at what they were doing.
Matt Edmundson:I looked at what their competitors were doing.
Matt Edmundson:I'm like, well, your competitors are selling 10 times as much
Matt Edmundson:as you from what I can gather.
Matt Edmundson:online.
Matt Edmundson:And he's like, well, okay, so to increase our volume by tenfold, I need to increase
Matt Edmundson:my ad budget by tenfold, don't I?
Matt Edmundson:And I'm like, yeah, no, no, not at all.
Matt Edmundson:I'm like, first and foremost, you Before you spend any money
Matt Edmundson:on increasing ads, you've got to look at your conversion rate.
Matt Edmundson:So the conversion rate for you is like a fifth of what it is for your competitors.
Matt Edmundson:So, um, they may be spending twice as much on advertising, but overall
Matt Edmundson:they're getting 10 times as many sales.
Matt Edmundson:Um, and a lot of that is down to their website.
Matt Edmundson:You can be better off rather than spending an extra 30 grand on ads, investing in
Matt Edmundson:your website and getting conversion rates.
Matt Edmundson:It was a very difficult conversation for him to hear.
Matt Edmundson:Because ads, it's easy isn't it, in a lot of ways, you kind of go, well I
Matt Edmundson:need more sales, therefore I, I, I will increase my spending on ads because it's
Matt Edmundson:easy, it's quick and you can outsource that to an agency and you go, well you
Matt Edmundson:just Disturb all my cells, there you go.
Matt Edmundson:Whereas increasing website conversion, whilst there is science behind
Matt Edmundson:it, there's also an art involved and it's not as straightforward,
Anna Frapwell:right?
Anna Frapwell:Yeah, 100%.
Anna Frapwell:Yeah, definitely.
Anna Frapwell:And it's also things like, you know, some of the conversations that we have in that
Anna Frapwell:initial call with someone is just making sure that they've got a really solid
Anna Frapwell:understanding of those numbers as well.
Anna Frapwell:And, you know, what are your margins?
Anna Frapwell:Margin strong enough to sustain an ad campaign and spend that needs
Anna Frapwell:to go towards that ad campaign.
Anna Frapwell:And, you know, are you maximizing your average order value and things like that
Anna Frapwell:to make sure that when someone lands, that your conversion rate is strong,
Anna Frapwell:but you're also getting them to spend the most you can possibly get them to
Anna Frapwell:spend so that that cost per click that you've got then just kind of transforms.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
Matt Edmundson:And then when you've done that, yes, we can start to talk about increasing ad
Matt Edmundson:spend like with AdWords and Google Ads and things like that, which is great, you
Matt Edmundson:know, and I think it's very sage advice.
Matt Edmundson:And underpinning that you had email.
Matt Edmundson:Interesting, you chose Klaviyo, which seems to be the thing that 98 percent
Matt Edmundson:of eCom businesses are using now.
Matt Edmundson:I don't know what the exact number is.
Matt Edmundson:But everyone I talk to is now using Klaviyo.
Matt Edmundson:Is there a reason you chose Klaviyo over other platforms?
Anna Frapwell:Yeah, I mean, we've tried other platforms.
Anna Frapwell:Klaviyo for us is just, um, incredibly intuitive.
Anna Frapwell:It's built free commerce.
Anna Frapwell:We're able to do so much more with it.
Anna Frapwell:We see, um, great deliverability with Klaviyo as well.
Anna Frapwell:So we are just, when we compare, if we, I'll quite often say if we've got
Anna Frapwell:someone on MailChimp or something like that, and, and we talk to them about
Anna Frapwell:Take them over to Klaviyo, you know, I, I'm always entirely confident that
Anna Frapwell:they'll make that money back in terms of extra costs, it will cost to go through
Anna Frapwell:Klaviyo very, very quickly because the results we're seeing are so good.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, it's really, really powerful point.
Matt Edmundson:I'm smiling because I was having a conversation with someone.
Matt Edmundson:Somebody yesterday, a good friend of mine, he's not involved in e-commerce,
Matt Edmundson:but we just, we two old men sat in a restaurant eating, catching up with each
Matt Edmundson:other, haven't seen each other for a little while, and we're just having a gab.
Matt Edmundson:And we got onto the conversation of Zoom.
Matt Edmundson:'cause obviously Zoom, I mean in the pan, the pandemic, you know,
Matt Edmundson:if it was ever good for a company, it was good for Zoom, right?
Matt Edmundson:I mean it just, Mm-Hmm came seemingly outta nowhere.
Matt Edmundson:Change the world in that sort of sphere and become the market leader.
Matt Edmundson:And we were talking about that and he's, he, he made a really interesting point.
Matt Edmundson:He's like, well, where was Skype?
Matt Edmundson:You know, Microsoft book, Skype?
Matt Edmundson:I had all this money behind it, but where was Skype?
Matt Edmundson:And it kind of feels a little bit.
Matt Edmundson:I'm saying now, well, where was MailChimp, you know, and Klaviyo seems to have
Matt Edmundson:been this new kid on the block that I know it's been around for a little
Matt Edmundson:while, but it seems to now be the market leader where you kind of go, well,
Matt Edmundson:that was MailChimp's domain because everybody used MailChimp years ago.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Um, but for whatever reason, they've not innovated and they've not kept up.
Matt Edmundson:Um, and it just seems like more and more people are switching
Matt Edmundson:to this other platform.
Matt Edmundson:I think you're
Anna Frapwell:right, and I think it's almost like they are starting to innovate,
Anna Frapwell:but not at the pace at which they need to innovate either, and I think there's
Anna Frapwell:so much more that's kind of happened with the likes of Klaviyo in terms of
Anna Frapwell:integrations, you know, we can integrate Klaviyo seamlessly with Facebook Ads,
Anna Frapwell:and we can kind of share that data.
