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Winning Over Gen Z: The Insider's Guide to Dominating TikTok and Snapchat
Episode 15912th October 2023 • eCommerce Podcast • Matt Edmundson
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Are you struggling to connect with the elusive Gen Z audience on TikTok and Snapchat? Look no further!

In this episode of our eCommerce Podcast, we delve deep into the world of Gen Z and uncover the insider tips and tricks to dominate these popular platforms. From unleashing your creativity without a film crew or high-end camera to understanding the power of short-form content and swipe culture, our expert guests share invaluable insights that will revolutionize your approach to social media marketing.

Transcripts

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Hopefully, marketing is, is always going to exist.

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People are going to need to sell, promote products to, to different generations,

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but I do also think they have it tough, but that's, that's more kind of their

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place in the world right now and how they view the world, um, and stuff

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like that is, is very different and you see it in the workplace as well.

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You know, it, it affects me not just in the, I've got to understand it from

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a marketing strategy point of view, but I have Gen Zs who work for me and

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you know, the way They see things and their expectations of an employer is

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extremely different to a millennial or a Gen Y or anyone beyond that.

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So, you know, we all have to actually take some time to get to

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know them and to understand that we can't treat everyone the same.

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We have to understand what those differences are, why

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they exist and work with them.

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Welcome to the e commerce podcast with me, your host, Matt Edmundson.

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This show is all about helping you deliver e commerce wow.

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And to do that, we are talking to the wonderful Claire Daniels today

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about how to market to the new Gen Z.

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Oh yes, we're going to get into all of that.

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With Claire, who is actually, uh, Claire, it's fair to say you, this is the second

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podcast you and I've recorded together.

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So it's like, it's like we're, we're kind of old hats at this now, right?

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Yeah, old friends.

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So, yeah, it's great to have you on the show.

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It's great to have you on the e commerce podcast, uh, where we get

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to talk about all things e commerce.

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Last time we, we were on the Push podcast talking about all

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things leadership and life.

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Now we're talking about e commerce, getting into your,

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your, uh, your toolbox as it were.

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But before we do that, let me, ladies and gentlemen, tell you a

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little bit about eCommerce Cohort.

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Uh, eCommerce Cohort is the sponsor of today's show.

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There's been a bit of an overhaul to eCommerce Cohort recently, so

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if you've not checked it out, do check it out, eCommerceCohort.

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com, a monthly membership group for all you fine eCommerce folks.

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Do come and join us in that.

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It is growing.

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It is expanding.

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It is doing some great stuff and prices, I think, start now from 14.

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99 a month, which is cheap as chips.

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Uh, as we like to say here in the UK, uh, or I think it's like 18 bucks,

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uh, if you're outside of the UK.

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Uh, but do come along, do come join us, check it out, ecommercecohort.

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com.

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Now Claire, let me, uh, read your bio here.

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It says that you, I love, I love the bio, uh, Claire Daniels is the rock star.

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CEO, uh, and I'm expecting some music later, uh, Rockstar CEO of Trio

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Media, a Leeds based digital marketing powerhouse that's all about shaking up

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the status quo for brands on the rise with a toolkit that includes everything

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from SEO wizardry to social media.

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Sorcery.

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Trio is your go to for marketing magic.

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It's just awesome.

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Uh, before taking the reins at Trio in 2018, Claire was a strategic marketing

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guru leading tech teams like a true boss.

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Oh yes.

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Claire, great to have you on this podcast.

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Thank you for joining me.

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How are we doing?

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Thanks, Matt.

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I'm doing great, thank you.

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And I should probably add, I didn't write that bio, so I appreciate

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what what they gave, what we gave you, because yeah, I appreciate it.

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Yeah, yeah, yeah, it used to be, and to be fair, we still do this

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on occasions, people would give us bios and we'd just read them out,

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um, it depends how busy we are.

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But Sadaf has taken recently to rewriting guest bios, um, to be a

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little bit more fun and frivolous.

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Uh, and I'm, I'm quite enjoying reading them and I don't read the bios until

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we actually do the podcast recording.

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So it was the first time I'd seen it and I just, I just smile every time.

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It's a wonderful thing.

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It's a wonderful thing.

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So, uh, we are talking about marketing to Gen Z, or Gen Z, I suppose if

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you're outside of the UK, right?

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And, um, let's get into that.

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Let's jump into it.

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So how did you get involved in, um, marketing to this

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particular niche clientele?

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Well, for us, ultimately, as a marketing agency, we're working with businesses

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in a whole range of industries.

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We're using data to produce strategies and look at what's

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going to work for our clients.

