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Tips From The Playbook Of A PPC Expert
Episode 16423rd November 2023 • eCommerce Podcast • Matt Edmundson
00:00:00 00:58:58

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Jump into the world of pay-per-click advertising with PPC expert Phil Byrne as he unravels the complexities of Google Ads, e-commerce strategies, and the power of data analytics. Whether you're a startup or an established brand, get ready for a wealth of actionable insights.This is a must-listen for anyone looking to sharpen their PPC skills in the dynamic world of e-commerce.

Key Takeaways:

1. E-commerce PPC Strategies: Phil Byrne highlights the importance of Google Shopping and remarketing in e-commerce, emphasising the use of YouTube and Meta for effective lead generation. He shares insights on adapting PPC strategies for digital products, focusing on search-driven campaigns and utilising educational content to solve consumer problems.

2. Tailored Advice for Different Business Stages: For startups, Phil suggests starting with standard shopping or search campaigns and considering agency assistance as sales grow. He advises established brands to focus on differentiating their products, especially on competitive platforms like Amazon, highlighting the need for a unique approach in each business phase.

3. The Power of Data in PPC: Emphasising the significance of understanding data and analytics, Phil recommends acquiring Google Ads and Google Analytics certifications. This knowledge is crucial for efficiently managing PPC campaigns and making informed decisions, reinforcing the idea that data is a key player in the success of any PPC strategy.

ABOUT PHIL:

Diving into the digital realm since '99 with a melody in his step, he pioneered one of the world's unique commission-based PPC agencies in 2008. This vintage digital aficionado has collaborated with top-notch entrepreneurs and propelled numerous projects to the skies. He's got a treasure trove of secrets and tales from his adventures to unveil!

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

Transcripts

Matt Edmundson:

hello and welcome to the eCommerce Podcast with

Matt Edmundson:

me, your host, MatT Edmundson.

Matt Edmundson:

The eCommerce Podcast is all about helping you deliver eCommerce well.

Matt Edmundson:

And to help us do just that, today I'm chatting with Phil Byrne from

Matt Edmundson:

Positive Sparks about tips from the playbook of a PPC expert.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh yes, we're going to pick his brains all about PPC and Google

Matt Edmundson:

and all those kind of things.

Matt Edmundson:

We're going to get into it.

Matt Edmundson:

But before we do, let me remind you.

Matt Edmundson:

Dear awesome listener, if you haven't done so already, sign up to the newsletter.

Matt Edmundson:

On the website@ecommercepodcast.net.

Matt Edmundson:

All we do with that, by the way, is we just send you the show notes

Matt Edmundson:

and links straight to your inbox.

Matt Edmundson:

No spam, no messing, no nothing.

Matt Edmundson:

It's pretty straightforward stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

So you wanna sign up for that.

Matt Edmundson:

Stay on top of everything that's going on.

Matt Edmundson:

And let me give a big shout out also to the e-Commerce cohort.

Matt Edmundson:

You can find out more about them@ecommercecohort.com.

Matt Edmundson:

This is our monthly membership group, and inside the group we have.

Matt Edmundson:

Workshops delivered by experts about all kinds of weird and wonderful topics.

Matt Edmundson:

We've just done one around what have we got coming up, Optimization, OptiMonk.

Matt Edmundson:

Yes, we've got OptiMonk doing some stuff on Optimization in the

Matt Edmundson:

cohort, so do come sign up for that.

Matt Edmundson:

Check out more information at ecommercecohort.

Matt Edmundson:

com, because besides...

Matt Edmundson:

Getting access to the Expert Monthly Workshops and all that sort of stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

You also get access to watch these recordings, the podcast recordings

Matt Edmundson:

of eCommerce Podcast Live.

Matt Edmundson:

You get to ask the guests your questions if you do and if you are

Matt Edmundson:

watching this episode live, I know a couple of you are, do apologise

Matt Edmundson:

for the mess up at the start again.

Matt Edmundson:

If you're just listening to this, you'll have no idea what I'm talking

Matt Edmundson:

about, but I did severely mess up the start, but that's okay.

Matt Edmundson:

We're back on track.

Matt Edmundson:

More information about Cohort can be found, like I said, at ecommercecohort.

Matt Edmundson:

com, or just follow the links from ecommercepodcast.

Matt Edmundson:

net.

Matt Edmundson:

Be great to see you in there.

Matt Edmundson:

Now, before I get into today's conversation, let me give a bit of

Matt Edmundson:

a shout out and a mention to Alan Gormley, who has been on the show,

Matt Edmundson:

and Alan is an absolute legend.

Matt Edmundson:

And the reason I want to do that, Alan from Shopbox.

Matt Edmundson:

ai.

Matt Edmundson:

He introduced us he introduced me to Phil, who is, who has who is and has

Matt Edmundson:

been diving into the digital realm since 1999 with a melody in his step,

Matt Edmundson:

he pioneered one of the world's unique commission based PPC Agencies in 2008.

Matt Edmundson:

This vintage digital aficionado has collaborated with top notch

Matt Edmundson:

entrepreneurs and propelled numerous projects to the skies.

Matt Edmundson:

He is a treasure trove of secrets and tales and we're

Matt Edmundson:

going to get into all of them.

Matt Edmundson:

Yes, we are.

Matt Edmundson:

Phil, great to have you on the show, man.

Matt Edmundson:

Thanks for joining us.

Matt Edmundson:

How are we doing today, good sir?

Matt Edmundson:

Hi Matt,

Phil Byrne:

it's great to be here.

Phil Byrne:

Feeling good, hope you are too.

Phil Byrne:

Looking forward to the chat.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, feeling good.

Matt Edmundson:

Now we've actually got the conversation underway and we've moved past the blip.

Matt Edmundson:

But yeah, whereabouts in the world are you?

Phil Byrne:

I'm based in Cornwall, there are three of the team in

Phil Byrne:

Cornwall, including myself, so every day, pretty nice life, I get up, look

Phil Byrne:

at the sea, and then come back and do some pay per click, or help the team

Phil Byrne:

do their pay per click, as it is these

Matt Edmundson:

days.

Matt Edmundson:

Whereabouts in Cornwall are you?

Phil Byrne:

I live in a village called St Agnes.

Phil Byrne:

The company main office is in Truro, which is about six miles away.

Phil Byrne:

But I spend most of my time working from home, walking down to the sea,

Phil Byrne:

mixing my kids really, with the

Matt Edmundson:

digital life that we have.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, no doubt.

Matt Edmundson:

You don't sound like you're from Cornwall though, I'm not being funny.

Phil Byrne:

No.

Phil Byrne:

Originally, I come from...

Phil Byrne:

A small Cumbrian village near Carlisle.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

So it's really a town, it's not a village, it's called Maryport.

Phil Byrne:

So if ever you're up that way, yep, you'll take a visit.

Phil Byrne:

It's a place that doesn't get the same amount of traffic as

Phil Byrne:

Keswick and Windermere and all the more famous places around my

Matt Edmundson:

hometown.

Matt Edmundson:

Maryport.

Matt Edmundson:

I can't say as I've been, I've obviously done Windermere, I've done Keswick,

Matt Edmundson:

I've done the lakes many times, it's an hour and a half away from me.

Matt Edmundson:

But it's, so Maryport's a place worth looking at.

Matt Edmundson:

It's,

Phil Byrne:

It's a lot different than Agnes, it's a town that needs

Phil Byrne:

some kind of look, to happen to it, but it's a beautiful view of

Phil Byrne:

Scotland, it's a beautiful view, go down to the seafront, you're looking

Phil Byrne:

right across the water at what is Dumfrieshire, Dumfries and Galloway.

Phil Byrne:

That's worth seeing, Matt.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

And the fish keeps a go too.

Matt Edmundson:

Okay.

Matt Edmundson:

I'll bring them all then.

Matt Edmundson:

Good.

Matt Edmundson:

It all, it's funny isn't it, English tourism.

Matt Edmundson:

What's it based around?

Matt Edmundson:

Is there a good pub or a chippy?