Anna Frapwell:And there's no need to bring in like Zapier or anything like that
Anna Frapwell:to push data between two platforms.
Anna Frapwell:So for us, it's kind of, it just makes everything far more
Anna Frapwell:streamlined, far more effective when we're combining multiple platforms
Anna Frapwell:together, um, for an end goal for a
Matt Edmundson:customer.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, absolutely.
Matt Edmundson:And I, this is interesting.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, uh, interesting.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, that you, everyone seems to be going down that road.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, which is good.
Matt Edmundson:I use Klaviyo myself on, uh, or Klaviyo.
Matt Edmundson:Is it Klaviyo or Klaviyo?
Matt Edmundson:I don't know.
Anna Frapwell:I don't know.
Matt Edmundson:Tomato, tomato, you know.
Matt Edmundson:But we use it ourselves for our own econ businesses.
Matt Edmundson:So I, uh, have, we've used MailChimp.
Matt Edmundson:We've used, I mean, we've used just about all of them, I think, over the years.
Matt Edmundson:And Klaviyo seems to be the one that we sort of stuck with at the
Matt Edmundson:moment, um, uh, for now until I test drive another one, I'm sure at
Matt Edmundson:some point, the tech team hate it.
Matt Edmundson:Oh, Matt, not another email problem.
Matt Edmundson:Um, so let's talk about multi channel marketing.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, let's talk about it specific, cause at the start, when we were
Matt Edmundson:talking about this, we said, we're going to talk about managing, um,
Matt Edmundson:mastering multi channel marketing.
Matt Edmundson:And I said with a specific bent on family.
Matt Edmundson:And because that's what you guys are pretty hot on it, why, I mean,
Matt Edmundson:this seems to be one of the things you have an agency sort of got into
Matt Edmundson:that whole sphere of things, right?
Anna Frapwell:Yeah, sure.
Anna Frapwell:So I think it kind of naturally happened initially in that, you know, as a
Anna Frapwell:parent, we were talking to parent brands.
Anna Frapwell:And over time, it's where we've kind of honed our craft, as it were, and
Anna Frapwell:that's where we kind of specialize.
Anna Frapwell:And it's a really interesting sector to work in, because I think.
Anna Frapwell:You know, what's great is, I mean, between us and the agency, I think
Anna Frapwell:we, we did a headcount the other day and I think we've got like 14 kids.
Anna Frapwell:So we kind of like, we can understand, you know, no matter what the problem is
Anna Frapwell:that that parent might be having, we can, someone can put themselves in their shoes.
Anna Frapwell:So that's kind of brilliant.
Anna Frapwell:And it just being able to talk to a client who's got a family brand, whether
Anna Frapwell:that's kind of a baby product, a kid's
Anna Frapwell:Customer is talking.
Anna Frapwell:It's just amazing.
Anna Frapwell:But also from like a multi channel marketing perspective, we obviously,
Anna Frapwell:you know, we know what it's like as parents, how distracted we are.
Anna Frapwell:You know, if we take, um, one of the brands we work with
Anna Frapwell:is the Sleep Aid for babies.
Anna Frapwell:And I myself had a baby that did not sleep, refused.
Anna Frapwell:Sleep, sleeping was for kind of wimps.
Anna Frapwell:We're not going to do that.
Anna Frapwell:And you know, the amount of Stuff that I bought in the middle of the night
Anna Frapwell:whilst scrolling Facebook and it's things like that and being able to kind
Anna Frapwell:of go, okay, let's test sending emails at two o'clock in the morning because
Anna Frapwell:there might be parents just desperately trying to Distract themselves, keep
Anna Frapwell:themselves awake and they will, you know, be hooked in quite easily to
Anna Frapwell:something that really talks to that particular pain point in that moment.
Anna Frapwell:So there's lots of strategies that we're able to kind of hook onto because
Anna Frapwell:they're born from experience as well.
Anna Frapwell:But from a multi channel marketing perspective, it's making sure that, you
Anna Frapwell:know, you know what it's like as a parent, you're really highly distracted, you can
Anna Frapwell:be, I don't know, finding a quiet place to just have a scroll and just go right,
Anna Frapwell:it's a moment for me, I'm just going to scroll through here, and then next thing
Anna Frapwell:someone's, it's either gone deathly quiet in another room, so you know that you
Anna Frapwell:need to go and have a look at what's going
Matt Edmundson:on.
Matt Edmundson:Charcoal pans on the wall are going to appear or something, yeah, yeah,
Matt Edmundson:we've got an issue, yeah, yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Getting
Anna Frapwell:quick.
Anna Frapwell:Screams and it's because the siblings push the other one over
Anna Frapwell:and then you get distracted and you've stopped what you're doing.
Anna Frapwell:Yeah.
Anna Frapwell:So that's why retargeting, and it's quite interesting when we dig into
Anna Frapwell:kind of Google and look at kind of the touch points to a sale and how
Anna Frapwell:many touch points it's taking to get customers through to a sale.
Anna Frapwell:And you're looking at different products and it can be sometimes
Anna Frapwell:on the products where you know.
Anna Frapwell:It is a product where they've been, you can tell that there's just so much going
Anna Frapwell:on in their lives or they're scrolling before they go and pick up a kid from
Anna Frapwell:the school run and all of a sudden the bell goes, so they've got to get out
Anna Frapwell:of their car and it's things like that.
Anna Frapwell:So yeah, it's quite interesting in terms of what we can.
Anna Frapwell:Uh, think about from a strategy point of view.
Matt Edmundson:That's really insightful, isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:Because, um, I love this idea of targeting, uh, uh, mums who
Matt Edmundson:are awake in the middle of the night with sleep aids for kids.
Matt Edmundson:I think that's genius.
Matt Edmundson:Um, and I, uh, I, I, it's, there's, we're, we're just about to launch,
Matt Edmundson:um, a new beauty brand, one, another eCom business of ours.