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Um, and also using platforms that become favoured by some audiences over others.

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Um, and being in the digital marketing space, obviously TikTok has massively

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over the past two to three years.

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Taking a huge chunk of the social media pie, um, and predominantly that

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is made up from people within the Gen Z demographic, not, not solely, you

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know, and we really encourage people with target audiences outside of that

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age bracket, that TikTok is definitely still for them as a marketing platform.

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But it led us to really look at what is it that is different about Gen Z

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from previous generations and what makes them tick with marketing because

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there are quite a lot of changes now.

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You know, there really has been a shift in...

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Consumer expectations, the way technology and social media and all of that is used.

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So, we just kind of doubled down on that, both with helping our clients,

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but also trying to help and educate other people by using data platforms

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that we have available to us to really look at the insights and help produce

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strategies that are really nailed on for what it is that is important to Gen Z.

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Fantastic.

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Well, let's, uh, before we jump into it, let's define, um, uh, mainly if my wife

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is listening, let's define what Gen Z means, because I think we're all getting

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confused Gen, uh, the Gen Z, Millennials.

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Um, I, I know I'm a Gen X.

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I, that's as much as I can show my age now.

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Um, but so how do we define what Gen Z is?

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so Gen Z came after Millennials, so I, I don't like that I'm a Millennial, but

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apparently I am one, um, but Gen Z is typically anyone born between like the

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late 1990s up to early 2010s, so aged between around 11 to 26 kind of push, you

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know, and anyone younger than 30, um, and certainly when we're looking at anyone

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that can be influenced or make purchasing decisions, that kind of 16 to 30 bracket.

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Yeah.

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And some of the characteristics of that generation, you know, they're

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known for growing up with technology.

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Whereas, you know, I think for myself, technology happened as we

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were growing up, but it wasn't.

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Part of us in the same way it is now for the younger generation.

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Um, and so they are extremely fluent with digital media, with technology, um, and

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also the access to information they have.

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So they take on much more global perspectives, um, and these certain

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issues that they are more concerned about, like social justice and diversity.

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And a lot of this feeds off that access to.

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Non stop communication, social media that brings awareness to certain topics.

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very good.

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And so, it is fascinating actually, this idea of growing up.

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in an environment, not just with technology, but with the technology

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that is currently available.

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So social media is probably the big one, isn't it?

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Really.

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Um, I remember when I was at university getting my first

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ever email address, right?

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This is, uh, so I'm, I did not grow up with any form of tech whatsoever.

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I was like, how old was I?

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Maybe 22, 23 before I got my first mobile phone.

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So it was.

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It was all, and when I say mobile phone, I mean a mobile brick.

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Uh, they weren't, they weren't what they are now.

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And so it totally passed me by.

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Now my kids, uh, who would be Gen Z, um, have grown up in

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a very different environment.

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They were using iPads from.

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It was almost like they came out of the womb knowing how to swipe left,

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swipe right, and do you know what I mean, do all that sort of stuff.

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And they've grown up in a very different environment, so they use technology,

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I think, in a very different way.

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Um, I try very hard to keep up, Claire, I'm not going to lie,

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but my kid's just way out there.

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I have no idea.

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No idea.

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And so I, I, I, I find it a really interesting group of people because

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they have been totally influenced by this whole thing, um, interestingly,

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just as a total aside, this is just me having a bit of a moan.

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Uh, I told my son the other day, who's trying to do a few things, I'm like,

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why don't you just call that person?

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And, um, and, and have a conversation with them and, and I kind of,

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I talk, I talk to him later.

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I think he's trying to organise accommodation for university.

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I'm like, just call them up and see what they say.

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Here's the number.

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I even gave him the phone number to call, uh, later.

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Did you call them?

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No.

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I emailed them.

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Why didn't you call them?

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Go away.

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Have you called?

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No.

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I text them.

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It's like, do you know what I mean?

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

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Because, uh, I grew up in a world when a telephone was tethered to a

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wall and you had a really long cord.

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Uh, you know, and, and try and hide, you'd sit in the downstairs

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toilet trying to hide the

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Dial thing as well where you can do it.

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Like, do, like,

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Rotary Dice.

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There's going to be people listening to this show going,

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Matt, I'm totally with you.

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And then there's going to be people listening to this show going, Rotary

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Dice, what the heck are you talking about?

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Why would you have a phone put on a wall?

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I don't get

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it.

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know.

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Honestly, it's, it amazes me how much has changed in such a short period of time.

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And I think, you know, especially for the Gen Z audience, add to that

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their experience through COVID.