Matt Edmundson:

We just want to know.

Matt Edmundson:

That's

Phil Byrne:

it.

Phil Byrne:

Got those things covered, you're great.

Matt Edmundson:

Wow, absolutely.

Matt Edmundson:

It's good to talk to a fellow Brit.

Matt Edmundson:

So welcome to the show.

Matt Edmundson:

And interestingly, I just finished recording a podcast about an hour ago

Matt Edmundson:

for another show we do called Push To Be More with a lady from Cornwall.

Matt Edmundson:

She was from Essex originally.

Matt Edmundson:

She now lives in Newquay.

Matt Edmundson:

And she just said, you know what, I'm coming to Newquay twice a year

Matt Edmundson:

because we love it over here so much.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm just moving.

Matt Edmundson:

And so they just moved over about five years ago and never

Matt Edmundson:

looked back since really.

Matt Edmundson:

Is that what happened to you?

Phil Byrne:

We came nine years ago now, so we've been here a little while and

Phil Byrne:

we're actually living abroad at the time.

Phil Byrne:

We're living in Ireland before we came to Cornwall.

Phil Byrne:

And my wife is American.

Phil Byrne:

Okay.

Phil Byrne:

So we spent a long time trying different places.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

So when you're in international family, there's no perfect place to live.

Phil Byrne:

That's true.

Phil Byrne:

Where the world opens up to you.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

And we try different countries and then.

Phil Byrne:

We just wanted to come back to the UK.

Phil Byrne:

Some of that was career opportunities, and we chose Cornwall because we'd heard

Phil Byrne:

it was the sunniest, it was the warmest.

Phil Byrne:

Some days, that is true, Matt.

Phil Byrne:

I wouldn't say it's the truth overall, but it's a beautiful place to live.

Phil Byrne:

We've had kids here now, so that's...

Matt Edmundson:

That's awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

I like that.

Matt Edmundson:

They the sort of the borders opening up to international families and

Matt Edmundson:

actually also being in digital now, you can pretty much do your job

Matt Edmundson:

anywhere from the world, right?

Phil Byrne:

That's right.

Phil Byrne:

Jessica, my wife and I, we started remote working.

Phil Byrne:

It didn't have that name back then, but we started that back in 2011, so it

Phil Byrne:

was quite a long time ago, and it was her PhD that made it happen originally.

Phil Byrne:

So she did a PhD in the music of the tango, so we went to Buenos

Phil Byrne:

Aires, and we had some time there.

Phil Byrne:

Wow.

Phil Byrne:

That started the whole thing off.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

That sounds amazing.

Matt Edmundson:

To do a PhD in the music of the tango, I think it is quite, I'm a

Matt Edmundson:

doctor, what are you a doctor in?

Phil Byrne:

Music of the tango.

Phil Byrne:

Because what actually happens for her is everyone thinks she's a

Phil Byrne:

medical doctor, and they ask her advice, my leg's hurting, I'm not

Phil Byrne:

feeling good, and she has to explain.

Matt Edmundson:

Just go do the tango and everything will be alright,

Matt Edmundson:

yeah, it's fascinating isn't it, absolutely, so does that mean

Matt Edmundson:

you're very good at the tango?

Matt Edmundson:

We

Phil Byrne:

tried the dance and neither of us were that good at it,

Phil Byrne:

and probably even worse altogether.

Phil Byrne:

Because you have to, the one thing I learned from the tango,

Phil Byrne:

is all of your relationship things come out in that dance, Matt.

Phil Byrne:

If you don't have an argument that day, it's not going to go well.

Matt Edmundson:

Wow, okay, fair play to you.

Matt Edmundson:

So how did you get involved in PPC then?

Phil Byrne:

A long time ago, as you said, I've been online for a long

Phil Byrne:

time, so I've always been into music.

Phil Byrne:

As I can see, you are, with your...

Phil Byrne:

Drums behind you.

Phil Byrne:

I wish

Matt Edmundson:

I could claim credit for those.

Matt Edmundson:

They belong to my son, who is yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

It just makes a really cool backdrop.

Matt Edmundson:

But the drums that you see belong to my son who's buggered off to university now.

Matt Edmundson:

So Sharon, my wife, is I'm converting his room into a guest room.

Matt Edmundson:

And she moved the drum kit, and we decided to just put them in the studio.

Matt Edmundson:

Because it would just make a great backdrop.

Matt Edmundson:

And if he ever wants to play them, it's away from the house.

Matt Edmundson:

I wish I, I don't play the drums, Phil, but I do play the guitar and keyboard.

Phil Byrne:

There's that musical heritage.

Phil Byrne:

So you do have music in the family, apparently,

Matt Edmundson:

maybe, but yeah,

Phil Byrne:

still there.

Phil Byrne:

So it all began for me back in the late nineties.

Phil Byrne:

I just left university.

Phil Byrne:

I've been involved with bands at university, and I ended up helping

Phil Byrne:

the other university in Leeds, which was called Leeds Polytechnic

Matt Edmundson:

at the time.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

I remember those days.

Matt Edmundson:

Remember

Phil Byrne:

those days?

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

To put on their bands and do different things.

Phil Byrne:

So from there, we began to promote the events with very early websites.

Phil Byrne:

Netscape Composer was the first thing I ever did.

Phil Byrne:

Remember that?

Phil Byrne:

Yeah, I do, yeah.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah, totally.

Phil Byrne:

websites for bands, and that grew into promotion.

Phil Byrne:

So SEO was the first thing that I really discovered as a marketing channel.

Phil Byrne:

And then that moved into my own affiliate sites, doing websites for other

Phil Byrne:

companies, in and around Leeds and beyond.

Phil Byrne:

And then...

Phil Byrne:

Suddenly, pay per click arrived, and then a few years after that, I don't

Phil Byrne:

know if you remember, the first big SEO change was It was Panda, Google

Phil Byrne:

Panda, which came through, changed a lot of the rankings for sites.

Phil Byrne:

So pay per click was about 20 percent of my life until that happened.

Phil Byrne:

At the time, I had all these hotel comparison sites, which were really

Phil Byrne:

affiliate sites, using different SEO techniques to be ranking

Phil Byrne:

high for hotels in whatever town.

Phil Byrne:

And that was my main source of income at the time.

Phil Byrne:

And then Panda hit, and overnight...

Phil Byrne:

That income went down by 90%.

Phil Byrne:

So after getting over the shock of that, I also realized at the same

Phil Byrne:

time, what Google had done was, Panda was the big story, but Google ads had

Phil Byrne:

gone through quite a transformation.

Phil Byrne:

Around about the same moment and he offered me these new opportunities.

Phil Byrne:

So that's what really took me into pay per click.

Phil Byrne:

And then the client side of my life was beginning to grow at the same time.

Phil Byrne:

So those opportunities I would look out for them too.

Phil Byrne:

I Still live near Leeds.

Phil Byrne:

It was before we really left that all the pay per click world began.

Phil Byrne:

And Leeds had a Google office.

Phil Byrne:

So I could meet it with my rep.

Phil Byrne:

It was a lot different then, your rep wanted the contact from you.

Phil Byrne:

Whereas these days, it's so hard to go up to Google support at

Phil Byrne:

all, and it all grew from there.

Phil Byrne:

And then as for me, as SEO changed and became perhaps less powerful,

Phil Byrne:

pay per click became more powerful.

Matt Edmundson:

It's really fascinating.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, and here we are.

Matt Edmundson:

It's fascinating listening to your journey because I started in websites in 98.

Matt Edmundson:

First website ever built was for a friend.

Matt Edmundson:

His church wanted a website and he came to me and he said, Matt, do you

Matt Edmundson:

know anybody that builds websites?

Matt Edmundson:

And there's some friends of mine do them, but they're thousands of pounds.

Matt Edmundson:

Cause you know, no one had a clue back then.

Matt Edmundson:

And I said, but if you want.