Matt Edmundson:We're going to do a little beauty brand type thing.
Matt Edmundson:And I'm like, uh, It's really interesting.
Matt Edmundson:I'm just sitting here thinking, I'm actually tempted to tell the marketing
Matt Edmundson:team, why don't we just test Facebook ads at two o'clock in the morning when
Matt Edmundson:it's the least competitive in the UK, um, and just talk to new mums about, you
Matt Edmundson:know, skincare or something like that.
Matt Edmundson:Whether that, I mean, maybe they don't want to hear about skincare at
Matt Edmundson:two o'clock in the morning, but it's, it's one of those things, isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:Where we're all trying, I think, to target ads and to get people's attention.
Matt Edmundson:And we're all doing it between nine and five.
Matt Edmundson:Right, there's these boundaries.
Matt Edmundson:But actually what you're talking about here is thinking outside of the
Matt Edmundson:box a little bit and thinking more in line with your consumer and when
Matt Edmundson:they're going to be consuming content.
Anna Frapwell:Exactly that.
Anna Frapwell:And it's, it's, it's essential.
Anna Frapwell:I mean, certainly so far as email goes, it's, you know, you need, there's
Anna Frapwell:so much, I mean, I know my inbox is round and there's so much, you know,
Anna Frapwell:you've got to cut through that inbox.
Anna Frapwell:You know, it's about cutting through the feed.
Anna Frapwell:How can you on Facebook, you know, how can you create that cut through?
Anna Frapwell:How can you be the ad that stands out against everyone else?
Anna Frapwell:And again, with an inbox, it's the same thing, you know.
Anna Frapwell:How can you be the email that they go, Oh, I'm just thinking about that.
Anna Frapwell:That's what I need.
Matt Edmundson:And like
Anna Frapwell:I say, the amount I spent on sleep aids, the first year of my, my
Anna Frapwell:husband will be like, what are you trying
Matt Edmundson:now?
Matt Edmundson:We're going to do what?
Matt Edmundson:And you're like, don't talk to me.
Matt Edmundson:Don't ask any questions.
Matt Edmundson:I have not got any sleep.
Matt Edmundson:You just, I'll sell the house, but what do you, whatever you want.
Matt Edmundson:Exactly, that's what we're gonna do.
Matt Edmundson:No, I've had three, I mean, my kids are at the other end of the spectrum
Matt Edmundson:now, my two eldest are at uni, my young daughter's at sixth form.
Matt Edmundson:And so, um, if they're having sleepless nights, I don't hear about it.
Matt Edmundson:But I still remember the days well, where that was a bit of a
Matt Edmundson:fraught time, especially with my daughter for the first two years.
Matt Edmundson:And I, we would have literally bought anything.
Matt Edmundson:I mean,
Anna Frapwell:Well then that's the thing, yeah.
Anna Frapwell:And the other thing is, you know, no two children are the same either, you know.
Anna Frapwell:I didn't realise what a dream sleeper my first was, probably fortunately,
Anna Frapwell:because I may not have had a second.
Anna Frapwell:But, they definitely got that one the right way round.
Anna Frapwell:But, um, yeah, and it's just, you know, and we just learn.
Anna Frapwell:You know, so many of those experiences that we've had with children, so
Anna Frapwell:we've got one that's eleven and one that's, um, five and a half.
Anna Frapwell:And it's...
Anna Frapwell:You can just lean so much and when you're looking at a team that's got a
Anna Frapwell:Approximately 12 to 13 children between us, we've all come into the mix with
Anna Frapwell:completely different life experiences and, you know, working together cohesively to
Anna Frapwell:then go, actually this, this is the angle, this is the need, this is the problem.
Anna Frapwell:Let's talk to that.
Matt Edmundson:And it's interesting how you mentioned that certainly
Matt Edmundson:new, I'm going to call the sector new mums, um, rightly or wrongly,
Matt Edmundson:but let's just say, you know, we're talking new mums and you talk about.
Matt Edmundson:Um, or maybe just mums in general, actually, they're, it's a very distracted,
Matt Edmundson:uh, target audience because they're just trying to find 30 seconds here and
Matt Edmundson:there, you know, I'm picking up the kids.
Matt Edmundson:I'm on the look, whatever it is, you know, you just, you find your time, don't you?
Matt Edmundson:And it's easy to forget what you're doing because Johnnie's Crying or
Matt Edmundson:whatever, you know, and so dealing with a distracted market rather than
Matt Edmundson:something that's hyper focused is, is an interesting challenge in itself.
Matt Edmundson:A few weeks ago, we had Neil Hoynes on the show.
Matt Edmundson:Now, at the time of recording this interview, it has not come out yet.
Matt Edmundson:It will be coming out soon, I think.
Matt Edmundson:I say name, I don't think it's come out yet.
Matt Edmundson:I just, I really should know my own schedule.
Matt Edmundson:But again, the production team, Orient Media, shout out to Orient Media.
Matt Edmundson:They're amazing.
Matt Edmundson:Um, the production team, uh, take care of all of that.
Matt Edmundson:But Neil Hoynes is the chief strategy officer for Google.
Matt Edmundson:Right.
Matt Edmundson:Okay.
Matt Edmundson:And his whole life is measuring data and he was talking about how,
Matt Edmundson:um, they measured for one lady who was buying a pair of shoes, okay?
Matt Edmundson:Now this is not a complex purchase.
Matt Edmundson:It's not like I'm buying a house or something.
Matt Edmundson:That is super involved.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, it's a pair of shoes.
Matt Edmundson:And I'm, I appreciate people might be shouting at the, at the.
Matt Edmundson:Phone now going, no, no.
Matt Edmundson:Shoes are complex, man.
Matt Edmundson:. You're misunderstanding it.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, in my head, shoes aren't complex.