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You know, like what you just said about your son not ringing someone.

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That, like, human interaction is not even first nature to them.

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You know, digital interaction is, is what is their native language

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that they're almost using.

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And then human, face to face, anything a bit more personal is difficult.

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And, you know, I think, not that I'm going to get into this heavily, but

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it's then linked with the rise in, you know, mental health issues, you know,

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so much more prevalent in that audience.

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But all of this, I believe, is, you know, intrinsically linked with the way that

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technology has just become so much part of their life that it's like their first.

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Um, and interestingly.

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When I was in the car with some of my colleagues one day, we were driving to

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an event where I was going to be giving this presentation and we were talking

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all about Gen Zs and then we just ended up being like, oh, they screwed,

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you know, and then it's like, oh, but here we are, how to market to them.

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But I think ultimately these, we've got to understand them and what makes them

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yeah, yeah,

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Hopefully, marketing is, is always going to exist.

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People are going to need to sell, promote products to, to different generations,

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but I do also think they have it tough, but that's, that's more kind of their

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place in the world right now and how they view the world, um, and stuff

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like that is, is very different and you see it in the workplace as well.

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You know, it, it affects me not just in the, I've got to understand it from

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a marketing strategy point of view, but I have Gen Zs who work for me and

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you know, the way They see things and their expectations of an employer is

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extremely different to a millennial or a Gen Y or anyone beyond that.

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So, you know, we all have to actually take some time to get to

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know them and to understand that we can't treat everyone the same.

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We have to understand what those differences are, why

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they exist and work with them.

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Yeah, that's a very valid point, because I think it's certainly very easy for

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people of a certain age, mainly myself, to, um, to just complain, because they

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are, it is a very different generation, certainly to the Gen X generation that

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I'm, uh, part of, um, and some of the things that we complain about are both,

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are, are valid, and some of them are not valid, but the bottom line is, you know,

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they have, Gen Z, a bit like millennials grew up in a very different way to the way

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I grew up, And you, you have to get your head around the fact that, that people

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think differently and work differently.

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Like you're saying, we've got to get into that understanding if we're

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going to effectively market to them.

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So that's a really valid point.

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So some of the things that you said that earmark this generation, they've

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got a global perspective, social justice, um, diversity, obviously

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social media has impacted them on a massive way and all of those things.

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They've had their experience through COVID, human interaction is not

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their first interaction, digital is, and obviously they've got,

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there's a big, the mental health is a bigger issue in the Gen Z than it

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is, say, in previous generations.

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Um, there's a lot going on there.

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Um, and so where do you start with all of that?

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Well...

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It's about, any marketing is always about understanding the customer

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first, you know, what is going to be important to these people.

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I mean, an exercise that we always do with new clients is our kind of own exercise

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we've created called Top 20 Reasons.

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And we go through 5 reasons people buy from you, 5 reasons they

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don't, 5 reasons people come back, and 5 reasons they don't return.

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Um, so it, it takes away, you know, we never just say to someone,

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oh well what are your USPs, or what is it that you offer?

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It's like, what are the actual reasons that are important to

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people that make them buy from you?

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So that you really get under the skin of the target audience.

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I

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would do, you know, doing something like that, so really getting to know who are

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these people, what do they value, what's important to them, and the reason why we

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do that is so that through our marketing, we can address any of the objections,

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you know, the reasons people don't buy may not be, in your mind, a valid

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reason for them not to buy, but it is the reason they don't buy, and actually

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that could have been handled through more effective marketing, um, or equally

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the reasons why people do buy from you.

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Making sure that that message is is really front and center.

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So you know, if it's a brand that actually is very socially conscious,

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a lot of people buy into that.

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Say for example, Patagonia.

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You know, like, is it because they're creating ground, breaking clothes

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with some patterned fleeces, you know, and stuff like that that are popular?

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Well, not really, but actually their morals, ethics, values as a business is

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what makes people want to buy into that.

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Yeah.

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It's kind of understanding what is meaningful to people and then

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leaning to that and talk about it.

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So that's...

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Really important.

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And so you may do it, you may address these challenges through

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your content, through imagery, you know, for example, we spoke about

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one of the points there is diversity.

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So actually, diversity is important.

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And also, I don't know the stats on this, but I would imagine that Openly

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out people within the LGBTQIA+ and anyone I may have excluded there, community.

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I imagine there's a lot more of that in the Gen Z demographic.

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So, you know, if that is your target audience, you probably need to be

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a lot more open to embracing that.