Matt Edmundson:

I know there's some software out there, buy the software for me, I'll figure

Matt Edmundson:

it out because I was busy selling saunas and steam rooms at the time,

Matt Edmundson:

and as you do, I just said, I just saw an opportunity and I said, I'll

Matt Edmundson:

do it, just buy the software, and he bought, do you remember Dreamweaver?

Matt Edmundson:

I used to use it.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Dreamweaver and one of the very Dreamweaver and what

Matt Edmundson:

was the graphics one?

Matt Edmundson:

Was it fireworks?

Phil Byrne:

Was that what it was called?

Phil Byrne:

Fireworks, that's right.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

The same company, wasn't

Matt Edmundson:

it?

Matt Edmundson:

Macromedia.

Matt Edmundson:

Macromedia, before they were bought out by Adobe and they and so they were like yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

So they, and I did this website for them.

Matt Edmundson:

And I did a website for Sharon and I who were just about to get married.

Matt Edmundson:

So this was 25 years ago.

Matt Edmundson:

So we did these websites back then.

Matt Edmundson:

So I'm just listening to your journey.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm just remembering all of this going, geez, man.

Matt Edmundson:

So yeah, going back to the old days, the polytechnic days as well.

Matt Edmundson:

So trip down memory lane.

Matt Edmundson:

So here we are Phil, all these years later, you're still involved in PPC.

Matt Edmundson:

You didn't obviously get totally wiped out when your hotel websites.

Matt Edmundson:

Wow.

Matt Edmundson:

And so you've obviously learned a thing or two about PPC over the years.

Matt Edmundson:

What are some of the big sort of changes that you've noticed that maybe are for

Matt Edmundson:

the good or maybe not for the good?

Phil Byrne:

It's definitely a mix of both.

Phil Byrne:

One of the big changes Originally was the rise of more ads.

Phil Byrne:

So every platform, whether it's Google, Meta, TikTok now, they're all going

Phil Byrne:

to generate their income from ads.

Phil Byrne:

So what really happens to the platform?

Phil Byrne:

It is out to begin to dominate the space.

Phil Byrne:

Now, is that a good or a bad thing?

Phil Byrne:

It creates opportunity for eCom brands, if we want to promote their products.

Phil Byrne:

But at the same time, I think it does always take a little bit of

Phil Byrne:

the soul of what the platform is.

Phil Byrne:

And it's how successful the platform is going forward, it's how they balance

Phil Byrne:

that mix of income versus sales.

Phil Byrne:

I think Google Shopping has been a massive change for eCom brands.

Phil Byrne:

Yes, it has.

Phil Byrne:

The fact that shopping came into being, um, off allowed us the opportunities

Phil Byrne:

to promote products in a very different way with an image and offer price.

Phil Byrne:

At the same time, the Google Shopping feeds are.

Phil Byrne:

A whole opportunity in themselves.

Phil Byrne:

Really they have a lot of similarity with SEO in our ability to manipulate

Phil Byrne:

which products are shown and which ones we want to put less attention on.

Phil Byrne:

I think that's changed things dramatically.

Phil Byrne:

YouTube.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

Beginning to launch their ads, that is really a big part of how Google is growing

Phil Byrne:

now, certainly through Performance Max and all the smart campaigns, which mix all

Phil Byrne:

of the different platforms that they own.

Phil Byrne:

YouTube is just such a rising force.

Phil Byrne:

It's perhaps the part of Google which has the most opportunity.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

Whereas search is so congested now, shopping the same, it's a

Phil Byrne:

bit tougher to find your gap.

Phil Byrne:

Then of course, social media, Matt, when you and I began,

Phil Byrne:

there was no social media.

Phil Byrne:

That's right.

Phil Byrne:

And now, we have a world that's pretty much driven by social media.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah, we do.

Phil Byrne:

And there's good and bad to that as well, isn't there?

Phil Byrne:

But in terms of pay per click, all of those platforms, Meta especially,

Phil Byrne:

has opened up new ways of reaching people that should potentially

Phil Byrne:

adore what you create and promote.

Phil Byrne:

So those things, I think every year we can say that some new opportunities come.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

I don't see that changing for a while.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

No, that's very true.

Matt Edmundson:

So much there.

Matt Edmundson:

Phil, do me a favour.

Matt Edmundson:

For those watching on video, just step slightly to your right

Matt Edmundson:

so you're a bit more central.

Matt Edmundson:

There we go.

Matt Edmundson:

There we go.

Matt Edmundson:

We're starting to lose you.

Matt Edmundson:

I was talking to a white wall for a little minute there.

Matt Edmundson:

How was it?

Matt Edmundson:

No, not at all.

Matt Edmundson:

Fascinating you're talking about YouTube.

Matt Edmundson:

And the reason why I picked this up straight away is we had on the show a

Matt Edmundson:

few months ago a chap called Brett Curry.

Matt Edmundson:

And Brett Curry hosts an eCommerce podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

OMG Commerce is his company.

Matt Edmundson:

and...

Matt Edmundson:

he's an absolute legend, Brett.

Matt Edmundson:

He, I met him in Austin we had some food together, we caught up.

Matt Edmundson:

Stayed in touch.

Matt Edmundson:

Really nice guy.

Matt Edmundson:

Tall guy.

Matt Edmundson:

He's got eight kids.

Matt Edmundson:

Eight kids.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, that was my response as well.

Matt Edmundson:

I was like, dude, have you figured out what's causing this yet?

Matt Edmundson:

Do you need...

Matt Edmundson:

But he's awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

Him and his wife, totally in love.

Matt Edmundson:

Love having a big family and just an absolute legend of a chap.

Matt Edmundson:

But he was saying like you, that YouTube ads for him are the big...

Matt Edmundson:

Opportunity of the moment in a lot of ways, if you can get them right.

Matt Edmundson:

Sure.

Matt Edmundson:

Is that what you are?

Matt Edmundson:

Is that what you've found as well?

Matt Edmundson:

Have you done much with YouTube ads?

Phil Byrne:

For the right brands, it's a great channel.

Phil Byrne:

So it has to be a visual brand.

Phil Byrne:

One thing I think Meta and YouTube have in common is they are great places to

Phil Byrne:

promote the positive things in life.

Phil Byrne:

So travel, some product which is going to make you look better, feel better,

Phil Byrne:

those are fantastic for video fronted.

Phil Byrne:

Ads.

Phil Byrne:

Things which are a bit more, stuff we don't want to think about.

Phil Byrne:

Health insurance, remedies to things which are not great.

Phil Byrne:

It's tougher for those kinds of products.

Phil Byrne:

But certainly YouTube, because it keeps growing so much, and people are

Phil Byrne:

drawn there for all kinds of reasons, it just has such a huge audience.

Phil Byrne:

So if you can find that way to place your ads on the right channels, on

Phil Byrne:

the right videos, that have already the audience that you seek to reach.

Phil Byrne:

It's a good channel.

Phil Byrne:

YouTube recently brought out their own version of lead ads.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

And I think that's what I would say it really offers a massive opportunity to

Phil Byrne:

generate subscribers, whether that's email, SMS, and then it's all down to

Phil Byrne:

the rest of your funnel as to how great those ads are going to work out for you.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

And you know that, that's where we see the opportunity most of the time.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, that's interesting.

Matt Edmundson:

You talk about the sort of the positive life brands doing well with those

Matt Edmundson:

kind of places I, and it's interesting you use that phraseology because

Matt Edmundson:

I've not thought about it like that.

Matt Edmundson:

And actually you go with that makes a lot of sense.

Matt Edmundson:

Yes.

Matt Edmundson:

Why would he, why would I try and sell life insurance?

Matt Edmundson:

I'm dare say some companies don't do it successfully if they find the right

Matt Edmundson:

audience that they're trying to target.

Matt Edmundson:

Is YouTube rephrase it, are YouTube ads tied into the Google Ads platform

Matt Edmundson:

or is it a separate distinct platform?

Phil Byrne:

So it's all part of Google Ads, part of their network, so if

Phil Byrne:

you run a Performance Max campaign, which is the newest type, the Google

Phil Byrne:

campaign, then they will automatically run your ads across everything.