Matt Edmundson:Right?
Matt Edmundson:I, I have two brands I go to.
Matt Edmundson:I buy that one or that one.
Matt Edmundson:It's easy.
Matt Edmundson:Mm-Hmm.
Matt Edmundson:But he was saying for this one lady, um, that she had 236 points of connection
Matt Edmundson:with that company before the purchase.
Matt Edmundson:And he's, he was like.
Matt Edmundson:This is email.
Matt Edmundson:This is Facebook ads.
Matt Edmundson:This is Google retargeting ads.
Matt Edmundson:This was ads on Instagram.
Matt Edmundson:This was coming to the website, reading a blog.
Matt Edmundson:Do you know what I mean?
Matt Edmundson:She would then stop, big, obviously distractions or something was going on.
Matt Edmundson:And he was like, overall, there were 236.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, interactions before she actually put in her credit card details and purchased.
Matt Edmundson:And he's like, so who gets the sale?
Matt Edmundson:How do I attribute that sale?
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:And it's like, it's obviously the answer is it's virtually impossible to go.
Matt Edmundson:Mm-Hmm.
Matt Edmundson:. Well, it was when she was looking at that Facebook ad that she actually
Matt Edmundson:went from being really interested to Yes, I've decided on it.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:I've made my choice.
Matt Edmundson:'cause you don't, yeah.
Matt Edmundson:I'm doing it.
Matt Edmundson:And the reason I'm telling this story is because I.
Matt Edmundson:You sort of, you distracted me and reminded me of it.
Matt Edmundson:There's a lot of these connections, which is why let's talk about
Matt Edmundson:multi channel marketing.
Matt Edmundson:Um, for me, multi channel marketing now starts to make sense because
Matt Edmundson:in this hyper distraction going on, we have to connect sometimes
Matt Edmundson:230 times before we get this thing.
Anna Frapwell:And if you, you know, we're, we're not, we don't focus
Anna Frapwell:our attention, do we, as humans?
Anna Frapwell:We don't spend, we're very much, you know, quickly, even if you're not a distracted
Anna Frapwell:mum, you're kind of looking at something, then you're looking at something else.
Anna Frapwell:People are watching Netflix and watching their phone at the same time.
Anna Frapwell:You know, there's so many.
Anna Frapwell:Things going on in our brains and in our environment that it then becomes even
Anna Frapwell:more important to be kind of in this Multi channel presence, but with the caveat
Anna Frapwell:of I think it's really important to be doing them well, so don't go Oh, okay.
Anna Frapwell:I need to be everywhere.
Anna Frapwell:So I'm just gonna throw myself everywhere like throwing yourself
Anna Frapwell:everywhere and doing that badly It's not going to, not going to work either.
Anna Frapwell:It's, you know, it's about making sure that what you do do, you do it really,
Anna Frapwell:really well and then build out from there.
Anna Frapwell:But it's interesting your point about the lady in the shoes, because we've
Anna Frapwell:worked with kid's shoe brands in the past and that's quite an interesting one
Anna Frapwell:as well, because if you think about it, we're all kind of as parents conditioned
Anna Frapwell:to go through the misery of going to somewhere like Clark's and sitting
Anna Frapwell:there for ages while you wait for your child's foot to be measured because.
Anna Frapwell:We all know that it's really important to have children's feet measured because
Anna Frapwell:they're growing and things like that.
Anna Frapwell:And it was quite, it's quite an interesting one because I think shoes
Anna Frapwell:in general are quite difficult to sell online because you want to know how
Anna Frapwell:they fit and feel, um, different shoes.
Anna Frapwell:Come in, you know, they size differently per store and things like that.
Anna Frapwell:Some stores selling European sizes, some stores go by the
Anna Frapwell:UK sizes and things like that.
Anna Frapwell:And then that was a brand also that required a lot of touch points
Anna Frapwell:because, you know, it's not just from an adult's perspective, you
Anna Frapwell:know, what size foot you are.
Anna Frapwell:And so therefore you kind of can make an educated guess on what size it is.
Anna Frapwell:You've got the added dimension of then.
Anna Frapwell:Being responsible for making sure your child is wearing the right size
Anna Frapwell:shoe when we know actually that that's really important in those early years
Anna Frapwell:is to have the right size shoe because I mean, we all tell ourselves all
Anna Frapwell:sorts of things as parents, you know, you could be damaging their feet if
Anna Frapwell:you don't get it right and all of those things going on in your brain.
Anna Frapwell:So that again was another brand that required so many touch points in
Anna Frapwell:order to get the sale because you were, you were having to address so
Anna Frapwell:many different barriers to purchase.
Anna Frapwell:In order to, but one of the big things we knew was no one likes
Anna Frapwell:sitting in clots for hours on end in a queue with a million other kids
Matt Edmundson:around them.
Matt Edmundson:Oh, with their smotty noses.
Matt Edmundson:Can you get
Anna Frapwell:me out of here now?
Matt Edmundson:It's interesting, isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:I'm thinking, I mean, we're talking a lot about shoes.
Matt Edmundson:The shoe company that I use has an interesting shoe sizing policy and
Matt Edmundson:I'm always a little bit sketchy of it.
Matt Edmundson:But what they have you do now is you.
Matt Edmundson:You put a piece of A4 paper on the floor and you put your foot on it and you take
Matt Edmundson:a photo and they're using the tech now to figure out the right shoe size for you.
Matt Edmundson:And, which I think is, is, is interesting, isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:As tech unfolds, we can, we can add this.
Matt Edmundson:And again, this comes back to website conversion.
Matt Edmundson:How do you help somebody buy?
Matt Edmundson:It's like, we're going to help you get the right size straight away.
Matt Edmundson:You know, no dramas, you know.
Matt Edmundson:All you need is a picture of your foot, which is quite clever when you think about
Matt Edmundson:it, you know, what you can do with that.