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Demonstrating that through your marketing and that you're on board and you're

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inclusive and you know, in any type of diversity, whether it is gender or

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race or beliefs, anything else, then a brand, if they're selling Stairlifts.

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Um, you know, they probably don't need to show that quite, quite so much.

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Um, so it's, it's understanding that and then, and then showing it.

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I mean, besides those points that we've just discussed, I actually have some

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data that we could dive into if you want.

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So, um, we use a platform called, uh, GWI, Global Web Index.

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Um, and it's got over 40, 000 different data points.

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You can put in different age groups, et cetera, and find out all sorts about them.

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So we've pulled off some stats about Gen Zs.

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Um, so I've got, how do they interact with brands?

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What are their favorite social media platforms?

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How do Gen Zs discover new brands and stuff like that we dive into?

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And then also what you can do with that information.

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So should I

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Go.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Yeah, absolutely.

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Loving this.

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I'm making lots of

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notes, Claire.

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Yeah, good.

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People are going to be learning today.

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Um, so, in terms of the top five things that are voted for, there's

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a really long list, but in how Gen Z's interact with brands.

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Um, the number one thing is I use discount codes or coupons.

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Then we've got, I research a product online before buying it.

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I spend the time looking for the best deals.

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I am loyal to the brands I like.

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I tell my friends and family about new products.

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So we've got a few themes there.

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Theme around price and being price conscious.

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And theme around actually being quite bought into something, so

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much so that you're loyal and you would recommend it to others.

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And then also making sure that you do your research before making a

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decision, which is quite interesting.

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Then, what are Gen Z's favourite social media platforms?

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So, TikTok is the top one, so that's 48.

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8% of Gen Z's said TikTok was their favourite platform,

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Oh, wow.

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out of 19 million people, um, surveyed.

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Um, then Instagram, then Snapchat, and then WhatsApp.

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And this data, for example, has been...

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It's hugely important for us because, like, we're working on a campaign at

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the moment with a tech company who have a platform that is for teachers.

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But obviously the teacher age group is quite wide and we're

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working with them on a social media campaign, both organic and paid.

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And we used this platform to go, okay, teachers, what's their

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favourite social media platform?

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And we, Facebook then went to number one because this is taking any age group

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Okay.

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Then what we did was broke down teachers by age groups, so we found

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that actually we've got a really strong category of teachers, you know,

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that are 30 or less, you know, so they're just coming out of university,

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they're just starting out in teaching.

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And they all voted TikTok as the most popular platform.

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So it helps us when we understand those audiences, you know, in the smaller

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segments to go, well, we need a strategy for TikTok for these type of people,

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but then we also need a strategy for Facebook and those strategies

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then going to be really different.

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Yeah.

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Um, so knowing what their favorite platform is, you can then start to

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think about, okay, so where am I going to go spend time promoting what it

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is that we have with that audience?

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Um, also as well, like Snapchat being on there is an interesting one.

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Like we were working with a university and they were wanting to get in front

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of prospective students and we then went forward with a idea around doing Snapchat

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ads as well and getting Snapchat content in front of that graphic, whereas, You

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know, without the data really leading you in the right direction, you may just

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kind of always end up with a, okay, if we're doing social, it's going to be on

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Meta, we'll cover Facebook, Instagram

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Yeah.

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no, but actually it's about really being able to be specific about what platforms.

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Those audiences are using, um, and even so we've had people come in

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and do work experience here all kind of between the ages of 18 to 21 and

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they're like, oh, well, I use WhatsApp.

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I use WhatsApp to talk to my family because my family's all

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old and that's what they use.

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They don't use WhatsApp to talk to each other.

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They use Snapchat to talk to each other or

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Yeah.

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Instagram to talk to each other.

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Mm hmm.

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Um, you know, I was away somewhere recently with a colleague and,

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um, you know, she, we were talking to some people and someone said,

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oh, can I have your Instagram?

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And they exchanged Instagrams.

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I said, you do know that's the equivalent of someone asking

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for your number these days.

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Um, you know, which she had no idea because just different.

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Um, but that probably goes.

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Back to that point about your son as well, you know, what, what good is having

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someone's number because they don't want to talk on the phone, you know,

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they get your Instagram and they DM you.

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yeah.

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So,

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Yeah, they do.

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It's really interesting and my daughter, and the reason I'm laughing is because my

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daughter has WhatsApp, the only channels, the only group she's in are the family

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channels because we're all old, obviously.

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Uh, and she, she was texting her mate the other day.

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And she showed me the text and I'm like, what text thing is this?

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And she went, oh, it's Snapchat.

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I was like, What would it not be?