Phil Byrne:

So you've got search.

Phil Byrne:

You've got the Display Network, which is when your ads

Phil Byrne:

appear on a third party site.

Phil Byrne:

And you have YouTube.

Phil Byrne:

So even if you have no video content, your ads can appear within YouTube

Phil Byrne:

search results, as a normal text ad.

Phil Byrne:

And all of those things will happen for you.

Phil Byrne:

And, Google is pushing us all into using everything on their network.

Phil Byrne:

And some of that is because, on the positive side, it does

Phil Byrne:

increase the opportunity.

Phil Byrne:

At the same time, we're going to spend more, in their point of view.

Phil Byrne:

Watching what happens and keeping an eye on which YouTube channels

Phil Byrne:

your ads appear on, assessing whether they're right or wrong, is

Phil Byrne:

all part of optimising your spender

Matt Edmundson:

as much as you can.

Matt Edmundson:

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

Matt Edmundson:

It's interesting to me how big YouTube now, for the longest time we've been

Matt Edmundson:

saying, I say the longest time, I'm trying to think in my head, for the

Matt Edmundson:

last five or six years I know I've been saying to people YouTube is the

Matt Edmundson:

second largest search engine in the world and you can't ignore it, right?

Matt Edmundson:

Brands can't ignore YouTube, you've got to be on YouTube in some form or another.

Matt Edmundson:

Because it is so massive.

Matt Edmundson:

But going back, Polytechnic days and all that sort of stuff, do you

Matt Edmundson:

remember that announcement that Google bought YouTube for a billion

Matt Edmundson:

dollars and we were all utterly flummoxed by why they would do that?

Matt Edmundson:

Have we looked back

Phil Byrne:

now?

Phil Byrne:

It's a fantastic move.

Matt Edmundson:

One of the best business moves you've seen for a

Matt Edmundson:

long time and it flummoxed everybody because no one saw it coming.

Matt Edmundson:

A billion dollars for that.

Matt Edmundson:

Are you mad?

Matt Edmundson:

But look at what it's turned into and the money that it generates is unbelievable.

Phil Byrne:

Absolutely.

Phil Byrne:

And this is you and I, Matt, sounding like old men.

Phil Byrne:

Look, a billion dollars in today's world is not that big anymore.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah, it's true.

Matt Edmundson:

It was back then, right?

Matt Edmundson:

I don't, I'm trying to remember, I don't know if I'd ever heard of a billion

Matt Edmundson:

dollar company buyout before that.

Matt Edmundson:

I think there must have been one.

Matt Edmundson:

But it was so new and it was so surprising.

Matt Edmundson:

And yet here we are all just going, whoever made that decision is an utter

Matt Edmundson:

genius, and um, and then everyone's going.

Matt Edmundson:

How did Google have a billion dollars just to spend on a company like that and

Matt Edmundson:

not even, where did it get that money?

Matt Edmundson:

And you just think Google in itself is a pretty genius

Matt Edmundson:

money making machine, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

So hats off to them.

Matt Edmundson:

You love them or hate them, they've done an amazing job.

Matt Edmundson:

So tell us a bit about you've mentioned Google Max Performance

Matt Edmundson:

Max a couple of times.

Matt Edmundson:

For those that might not know, just explain what that is, cause that's

Matt Edmundson:

a fairly recent event, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

It's a...

Phil Byrne:

So Performance Max is a new type of campaign, which Google

Phil Byrne:

is continuing to grow the options within this type of campaign, what

Phil Byrne:

we'll call a Google smart campaign.

Phil Byrne:

So what we're doing is we're giving Google more license and freedom to

Phil Byrne:

spend our budget on our target market, keywords, audiences as it sees fit.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

That was what we used to do in pay per click is we would control every keyword.

Phil Byrne:

That Google would approach, we might control every third party website

Phil Byrne:

if we're doing Google Display.

Phil Byrne:

And the same on YouTube, we would control every channel and video

Phil Byrne:

that the ad would appear on.

Phil Byrne:

In PMAX, it's different.

Phil Byrne:

We're allowing Google this ability to spend on our behalf.

Phil Byrne:

The theory being that Google is able to track our potential customers better,

Phil Byrne:

cross network, understand, for its own larger dataset, where our audience sits.

Phil Byrne:

And in the end, give us more return at lowest cost per acquisition or

Phil Byrne:

lead, whatever we're seeking to do and make our campaigns work better.

Phil Byrne:

Google also claims, I think is correct on this, that it reaches more people.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

And on all of these advantages.

Phil Byrne:

Allow people who can make Performance Max work.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

It does allow them to scale to a higher level.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

On, we had some before.

Phil Byrne:

If we cannot get Performance Max to work and not everybody does, then we still have

Phil Byrne:

to be able to go in there and optimize and learn what did work and what didn't.

Phil Byrne:

And the downside to performance marks is the data is much more hidden, so

Phil Byrne:

we're not able to go very granular.

Phil Byrne:

Okay.

Phil Byrne:

As we did before, the raw ways.

Phil Byrne:

to Research a bit deeper, often using third party tools, which help us dissect

Phil Byrne:

what happened on Performance Max.

Phil Byrne:

But it's really a trade off between having less data to look at, but

Phil Byrne:

having more opportunity in the end.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, it's interesting.

Matt Edmundson:

And before, what do you think personally, Performance Max, does it achieve what

Matt Edmundson:

Google set out to achieve or not?

Phil Byrne:

I think it has to a large extent, we found for a lot of our clients.

Phil Byrne:

It's helped them grow.

Phil Byrne:

We do lots of shopping campaigns.

Phil Byrne:

Where Performance Max has really brought success is when we've broken it down

Phil Byrne:

to promote the best selling products.

Phil Byrne:

So one thing that works out in eCommerce, to dissect that a bit, is the 80 20 rule.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

So 80 percent of our income comes from 20 percent of the products, sometimes less.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

Every campaign.

Phil Byrne:

Whether it's Performance Max or Standard has a better chance of

Phil Byrne:

success if we focus on the 20%.

Phil Byrne:

That's how, that's where we're going to grow.

Phil Byrne:

Performance Max I think has helped most brands grow who do that.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

If they try and use Performance Max to sell things that didn't

Phil Byrne:

sell so well before, it's tough.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

The pace that tends to scale.

Phil Byrne:

What's happening already with issues with a product, with the

Phil Byrne:

business itself, it'll scale up.

Phil Byrne:

We have to make business focused decisions to make PMAX work.

Phil Byrne:

I think another difference is a performance max needs

Phil Byrne:

what we call signals.

Phil Byrne:

So a good signal is a segment of your audience, which is

Phil Byrne:

exactly who you want to reach.

Phil Byrne:

And that's different to keyword optimization that we

Phil Byrne:

traditionally did on Google Ads.

Phil Byrne:

So the better we are at segmenting out our audience and sending just the portion

Phil Byrne:

that has bought or added to cart or done something positive around the specific

Phil Byrne:

products in that campaign, that'll help us make Performance Max perform better.

Phil Byrne:

If we give it everyone that's here at the site, then the signal is not strong.

Phil Byrne:

We have to think of it in a different way, too.

Phil Byrne:

Okay.

Matt Edmundson:

So what's performance max?

Matt Edmundson:

I'm just thinking Phil, for people that are maybe starting out in eCommerce

Matt Edmundson:

and they, they've not got the budget necessarily to go get an agency involved.

Matt Edmundson:

Working from their, the back room, as it were, selling the products online.

Matt Edmundson:

Would Performance Max be worth looking at or not really?

Phil Byrne:

I think it's tougher.

Phil Byrne:

So it's a brand new ad account.

Phil Byrne:

You better off starting with standard shopping or standard search and

Phil Byrne:

then getting a few conversions and other signals in that ad account.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

So the more conversions, the more data it has, the better you're going

Phil Byrne:

to expand into Performance Max.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

That's probably the best advice for something,

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, fair enough and then, I guess to spring it on from

Matt Edmundson:

that, if I'm just starting out, at what point from your experience does it make

Matt Edmundson:

sense for the startup to reach out to an agency and say, please help us with

Matt Edmundson:

PPC now what point on the trajectory should I be thinking about that?