Matt Edmundson:So let's talk then about multi channel marketing.
Matt Edmundson:It's very difficult.
Matt Edmundson:This phrase multi channel marketing, I want to say multi level marketing,
Matt Edmundson:but it's not, it's multi channel.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, so is it better to market in four channels really well than in ten
Matt Edmundson:channels at a sort of mediocre level?
Anna Frapwell:I'd argue yes.
Anna Frapwell:I mean you don't want to, because the other thing is, you know, unless you've
Anna Frapwell:got infinite amounts of money to be spending on ad spend across as many
Anna Frapwell:channels as you like, you know, it's just no point watering down your ad spend.
Anna Frapwell:And then not really achieving anything particularly well across anything.
Anna Frapwell:Um, so you're better off kind of, and that, and that's why we've got to this
Anna Frapwell:place where we are predominantly looking at that foundational pieces, your email
Anna Frapwell:marketing, make sure that's set up.
Anna Frapwell:that you've got those automations in place to capture anyone
Anna Frapwell:at any part of their journey.
Anna Frapwell:Um, and then layering that on with the real kind of awareness driver
Anna Frapwell:of Facebook ads, and then the kind of retargeting the extra things that
Anna Frapwell:Google can do alongside Facebook ads.
Anna Frapwell:And together, they work really well.
Anna Frapwell:I would argue that kind of We're seeing more and more success with things like
Anna Frapwell:TikTok as well and layering that in.
Anna Frapwell:But again, I think that's really specific to the brand.
Anna Frapwell:And I think you can either just smash it on TikTok or you can be
Anna Frapwell:severely disappointed by what happens.
Anna Frapwell:And I think that's kind of making sure that your brand is fit for purpose
Anna Frapwell:when it comes to TikTok really.
Anna Frapwell:Um, so yeah, so that's why our predominant focus has been on those
Anna Frapwell:three core areas, because it's where we've been able to take a branch and go,
Anna Frapwell:okay, let's get out there, let's test.
Anna Frapwell:Let's now scale and let's use these three platforms to be able to scale
Anna Frapwell:you up to where you want to be.
Anna Frapwell:And then once we've got a hold of that and we've got that working really well
Anna Frapwell:for you, now let's look at something else, now let's look at something else.
Anna Frapwell:You know, there are so many things, you know, you look at SEO, which is
Anna Frapwell:again, arguably really important.
Anna Frapwell:You look at things like Pinterest ads.
Anna Frapwell:They're all very long term, slow burners.
Anna Frapwell:They are important, but if you're looking for that kind of faster conversion and
Anna Frapwell:scale, they're the places that you kind of need to focus your attention for our
Matt Edmundson:experience.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, so if I'm a brand, and I feel like we've reached a limit on those core
Matt Edmundson:ones, so let's take Google and Facebook.
Matt Edmundson:So let's assume they're our core foundational ones, um, whether it's
Matt Edmundson:Facebook something in the metaverse, we should probably call it meta rather than
Matt Edmundson:Facebook, actually, I've got my Matt Edmundson, Diocese, Prayer, Conversation
Matt Edmundson:Street, Holcombe, Origin, Origins, Liverpool, Frontline, Frontline Church,
Matt Edmundson:Jesus Christ, eCommerce Podcast, EP.
Matt Edmundson:Do you A.
Matt Edmundson:Believe me and go right you should try TikTok or do you B.
Matt Edmundson:Go can I have a look first because I'm not entirely sure.
Matt Edmundson:So before you go off and say do TikTok let's look at Google and Facebook and you
Matt Edmundson:tend to find actually What most owners perceive about their Google Ads and
Matt Edmundson:Facebook is not actually quite correct.
Anna Frapwell:Yeah, that one.
Anna Frapwell:B.
Anna Frapwell:That's what we, yeah, that's what we tend to find is, you know, you, and
Anna Frapwell:then, unfortunately, you know, it kind of reminds me of the conversations
Anna Frapwell:that I have all too often with brands where they kind of say, oh,
Anna Frapwell:interface, meta doesn't work for me.
Anna Frapwell:And you go, okay, let me just have a look, see why.
Anna Frapwell:You think Meta doesn't work for you, and you know, it may be that they've had a bad
Anna Frapwell:experience with someone who has set them up in an entirely the wrong way, they're
Anna Frapwell:not optimising the right things, they're not feeding enough creative into their
Anna Frapwell:campaigns, and you know, very much so now, more than ever, Meta is about creative
Anna Frapwell:iterations and making sure that you have not just volume of creative, but that
Anna Frapwell:there's diversity of creative as well.
Anna Frapwell:So quite often you'll look in an account where someone has said,
Anna Frapwell:wow, I didn't see that coming.
Anna Frapwell:It's just not working for us, and there's always opportunity, and
Anna Frapwell:there's always something that can be done to improve that performance.
Anna Frapwell:Um, I don't think we've, we've, I mean, we audit every business before we
Anna Frapwell:begin working with them, and I don't, I don't think we've ever audited a
Anna Frapwell:business where we've gone, actually, do you know what, you're right.
Anna Frapwell:You've, you've nailed it.
Anna Frapwell:You've nailed Metta.
Anna Frapwell:You don't need us.
Anna Frapwell:You've done it.
Anna Frapwell:You've completed Metta.
Anna Frapwell:Well done.
Anna Frapwell:On to the next
Matt Edmundson:one.
Matt Edmundson:On to the next one.
Matt Edmundson:What would the next one be?
Matt Edmundson:So what are some of the other channels?
Matt Edmundson:Um, you know, we're doing, maybe we've not got it totally optimized and
Matt Edmundson:buttoned down, but we're doing okay with Google, Facebook, and I'm feeling
Matt Edmundson:confident now about branching out.
Matt Edmundson:What are some of the other platforms that should be on my hit list?
Matt Edmundson:I mean, you've mentioned TikTok, you know, a lot of people talking about
Matt Edmundson:TikTok at the moment, but what should I realistically be thinking about?
Anna Frapwell:I do think it's really dependent on the
Anna Frapwell:brand and what you're selling.
Anna Frapwell:I think that, you know, there's a lot to be said for TikTok and Pinterest.
Anna Frapwell:I think that you'd see a faster conversion from the likes of TikTok.
Anna Frapwell:It's a much faster kind of, you know, you can think about, but again, TikTok is
Anna Frapwell:only going to work for you if you can, if you can produce the volume of creative.
Anna Frapwell:And if you're not able to keep up with that volume of creative, then Don't
Anna Frapwell:start down that Tik Tok route at all.
Anna Frapwell:Um, Pinterest, if you're talking about baby brands, kids brands,
Anna Frapwell:you've got that opportunity where people are building boards on their
Anna Frapwell:nurseries and things like that.
Anna Frapwell:And that's a great opportunity to tap into that psyche of that
Anna Frapwell:customer and where they are in their journey as they head towards having
Anna Frapwell:their first child or something.
Anna Frapwell:So, you know, that's, they're, they're great options.
Anna Frapwell:And it really, I, Believe is specific to your product, your brand and
Anna Frapwell:what you're trying to achieve.
Anna Frapwell:And going back to what we spoke about with digital PR, I think, you know, that's a
Anna Frapwell:really valuable place to be, and I think that's kind of only by doing that you are
Anna Frapwell:then putting yourself in a position where you're going to enhance performance on
Anna Frapwell:the channels that you're already using.
Anna Frapwell:Putting paid traffic into.
Anna Frapwell:So it's kind of layering on an additional element that's gonna
Anna Frapwell:enhance what you're already doing.
Matt Edmundson:Mm-Hmm.
Matt Edmundson:Very good.
Matt Edmundson:You talk about the volume of creative, um, Mm-Hmm.
Matt Edmundson:And, uh, meta needs volume, and.
Matt Edmundson:Tick tock needs volume.
Matt Edmundson:Just explain for those that might not know what that means and what that
Matt Edmundson:actually what's involved with that.
Anna Frapwell:Yeah, so, um, it's ensuring that obviously it's dependent on ad spend.
Anna Frapwell:If you've got a really, really small ad spend, then you're restricted by how
Anna Frapwell:much creative that you can Actually have running, but on most kind of accounts,
Anna Frapwell:you want to have a breadth of creative.
Anna Frapwell:So that's when we talk about, um, volume of creative, we're talking about
Anna Frapwell:things like making sure that you've got static images, video, you've got
Anna Frapwell:carousels, you've got collection ads, you've got all sorts of different
Anna Frapwell:permutations of creative running in your account, but then equally.
Anna Frapwell:Of those creations, you've got variations of them, so you've got different kind of
Anna Frapwell:variations of that same creative, um, but it has to be different enough for AI to
Anna Frapwell:actually go, or the AI in meta to actually go, that is different, it's not the same.
Anna Frapwell:I can see that there's a difference between those two, um, making sure
Anna Frapwell:that you're mixing kind of some very, um, lifestyle creative and
Anna Frapwell:video with some more user generated creative and, and things like that.
Anna Frapwell:So you really are putting yourself in a position where the algorithm can Be
Anna Frapwell:creative and find the right user for that piece of creative and then find the
Anna Frapwell:winning pieces of creative and then you're able to learn from the data, learn from
Anna Frapwell:what's working, what isn't working and then that can inform future choices and
Anna Frapwell:future decisions and what you do next.
Matt Edmundson:That's going to be one of my questions actually because
Matt Edmundson:you're, it's in, you know, we're talking about the volume of creative going
Matt Edmundson:back 25 years and it's when you, you know, were working for a large agency.
Matt Edmundson:The agency would run one ad.
Matt Edmundson:That's what they would run.
Matt Edmundson:They would put that ad in probably multiple magazines.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, it feels like this is quite different in the sense of
Matt Edmundson:I'm, I'm running a hundred ads.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Um, rather than one, uh, and I'm now thinking rather than trying to create
Matt Edmundson:one fantastic ad, I'm, I'm sort of spreading my resources to create a
Matt Edmundson:hundred ads, if that makes sense.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Why, why should I do that in, you know, why, why can't I just create
Matt Edmundson:one ad and run with that one ad?
Matt Edmundson:Why do I need a hundred different ads, for example?
Anna Frapwell:It's a bit like saying that all your customers are the same people,
Anna Frapwell:they're not the same people, they're kind of different people with different,
Anna Frapwell:you know, something that might appeal to you, might be for the same product,
Anna Frapwell:might not appeal to me, and how are you going to convert two entirely different
Anna Frapwell:people to purchase the same product?
Anna Frapwell:It's by putting something different that's going to resonate
Anna Frapwell:with them in front of them.
Anna Frapwell:Um, I think the, You know, and it's all about these touch points as well,
Anna Frapwell:and telling a story too, so you know, it may be that something catches your
Anna Frapwell:eye initially, and then, do you know who, sorry, I just had an idea of
Anna Frapwell:something that kind of plays into what I'm saying, um, as an example, a a
Anna Frapwell:company called Merry People that sell wellies, I'm fascinated by their ads.
Anna Frapwell:Okay, Merry People.
Anna Frapwell:Yeah, I stalked them.
Anna Frapwell:I'm going to go and check them out.
Anna Frapwell:Incessantly.
Anna Frapwell:So they have nailed creative variation and it's brilliant.
Anna Frapwell:So they will, you'll get one ad that will show you kind of how to wear
Anna Frapwell:the boots, how to style the boots.