Phil Byrne:

I think when you've done at least three to six months worth of

Phil Byrne:

pay per click, sometimes more, since when you're seeing sales happen, people

Phil Byrne:

show interest in what you're selling, and you feel that you don't have the

Phil Byrne:

time, As well, that's another factor.

Phil Byrne:

Run all of your ads yourself.

Phil Byrne:

I think if you are quite technically minded, you can learn how to run

Phil Byrne:

pay per click and you can do it.

Phil Byrne:

You should do it yourself for as long as you can.

Phil Byrne:

I think a brand owner always understands their products better than any agency can.

Phil Byrne:

But when you start to see sales, your time begins to diminish.

Phil Byrne:

You feel like you can scale, but you're not able to with the

Phil Byrne:

techniques that you've used.

Phil Byrne:

Great

Matt Edmundson:

time to go to an agency.

Matt Edmundson:

Get an agency involved.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, no fair play.

Matt Edmundson:

It was, I remember the day that because we used to do PPC in house.

Matt Edmundson:

Because when PPC first came out, it was the easiest thing in the world to do.

Matt Edmundson:

So easy.

Matt Edmundson:

It was just ridiculous, really.

Matt Edmundson:

In fact, we built an eCommerce brand just on the basis of the

Matt Edmundson:

fact that PPC was really easy.

Matt Edmundson:

Okay, let's just buy the ads for this because they're so

Matt Edmundson:

cheap and we make so much.

Matt Edmundson:

Why would we not do this and to scale it out, right?

Matt Edmundson:

Those days didn't last very long, Phil.

Phil Byrne:

Wild West days.

Matt Edmundson:

Such is the shame, but you're like, oh, geez.

Matt Edmundson:

But I remember our default.

Matt Edmundson:

We just did them in house and we were spending like 20, 30

Matt Edmundson:

grand a month on Google ads.

Matt Edmundson:

And they were like, at some point we looked at it and went.

Matt Edmundson:

We have got to be better off outsourcing this because people are

Matt Edmundson:

now, they're experts and we've got enough budget and enough data to

Matt Edmundson:

get the experts to tweak what we do because we just weren't doing it.

Matt Edmundson:

We were so busy doing other things and I remember when we moved over to

Matt Edmundson:

an agency, the difference it made was night and day and we spent half as much

Matt Edmundson:

but got four times the amount of sales.

Matt Edmundson:

And it wasn't because we didn't know what we were doing, we just

Matt Edmundson:

were not experts in that field.

Matt Edmundson:

And so when, like you say, budget and time allowed, it's I'm going to

Matt Edmundson:

step aside and let the experts loose.

Matt Edmundson:

So even today, even in our eCommerce companies now paid media.

Matt Edmundson:

is for me and is outsourced.

Matt Edmundson:

It's always a specialist thing that I get.

Matt Edmundson:

I don't need to figure that out internally, we internally we can

Matt Edmundson:

do whatever email marketing or we can do the website maintenance

Matt Edmundson:

and all that sort of stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

But yeah I just think you need the experts.

Matt Edmundson:

Personally, it's my experience.

Matt Edmundson:

You need the experts on with when it comes to PPC, just mainly because

Matt Edmundson:

it changes so quickly as well,

Phil Byrne:

it does.

Phil Byrne:

And I think what does happen when you work with many clients, You

Phil Byrne:

begin to see the same problems, but with different products, different

Phil Byrne:

brands, different countries.

Phil Byrne:

Sometimes, they're network issues.

Phil Byrne:

So sometimes the whole network has a problem with a certain type of ad,

Phil Byrne:

and as an agency you can act in the day to save all of your clients some

Phil Byrne:

spend if there's an issue, or if we see that suddenly this month pay per click

Phil Byrne:

is really cheap, January for example is a cheap month for pay per click,

Phil Byrne:

then if we're selling, let's up the budget, let's do something about it.

Phil Byrne:

All of that ability to react and to bring in the latest

Phil Byrne:

techniques and the latest changes.

Phil Byrne:

We have a new type of Google campaign launch in this month called Demand Gen.

Phil Byrne:

It's a really a reboot of their Discovery app, but it'll

Phil Byrne:

bring change and opportunity.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah, and just you experienced with your own eCom brand.

Phil Byrne:

There's always that time That kind of two, three months where

Phil Byrne:

something new that everybody catches on to, until you have opportunity.

Phil Byrne:

And then six months down the line, everyone's talking about

Phil Byrne:

it, and that space has gone.

Phil Byrne:

And because pay per click is an auction, really what we're

Phil Byrne:

doing is trying to find space.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

We can control.

Phil Byrne:

The Cost Per Click, where we can reach an audience that no one quite

Phil Byrne:

now is, or not enough people are reaching to push the auction up

Matt Edmundson:

too high.

Matt Edmundson:

That's really good.

Matt Edmundson:

That's awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

Cause that's actually one of my questions was, there were these sort

Matt Edmundson:

of wild west days where you could just, almost write your own check.

Matt Edmundson:

And part of me, part of my question is what's the next wild west?

Matt Edmundson:

Because there's always going to be one, and as eCommerce entrepreneurs, we spend

Matt Edmundson:

hours trying to figure out what it is.

Matt Edmundson:

Is there something here that we can capitalize on?

Matt Edmundson:

frOm a PPC point of view, is that what you think is the next Wild West?

Phil Byrne:

Demand Jan . It could, it will be for a little while, Google is

Phil Byrne:

so big and so many people are now very aware of something new that Google does.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

All the places, all the networks.

Phil Byrne:

Are also developing their own pay per click too.

Phil Byrne:

So TikTok, a year ago, became the new Wild West.

Phil Byrne:

A little bit more than a year ago.

Phil Byrne:

The networks right now who are pushing new pay per click platforms

Phil Byrne:

through are Quora and Reddit.

Phil Byrne:

Both of those, if your brand is questioned, informational related, or

Phil Byrne:

you are a company who sells something relevant to something which is discussed

Phil Byrne:

often, both of those hold opportunity.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

Pinterest is pushing very hard to take some of the audience away from Meta.

Phil Byrne:

So right now they have a pretty good offer where they'll do

Phil Byrne:

all your creative for free.

Phil Byrne:

And if you spend more than 2, 000 in a month, they'll give you an extra

Phil Byrne:

50 percent of that credited back.

Phil Byrne:

So you know, it's a good time to test Pinterest if you

Phil Byrne:

feel it's relevant to you.

Phil Byrne:

bUt then, things like that.

Phil Byrne:

New platforms, meaning you need a profile, you need to have an account

Phil Byrne:

that's updated, enough to show presence.

Phil Byrne:

So they all create work.

Phil Byrne:

And so it all again, Matt, comes down to time.

Phil Byrne:

How much time do you have in your team, in yourself, and which one's right for you?

Phil Byrne:

But there's always an opportunity.

Phil Byrne:

The other one that I think, especially if you're targeting the American

Phil Byrne:

market, that has some interesting things going on is Microsoft.

Phil Byrne:

Okay.

Phil Byrne:

They've been buying so many other sites and, they bought LinkedIn.

Phil Byrne:

A couple of years ago.

Phil Byrne:

So they are the only place that you can reach people on LinkedIn

Phil Byrne:

via ads outside of LinkedIn.

Phil Byrne:

If you're selling B2B, there's probably opportunity there too.

Phil Byrne:

But all of these networks constantly buy things, constantly bring new things

Phil Byrne:

out, and each one of them creates that opportunity for a little while.

Phil Byrne:

And then we have to find the next opportunity.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm loving this.

Matt Edmundson:

I especially I'm loving this because I we jumped on Pinterest recently.

Matt Edmundson:

Because again, I, we've mentioned it on the show before, we just thought

Matt Edmundson:

Pinterest was a really interesting platform for our brands right now and that

Matt Edmundson:

there is some great opportunity there.