Anna Frapwell:You'll get a next ad that will just hammer you with a visual
Anna Frapwell:and then there'll be lots of testimonials alongside that visual.
Anna Frapwell:So it's a very simple cutout image and it's got loads of testimonials.
Anna Frapwell:Then there'll be user generated content.
Anna Frapwell:Then there'll be, um, Kind of a really beautiful stylized shot.
Anna Frapwell:Then there'll be something from the founder.
Anna Frapwell:And all the time you're building this picture of this brand, you're building
Anna Frapwell:this picture of this product and you're kind of getting to a point where you're
Anna Frapwell:going, I want to be part of this, you know, because it's tackled your, um,
Anna Frapwell:The consumer from so many different angles that ultimately the you,
Anna Frapwell:kind of feel infused into the brand.
Anna Frapwell:brand It's, it's really, and it's what, you know, they're
Anna Frapwell:not the only people doing it.
Anna Frapwell:Lots of people are doing it.
Anna Frapwell:I think they do it particularly well, um, and it's just so
Anna Frapwell:important as part of a strategy to not just go, Oh, that's working.
Anna Frapwell:So that's what we're going to stick with.
Anna Frapwell:Because in order to scale and grow, you need that
Matt Edmundson:variant.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, no, I love that.
Matt Edmundson:I love, I think it's, it's a bit, it's a, I guess we have the technology now
Matt Edmundson:where if I go back 25 years and I'm picking up Vogue and there's an advert
Matt Edmundson:that Vogue knows who's picked up the magazine and so the advert changes
Matt Edmundson:accordingly and so what I, you know, it sort of shows an advert which is going
Matt Edmundson:to resonate more with whoever's picked it up rather than just one generic ad
Matt Edmundson:and I get that and I love how it works.
Matt Edmundson:You've talked about something I've not heard talked about much actually
Matt Edmundson:when it comes to Facebook ads.
Matt Edmundson:Specifically, Facebook ads, because I think Google, you know, is more
Matt Edmundson:about the shopping side of things.
Matt Edmundson:But with Meta, the opportunity you have to communicate your brand's story in a
Matt Edmundson:way that resonates with the customer, rather than just going, buy, buy,
Matt Edmundson:buy, here's a product, buy, buy, buy.
Matt Edmundson:Um, but showing different sides of the company, showing different values,
Matt Edmundson:different brands, different, you know, and educating the customer.
Matt Edmundson:So the customer almost feels like it knows you.
Matt Edmundson:And it's not even, you know, the customer's not gone to your website.
Matt Edmundson:Um, I think it's quite a clever idea.
Matt Edmundson:Um, and it's, I'm going to follow Merry People, the Wellies.
Matt Edmundson:Um, I'll follow them.
Matt Edmundson:I don't even need to mention their name twice.
Matt Edmundson:Facebook will have heard it.
Matt Edmundson:I dare say the ads will appear.
Matt Edmundson:Oh, come on.
Matt Edmundson:And I think what tips I'm aware of time, Anna, but, um, we've opened up
Matt Edmundson:a can of worms here in a lot of ways.
Matt Edmundson:I'm kind of curious, what tips would you give people who are.
Matt Edmundson:Listen to the podcast, um, and they're, they're fairly new tweakers.
Matt Edmundson:So people like say me, take away my background, I'm starting
Matt Edmundson:a new skincare brand, right?
Matt Edmundson:What sort of things should I be thinking about?
Matt Edmundson:Let's talk about that person.
Matt Edmundson:And then I want to get your tips for the person that's like me, that
Matt Edmundson:has a big eCommerce brand over here.
Matt Edmundson:That is.
Matt Edmundson:Functioning in all kinds of different ways.
Matt Edmundson:So, uh, let's start with the newbie.
Anna Frapwell:So, basics, um, making sure that you've kind of optimised
Anna Frapwell:your website, making sure that you've got your foundations in place when it
Anna Frapwell:comes to email marketing and making sure that you're capturing emails and SMS.
Anna Frapwell:Um, knowing your numbers, because it's surprising how many people
Anna Frapwell:Don't know their total margins.
Anna Frapwell:They might know the margin on against cost per, you know, the cost of the goods to
Anna Frapwell:buy and then what they're selling it for.
Anna Frapwell:But factoring in all those other elements in your business
Anna Frapwell:that contribute to your margin.
Anna Frapwell:So important.
Anna Frapwell:Um, and then.
Anna Frapwell:Making sure that you've got a really good, clear understanding of who your
Anna Frapwell:customer is and who is buying from you so that you can then build out
Anna Frapwell:strategies that lean into finding more people that like your existing
Anna Frapwell:customer to start and scale your brand.
Anna Frapwell:Fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:That's where I'd start.
Matt Edmundson:Great.
Matt Edmundson:And the established e commercer, as I like to call
Anna Frapwell:them.
Anna Frapwell:Yeah, so if they're already running ads, they're generating a consistent
Anna Frapwell:turnover from our perspective.
Anna Frapwell:It's making sure that we're Those platforms are dovetailing into each
Anna Frapwell:other and work and supporting each other and doing what they should do.
Anna Frapwell:Some of the things we look at in turn when we come to scale is things like, you know,
Anna Frapwell:we'll have a brand that's saying to us, one of our case studies is on a brand that
Anna Frapwell:we've been working with where they had a great turnover, but they were just seeing
Anna Frapwell:the same turnover month in month out and we kind of looked into that to see what
Anna Frapwell:was going on and actually identified that They had a great problem because people
Anna Frapwell:were repeat purchasing, but they weren't bringing in anyone new to the business.
Anna Frapwell:So our main strategy was about driving new customer acquisition whilst
Anna Frapwell:maintaining that customer loyalty.
Anna Frapwell:So that that was the way to scale that brand, which we just kind of exploded
Anna Frapwell:it for them because we were able to bring in lots and lots of new people.
Anna Frapwell:But we knew because of the way they ran their business and how successful
Anna Frapwell:they were at repeat purchase.
Anna Frapwell:Once we brought them in through the door, they were going to stick around.
Anna Frapwell:So that's how we scaled it.
Anna Frapwell:So it's, I think it's about finding out what the bottlenecks
Anna Frapwell:are within your business.
Anna Frapwell:What are the problems and what are the things that are holding you back
Anna Frapwell:from taking it to the next level?
Anna Frapwell:So it could, it's really difficult to come up with a one size fits all approach
Anna Frapwell:to the next steps because it's going to be very different in each situation.
Matt Edmundson:No, very good.
Matt Edmundson:Very good.
Matt Edmundson:Love that.
Matt Edmundson:Take notes, ladies and gentlemen.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, sage advice.
Matt Edmundson:Um, Anna, listen, I, I am really aware of time.
Matt Edmundson:Uh...
Matt Edmundson:So if people want to connect with you, if they want to find out more about
Matt Edmundson:Neon Digital Clicks, if they just have a few questions they want to run past
Matt Edmundson:you, what's the best way to get hold of you and see what you guys are up to?
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, so
Anna Frapwell:we're really active actually on Instagram, so you can head
Anna Frapwell:over to us on Instagram, we're at Neon Digital Clicks there, or head to our
Anna Frapwell:website, which is neondigitalclicks.
Anna Frapwell:co.
Anna Frapwell:uk.
Anna Frapwell:We offer a free audit, so you can always...
Anna Frapwell:Let's jump in and we'll take a look at your business, see what's going on.
Anna Frapwell:Um, so yeah, the best places are Instagram and our website.
Matt Edmundson:Does Instagram work well for you?
Anna Frapwell:Brilliantly.
Anna Frapwell:Yeah, it works really well.
Anna Frapwell:We, we, we, I kind of keep looking at other platforms, but it's where
Anna Frapwell:we kind of, it's kind of our, yeah, bread and butter, I'd say.
Anna Frapwell:It's where we get a lot of engagement, a lot of conversations happen, um,
Anna Frapwell:it's been a great platform for us.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:See, most people normally, they come on the show, um, this podcast or the
Matt Edmundson:other podcast that we have, um, I'm kind of addicted to podcasting, if
Matt Edmundson:I'm honest with you, but, um, they come on the show and they'll normally
Matt Edmundson:share like their LinkedIn, you know, LinkedIn find me on LinkedIn.
Matt Edmundson:Um, less and less people are saying, Find me on Instagram, unless they've
Matt Edmundson:got like a personal brand, but you're an agency on LinkedIn doing well,
Matt Edmundson:which I find quite fascinating.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:So yeah, well, that's awesome.
Matt Edmundson:It's an unusual thing, but it's awesome.
Matt Edmundson:And so we're on
Anna Frapwell:LinkedIn too.
Anna Frapwell:But we are on LinkedIn too, but I would say Instagram's The good stuff happens.
Matt Edmundson:That's where the magic happens is on Instagram.
Matt Edmundson:And this show is not sponsored by anything to do with Instagram,
Matt Edmundson:just to be totally clear.
Matt Edmundson:Now, uh, that's, that's brilliant.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, Anna, listen, we will of course link to all of those things in the show notes
Matt Edmundson:as well, which people can get along for free at the website, ecommerce podcast.
Matt Edmundson:net.
Matt Edmundson:Or of course, if you subscribe to the newsletter, they will
Matt Edmundson:be winging their way to you.
Matt Edmundson:Just click the links in the email and you will find them.
Matt Edmundson:Anna, listen, thank you for coming on to the show.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, super enjoyable conversation, loving your background, loving the
Matt Edmundson:insights into family and um, uh, multi channel marketing, not multi level
Matt Edmundson:marketing, uh, multi channel marketing.
Matt Edmundson:And um, I, I, I loved your ideas about, um, stories, you know, using Facebook
Matt Edmundson:met ads to sort of tell a story, which I, and, and build your brand that way.
Matt Edmundson:I think it's very clever.
Matt Edmundson:Um, so genuinely appreciate you coming on the show.
Matt Edmundson:Huge, huge thanks.
Matt Edmundson:Thank you.
Matt Edmundson:Thanks very much.
Matt Edmundson:Thank you.
Matt Edmundson:Thank you.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Also a big shout out to today's show sponsor, the eCommerce Cohort.
Matt Edmundson:Remember to check out their free training, uh, or free
Matt Edmundson:training, just check out them out.
Matt Edmundson:It's all at ecommercecohort.
Matt Edmundson:com.
Matt Edmundson:More information in there.
Matt Edmundson:Come join me in there.
Matt Edmundson:It's great fun.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, also be sure to follow the eCommerce Podcast wherever you get your podcasts
Matt Edmundson:from, because of course we have more great conversations lined up.
Matt Edmundson:And I don't want you to miss any of them.
Matt Edmundson:And in case no one has told you yet today, let me be the first to tell you.
Matt Edmundson:You are awesome.
Matt Edmundson:Yes, you are.
Matt Edmundson:Created awesome.
Matt Edmundson:It's just a burden you have to bear.
Matt Edmundson:Anna has 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 Orien 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 the wonderful Sadaf
Matt Edmundson:Bainon and Tanya Hutzalak.
Matt Edmundson:Our theme song was written by Josh Edmundson.
Matt Edmundson:And as I mentioned, if you would like to read the transcript or show notes,
Matt Edmundson:head to the website eCommercePodcast.
Matt Edmundson:net.
Matt Edmundson:That's it from me.
Matt Edmundson:That's it from Anna.
Matt Edmundson:Thank you so much.
Matt Edmundson:For joining us.
Matt Edmundson:Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world.
Matt Edmundson:I'll see you next time.
Matt Edmundson:Bye for now.