Matt Edmundson:

And yeah, we've definitely been playing around on Pinterest and

Matt Edmundson:

getting some good results so far.

Matt Edmundson:

I think we probably should throw some more money at it and scale

Matt Edmundson:

it maybe a little bit quicker not thought about Quora or Reddit.

Matt Edmundson:

So look, I got that in my notes.

Matt Edmundson:

We'll be having conversations tomorrow with the team, Phil, no doubt.

Matt Edmundson:

And then obviously Microsoft in the UK in the US is, you're never going

Matt Edmundson:

to get rid of Microsoft, are you?

Matt Edmundson:

It's always going to be there and so why would you not do that?

Matt Edmundson:

Now there's some fascinating information there.

Matt Edmundson:

Phil, listen, one of the questions we've got in from cohort um, if you were

Matt Edmundson:

starting an eCommerce business today from scratch yourself, it's just you and let's

Matt Edmundson:

say, I'm just looking around my desk for anything that's interesting pens.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm going to pick up a pen, right?

Matt Edmundson:

So you've got a passion for pens, the website passionforpens.

Matt Edmundson:

com, by Phil.

Matt Edmundson:

Phil's a passion for pens.

Matt Edmundson:

But a product like a pen or something like that, and you were starting up,

Matt Edmundson:

how would you, how would PPC be part of your strategy knowing what you know?

Matt Edmundson:

So that if some, obviously someone's starting up here, if they.

Matt Edmundson:

I guess they just want to piggyback what you would do a

Matt Edmundson:

little bit if that makes sense.

Matt Edmundson:

So what would you do there?

Phil Byrne:

Definitely do Google Ads, because Google Ads is the

Phil Byrne:

place we reach a customer who's furthest down the line ready to buy.

Phil Byrne:

We want to find the most relevant searches, so our type of pen, plus

Phil Byrne:

colour, so it's very relevant.

Phil Byrne:

Shopping feed, get Google Shopping running.

Phil Byrne:

And what I would do is monitor the traffic from shopping and search

Phil Byrne:

and watch what they do on the site.

Phil Byrne:

The main two sides of optimization nowadays are the ads, also

Phil Byrne:

what's happening on the site.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

So people drop out at the cart too often.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

They reach a page and they disappear because it's not quite what they're after.

Phil Byrne:

aNd that traffic, because it's the most intentional.

Phil Byrne:

We want to watch that traffic a bit more.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

What I would also do is run remarketing on Netta because it's the best

Phil Byrne:

place to run remarketing online.

Phil Byrne:

The ad is the biggest space we get online.

Phil Byrne:

iF we can find a relevant YouTube channel or YouTube presenters who reflect

Phil Byrne:

something about our pens, which we want to connect with, so whether that's

Phil Byrne:

calligraphy or something else that we might want to connect to, I think that'd

Phil Byrne:

be a great place to run some lead gen.

Phil Byrne:

I would do the same on Meta, so Facebook lead ads, which in turn generate email

Phil Byrne:

for us, that we can, or SMS, that we can begin to nurture across time.

Phil Byrne:

And then when we have a Google shopping feed, like I think one of

Phil Byrne:

the underutilized things online is a shopping feed, because once we have one,

Phil Byrne:

we can then take it to other places.

Phil Byrne:

So all affiliate networks take a shopping feed.

Phil Byrne:

Okay.

Phil Byrne:

So a great place for us to try affiliate marketing is to just upload our shopping

Phil Byrne:

feed and let those stream onto third party sites that are gonna send traffic

Phil Byrne:

to our site and help our remarketing.

Phil Byrne:

'cause really a lot of the way we see external third party marketing

Phil Byrne:

traffic in terms of pay per click is we can remarket to it.

Phil Byrne:

You had a really good interview with a, an influencer marketeer

Phil Byrne:

who was really asking everybody to see influencers as a storefront.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

And I think that was a great phrase, that's also what a

Phil Byrne:

shopping feed allows us to do.

Phil Byrne:

We can go beyond our affiliate partner sites, we can go to third party sites.

Phil Byrne:

One of our clients, um, put his shopping feed on DIY.

Phil Byrne:

com, which is owned by B& Q.

Phil Byrne:

And that brought a whole new source of traffic onto his own

Phil Byrne:

website that generated sales, gave us traffic to remarket to.

Phil Byrne:

And just get even more traffic in general.

Phil Byrne:

So in the beginning, with Pay Per Click, we want to generate highly relevant

Phil Byrne:

traffic, watch what it does on our site, but we also want to use the assets we

Phil Byrne:

create for Pay Per Click, the feed, the images, the videos, in as many

Phil Byrne:

places as we can, all within the budget that we have, which is the tough part.

Phil Byrne:

So that's what I'll do.

Phil Byrne:

And I think every eCommerce site has to try and grab subscribers nowadays.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

To make the most of that click that we've just paid for.

Phil Byrne:

So if people aren't ready to buy, can we get them to sign up?

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

Can we do something to give us the opportunity to market to those people

Phil Byrne:

for the next six months or more?

Phil Byrne:

And that's how I would play that.

Phil Byrne:

All in all.

Phil Byrne:

Top

Matt Edmundson:

tip, top advice there.

Matt Edmundson:

I love that getting the subscribers the email addresses, especially so you

Matt Edmundson:

can re, re target them, re market them.

Matt Edmundson:

Would that...

Matt Edmundson:

Those things you talked about, the Google ads, the remarketing on meta,

Matt Edmundson:

YouTube channel lead gen meta lead ads and distribution of your shopping feed.

Matt Edmundson:

Would that apply for say, a digital product?

Matt Edmundson:

So we get a lot of people listening to the show who are doing now

Matt Edmundson:

digital products, like the online courses or the like the memberships

Matt Edmundson:

fitness would be a classic one.

Matt Edmundson:

I'd come join my fitness group and all that sort of stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

Would that apply to those as well?

Phil Byrne:

It'd be slightly different, so Google really does not want us to sell

Phil Byrne:

digital products through shopping feeds.

Phil Byrne:

People do find third party ways to make that happen, but but digital

Phil Byrne:

products is all usually need driven, so usually a digital product

Phil Byrne:

fixes a problem, a question, an element of training that we need.

Phil Byrne:

So really we want to target, search is our most important

Phil Byrne:

thing in terms of Google ads.

Phil Byrne:

YouTube, again, can we find channels, spaces that address the audience we're

Phil Byrne:

trying to reach to hit the same issues.

Phil Byrne:

Meta is a great place to sell things which are educational or resolving a

Phil Byrne:

health issue, if it happens to be that.

Phil Byrne:

And you would just play it slightly without the shopping feed there.

Phil Byrne:

The affiliate side...

Phil Byrne:

It's a bit tougher, but the influencer side is highly relevant because we

Phil Byrne:

do have lots of influencers pushing.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah, you have certain things that we're trying to learn.

Phil Byrne:

The one thing I missed out of the eCommerce side is Amazon because Amazon

Phil Byrne:

is such a huge part of the internet now.

Phil Byrne:

They are actually the biggest buyer of Google Ads.

Phil Byrne:

So often our biggest competitor is in Google Shopping can

Phil Byrne:

be our product on Amazon.

Matt Edmundson:

Ha.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, beggars belief, but yeah, no, fair enough.

Matt Edmundson:

That makes a lot of sense.

Matt Edmundson:

So how do we deal with that?

Matt Edmundson:

With the Amazon side.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Amazon buying Google AdWords a lot cheaper than IMI, I've no doubt.

Matt Edmundson:

Selling the same product, competing for the space.

Matt Edmundson:

How do I guess if I'm an established brand, this could be a problem.

Matt Edmundson:

It's definitely been a problem for us in the past, you're how do I.

Matt Edmundson:

How do I compete with that?

Matt Edmundson:

Or how do I what's our strategy for getting people to click us rather than

Matt Edmundson:

Amazon, even though we're going to pay more money, probably be slightly lower

Matt Edmundson:

down what's some of your tips there?

Phil Byrne:

First thing is to bid against them.

Phil Byrne:

Because your Amazon sale is going to cost you 15 percent for

Phil Byrne:

whatever their commission is.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

So you have that budget to beat.

Phil Byrne:

Probably the most important thing is to have something that's different about the

Phil Byrne:

product purchase on your site to Amazon.

Phil Byrne:

Amazon is tough to compete with.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

On price.

Phil Byrne:

Often they are actually cheaper than a lot of the same products on a company's site.

Phil Byrne:

But this is something else that we can offer.

Phil Byrne:

Whether it's additional freebie or something additional to that

Phil Byrne:

product itself, which is only available on the site so we have

Phil Byrne:

to give it some kind of uniqueness.

Phil Byrne:

So then it's real choice.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

It's not just price And people really, and I would say a lot of consumers

Phil Byrne:

actually trust Amazon more than the do end brand, cos, they tried and trusted.

Phil Byrne:

They know they're going to get a refund.

Phil Byrne:

They're going to be here tomorrow.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

All these things are strands.

Phil Byrne:

So we have to create something on our own side.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

Differentiators.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, no, absolutely.

Matt Edmundson:

That's that was our strategy.

Matt Edmundson:

You've got to, you've got to create a compelling difference, right?

Matt Edmundson:

You've got to increase the value in the mind of the perceived

Matt Edmundson:

the perceived mind of the buyer.

Matt Edmundson:

And it's interesting, all these things you now have to think about, because again,

Matt Edmundson:

I'm going back to when it first started, so I'll just set it and forget it.

Matt Edmundson:

But now it's, you've got to be on top of it a little bit.

Matt Edmundson:

You've got to be watching this every day.

Matt Edmundson:

You've got to be checking the budgets, the performance, what's

Matt Edmundson:

working, what's not working.

Matt Edmundson:

Plus, you've then got to stay on top of things like what the latest trends are,

Matt Edmundson:

where's all this sort of stuff coming out.

Matt Edmundson:

What sort of some of the publications or feeds or sites you followed stay

Matt Edmundson:

up to date with the whole thing?

Matt Edmundson:

So

Phil Byrne:

On the Google ad side.

Phil Byrne:

There's a great American company called Solutions Aid,

Phil Byrne:

you might have heard of them.

Phil Byrne:

There's a brilliant UK Google Ads guy called Ed Leake.

Phil Byrne:

So he has a Facebook group on Google Ads.

Phil Byrne:

He also has his own app, which can help you run your ads.

Phil Byrne:

And then a lot of the things I tend to stay ahead of outside of that,

Phil Byrne:

because I'm really a Google Ads guy.

Phil Byrne:

Some of my team are more meta, more social media ads focused.

Phil Byrne:

so I tend to stay ahead of Google for heritage's sake, as

Phil Byrne:

much as keeping up with trends.

Phil Byrne:

But then I follow a lot of business blogs, a lot of business sites, which

Phil Byrne:

keeps me, keeps my mind ahead of what's actually happening out there.

Phil Byrne:

In the economic world, and my role these days is a lot about steering the company

Phil Byrne:

in terms of new things we bring through, what's happening in the landscape, where

Phil Byrne:

do we want to be, and keeping ahead of that stuff, but I think solutions A to

Matt Edmundson:

I've got one more question for you, Phil, because time has just

Matt Edmundson:

flown by, a thousand miles an hour.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm just slowly working my way through the list.

Matt Edmundson:

We've talked again, we've talked about a strategy for eCommerce

Matt Edmundson:

startups, you've talked about where some of the hotspots are.

Matt Edmundson:

If we're already doing well on Google, we should look at we've talked a

Matt Edmundson:

little bit about digital products.

Matt Edmundson:

So one person or one organization that I do want to touch on partly because I

Matt Edmundson:

serve on some boards, partly because I'm just genuinely interested, is charity.

Matt Edmundson:

Now, um, Google have this system for charities, don't they, where

Matt Edmundson:

you can get a 10, 000 credit towards your ad spend every month.

Matt Edmundson:

That's only, as far as I understand that, that's only on

Matt Edmundson:

the, it's only Google search ads.

Matt Edmundson:

It's not to do with YouTube.

Matt Edmundson:

It's nothing to do with Google Macs and all that sort of stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

It's just literally Google search ads you can spend up to 10, 000 on.

Matt Edmundson:

Have you had any experience with that?

Matt Edmundson:

So if there's a charity listening.

Matt Edmundson:

Maybe just explain what that is, because not every charity knows about

Matt Edmundson:

it, and then we'll talk a little bit about, for a few minutes, about

Matt Edmundson:

how charities can exploit this.

Matt Edmundson:

No

Phil Byrne:

problem, Matt.

Phil Byrne:

So the scheme is called Google Grants and there's a page which I

Phil Byrne:

can supply you with, Matt, where you can make an application.

Phil Byrne:

And what Google will do is they'll look at your status as a charity and

Phil Byrne:

most of the time they will award a grant and that can be credited to an ad

Phil Byrne:

account for you to run search ads from.

Phil Byrne:

I think what a charity has to do is think about in the same way we do in eCommerce.

Phil Byrne:

What do we want that ad spend to do?

Phil Byrne:

Is it sponsors?

Phil Byrne:

Volunteers?

Phil Byrne:

Is it donations?

Phil Byrne:

And each of those different things that we want to happen, we need to make

Phil Byrne:

sure we have a proper landing page for.

Phil Byrne:

I think where, where that spend can just disappear is if

Phil Byrne:

we just send people to the...

Phil Byrne:

Mindset and not give them an intention, but it's a good thing that Google do.

Phil Byrne:

They've given out lots of those grants we do look at those organizations.

Phil Byrne:

We'll actually help them But no charge if they fit with something that we sit

Phil Byrne:

with too and I think it's a good scheme

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, no, it's really powerful it's One organization I'm

Matt Edmundson:

involved with is using it that probably spending about one to two thousand

Matt Edmundson:

Dollars of the $10,000 allowance.

Matt Edmundson:

Part of that is because of I think effort for want of a better expression.

Matt Edmundson:

'cause it's a bit like running any gap ads campaign.

Matt Edmundson:

You've gotta know what you're doing a little bit.

Matt Edmundson:

'cause there are certain terms and conditions like you have to

Matt Edmundson:

have a certain engagement rate or something as best I understand it.

Matt Edmundson:

Where's.

Matt Edmundson:

If someone's sitting in a charity and going we'd love to get agency

Matt Edmundson:

involved, but we've not got the budget for agency, unless they come across

Matt Edmundson:

people like yourself who are okay, if they can, we'll do work voluntary.

Matt Edmundson:

Where's a good place to learn the basics about that type of thing so

Matt Edmundson:

they can maximize the charity spend?

Phil Byrne:

Yep.

Phil Byrne:

So Google themselves have a lot of great training courses.

Phil Byrne:

So you can actually get the Google Ads certification.

Phil Byrne:

That's why I think it's worth anyone.

Phil Byrne:

Involved in Google Ads, whether you run them yourself, or you manage

Phil Byrne:

someone else who does, or an agency who does, to do that training.

Phil Byrne:

I think if they did the Google search modules, they would have enough

Phil Byrne:

to start running their own ads.

Phil Byrne:

And then go at it from there.

Phil Byrne:

I think another thing for them to try, if they want someone else to run them,

Phil Byrne:

is to join some of the Facebook groups geared towards Google Ad techniques.

Phil Byrne:

And there's often people on there, Who say, I just want to have a couple

Phil Byrne:

of trial clients, test my techniques out on, and see if I can help.

Phil Byrne:

And that, for a charity, can be

Matt Edmundson:

great results.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, absolutely.

Matt Edmundson:

Top tip.

Matt Edmundson:

Loving that one.

Matt Edmundson:

We're going to get into some of those Facebook groups for some of the charities.

Matt Edmundson:

No doubt whatsoever.

Matt Edmundson:

That's fascinating.

Matt Edmundson:

And just again, just worth pointing out, if you are part of

Matt Edmundson:

a charity, there is Google Grants.

Matt Edmundson:

It is something worth looking at.

Matt Edmundson:

It does extend beyond just the Google Ads spend, like you get free Google accounts.

Matt Edmundson:

So I know that the ones I'm involved with, for example, all the emails, the

Matt Edmundson:

calendars, all that sort of stuff is not something that they charge you for.

Matt Edmundson:

It is a great thing they do.

Matt Edmundson:

It is a bit of faff to get the account, but it's worth it in

Matt Edmundson:

the long run if you get it.

Matt Edmundson:

But I like this idea.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm My final question, I know I said that before, Phil, but this

Matt Edmundson:

is genuinely my final question.

Matt Edmundson:

Phil.

Matt Edmundson:

Would you recommend eCommerce entrepreneurs maybe who use Agency to

Matt Edmundson:

do the Google AdWords certification just to give them that background knowledge?

Matt Edmundson:

100%.

Phil Byrne:

I think they should do Google Ads and Google Analytics.

Phil Byrne:

Okay.

Phil Byrne:

Really what's helped us become a commission based PPC partner is the data.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Phil Byrne:

More than the ads themselves.

Phil Byrne:

So I think for every entrepreneur, knowing your data and your ability

Phil Byrne:

to look into it and manipulate it so you see what you want to see.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, that's fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Commission based agency.

Matt Edmundson:

This is this intrigues me now.

Matt Edmundson:

We'll talk about that because I want you to tell people how people reach

Matt Edmundson:

you and you can talk about what you do Because I think this is fascinating what

Matt Edmundson:

you do traditionally Agencies, which I've worked with either have charged

Matt Edmundson:

a flat fee or they charge a percent of ad spend like 20 percent So if you

Matt Edmundson:

spend 10 grand on ads, they're going to charge you 2 grand So your total spend

Matt Edmundson:

is going to be that 12 plus sorry the 10 plus the 2 which is 12 You work slightly

Matt Edmundson:

differently and this is quite unique and I did want to give some time to this.

Matt Edmundson:

So just explain what it is you do and why you have gone slightly

Matt Edmundson:

bonkers with this whole thing.

Matt Edmundson:

It could

Phil Byrne:

be bonkers.

Phil Byrne:

We've been commission based for about five years now and it was

Phil Byrne:

the advance in data tracking.

Phil Byrne:

That made it an opportunity.

Phil Byrne:

I think that you've used and I've used the word agency in our chat But

Phil Byrne:

I hate using that word, I've always wanted to be with everything I've ever

Phil Byrne:

done a partner It's how I describe it.

Phil Byrne:

Yeah, so I want us to be on the same side of the fence Whereas when you're

Phil Byrne:

charging a flat fee or you're charging a percentage of spend You're not on the

Phil Byrne:

same side of the fence in my opinion There are still some great agencies who do that

Phil Byrne:

and if they're working for you Brilliant.

Phil Byrne:

I think that's fine.

Phil Byrne:

But I want us to all work and benefit together when things go great and

Phil Byrne:

us all to work together and look at what we're going to change when

Phil Byrne:

things are not performing too well.

Phil Byrne:

So we want to be commission based with every client we work with.

Phil Byrne:

There are times when we have to do something different for a short period,

Phil Byrne:

so when data is not there, to base this off, or when it's a brand new company,

Phil Byrne:

we don't even know yet if this is going to work in the market, then we

Phil Byrne:

do charge, as a normal agency does, a flat fee, for generally around 90 days.

Phil Byrne:

We want to go commission based, and if we're growing, it might turn into a half,

Phil Byrne:

so it's half a fee, plus an element of commission, but every client that we work

Phil Byrne:

well with is commission based, that's how we want to be, and it works well, it's

Phil Byrne:

been brilliant for us in some instances, it's taught us a lot, it means that we are

Phil Byrne:

more sales focused than brand focused, So depending on what you want your company

Phil Byrne:

to be, choose the right partner, but it's what we are, what we've become, and

Phil Byrne:

we're tried and trusted in that area.

Phil Byrne:

We, we've got to work with some amazing companies because we have that

Phil Byrne:

approach, and and it's, we don't tie anyone to long contracts, so people

Phil Byrne:

can try it, see if it works out.

Phil Byrne:

If it doesn't, if it does work out, everyone's

Matt Edmundson:

happy.

Matt Edmundson:

Everyone's a winner.

Matt Edmundson:

No, I love that.

Matt Edmundson:

I love that model and I love that idea and it's wonderful.

Matt Edmundson:

So Phil, listen, if people want to reach out to you, if they want to find out more

Matt Edmundson:

about what you're doing or want to get in touch with you about maybe how you can

Matt Edmundson:

help them, what's the best way to do that?

Phil Byrne:

No problem.

Phil Byrne:

So you can look at our site.

Phil Byrne:

Positivesmarks.

Phil Byrne:

com.

Phil Byrne:

All the contact forms there will come to me at the end.

Phil Byrne:

We'll go through the great team we have and then come to me.

Phil Byrne:

Very active on LinkedIn.

Phil Byrne:

So feel free to reach out LinkedIn, direct message me if you want.

Phil Byrne:

Mention the podcast and I'll know that you've come from

Phil Byrne:

this chat I've had with Matt.

Phil Byrne:

There's two things we do, which are my interest people.

Phil Byrne:

One is a free audit of current ad status and accounts.

Phil Byrne:

And the second one is our tracking.

Phil Byrne:

If you want to try our tracking setup.

Phil Byrne:

And you run an eCommerce store on Shopify or WooCommerce, then you're welcome to

Phil Byrne:

try that for 30 days and see if it shows you something that you didn't see before.

Phil Byrne:

I'd love to hear from people.

Phil Byrne:

It's always fun to chat like this, Matt.

Phil Byrne:

So anyone who's in the digital space, you always have a fun chat with.

Matt Edmundson:

Absolutely.

Matt Edmundson:

Phil, listen genuinely, man I, I'm always surprised how quickly time goes, but on

Matt Edmundson:

this occasion, I'm even more surprised and just really appreciate you coming on.

Matt Edmundson:

Thoroughly enjoyed the conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Thank you for sharing the wisdom and the insights.

Matt Edmundson:

And I think we should probably get you back on again at some point in the future

Matt Edmundson:

just to give us an update on the industry.

Matt Edmundson:

And I can ask you all the questions I didn't get to ask you.

Matt Edmundson:

But but yeah, Phil, listen, appreciate it, man.

Matt Edmundson:

Absolute legend.

Matt Edmundson:

It's been a pleasure.

Matt Edmundson:

Thank you.

Matt Edmundson:

whAt a great conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Huge thanks again to Phil for joining me today.

Matt Edmundson:

And in fact, I've started doing this.

Matt Edmundson:

Huge round of applause.

Matt Edmundson:

Yes, go for it.

Matt Edmundson:

Ha.

Matt Edmundson:

Also, big shout out to...

Matt Edmundson:

To today's show's sponsor, the eCommerce Cohort.

Matt Edmundson:

Remember to check them out think about come join the membership.

Matt Edmundson:

It's not actually that expensive ecommercecohort.

Matt Edmundson:

com for more information.

Matt Edmundson:

And of course, be sure to follow the eCommerce Podcast, wherever you get

Matt Edmundson:

your podcasts from, because we've got some more great conversations lined up.

Matt Edmundson:

And I don't want you to miss.

Matt Edmundson:

Any of them.

Matt Edmundson:

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

Matt Edmundson:

person to tell you you are awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

Yes, you are.

Matt Edmundson:

Credit awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

It's just a burden you have to bear.

Matt Edmundson:

Phil'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 the wonderful Sadaf

Matt Edmundson:

Beynon and Tanya Hutsuliak.

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, head

Matt Edmundson:

over to the website eCommercePodcast.

Matt Edmundson:

net.

Matt Edmundson:

That's it from me.

Matt Edmundson:

That's it from Phil.

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.

Matt Edmundson:

Bye for now.

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