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Uh, so.

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It's totally right.

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yeah, it really, yeah,

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Yeah.

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Um, this is what I mean, I, I, if you're like me, you kind of think, man, I've,

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I just got my head around Instagram and yet there's all this, I've now got

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to figure out all these other things.

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well, a lot of people are going, ah, I've finally come into terms with having

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to use TikTok and then Threads arrived and then, Twitter changed to X and

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then there's also, you know, there's Be Real and all this type stuff, but

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TikTok for us is definitely the kind of lead platform for this generation

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because it does have the most people

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It does, it's massive.

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It's interesting you talk about that because when Threads came out I was like,

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well, okay, I'll go get my Threads account

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because why would you not, right?

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And I've used it twice and I've never used it since.

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And so you know that there's going to be these things which sort of come and go.

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A bit like, what was the other one that came and went?

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Clubhouse, you know, with the, uh, that was another famous one, wasn't it?

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Um, Instagram seems to have stuck around.

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Obviously Meta is Instagram, WhatsApp and Facebook.

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Um.

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TikTok seems to have come on the scene and sort of hung around.

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My one reservation about TikTok at the moment is I'm not sure how America is

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going to respond to TikTok in the future.

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Um, because obviously as things currently stand is it's owned

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by China pretty much, isn't it?

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TikTok.

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Um, and so.

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I'm just not sure how long it will be, because I know that there's been rumours,

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but whether it actually happens or not, I don't know about whether certain

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states, whether the whole of the states is just going to ban TikTok, and then

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that's just going to kill the platform.

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I don't know.

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Um, but as things currently stand, obviously it's a super

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popular platform, right?

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Yeah, yeah, absolutely.

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And I think, you know, we shouldn't let any of that stop us from like,

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right now, that's where people are.

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And, you know, I think there has been rumours about that for a

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long time, and nothing's happened.

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And I think it has such a strong foothold that actually, I would be surprised if

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something did change because of the amount of time people spend on the platform.

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I think as well, the way TikTok differs, I mean, they themselves,

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I did refer to them as Social media platform earlier, but they would say,

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we're not a social media platform.

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We are a entertainment platform.

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That's how they position themselves.

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You know, you should come here to be entertained, spend a lot of time.

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It's, it's not the first place you would go if you want to talk to someone.

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And so it differs with that.

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And, you know, I don't know whether there'll be any kind of censorship that

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will start coming around, but yeah, I think for now it's where people are at.

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Let's, let's

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Embrace it.

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Yeah.

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Join in.

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What do you think?

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Um, what do you, why do you think?

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TikTok has resonated then with Gen Z specifically, um, especially if you've

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got a lot of Gen Zs, I suppose you've got a lot of Western Gen Zs who are very

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globally aware and globally conscious.

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Um, and you have got, uh, obviously nations like China, which isn't

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love it or hate it, right?

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There's, there's, there's pros and cons to, to, to China as a

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nation and what they're doing.

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But you've got Gen Z's, like my daughter, my kids are very aware of

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China, very aware of human rights records and all this sort of stuff.

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So on one hand they know that this is a Chinese platform, but on the other

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hand they've sort of flocked to it.

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So I'm kind of curious why that just seems like an interesting

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juxtaposition to me, uh, to

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Everyone knows iPhones are made in China, but everyone wants an iPhone.

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Um, you know, so I think.

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You accept it if actually, well, you know, that's what I

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want, it's where I want to be.

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So, it's obviously a necessary evil that you accept, isn't it?

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Um, a really interesting question about why I think...

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Gen Z's are drawn to it.

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And it made me think, so I remember, I mean, honestly, it must have been 14,

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15 years ago, going to a conference, um, about digital marketing and someone

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saying, if the internet was recreated, kind of today and kind of future from

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that time, It would be video first, and I couldn't get my head around it, I

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couldn't picture, well what do you mean the internet is just video, you know,

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because just thinking of like flat, static web pages, how could the whole web be

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video, but that's the kind of rationale of, this is the direction that it would

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go, and then here we are, we have TikTok.

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You can't not play it, like, you open it and video is playing, like,

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whether you like it or not, you know, it is just intrinsically video.

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As you said about your children, it's like they come out of the

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womb knowing about swiping.

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Everything about the way that platform has been built feeds into the way

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this generation we've created.

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Now expect to react online with a device, you know, short attention span, short bits

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of content, swipable content, you know, it's very clever in being able to very

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quickly learn what you're interested in, show you more of that to keep you there,

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you know, I don't know if you could tell by the way I'm talking about it, but I am

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very much hooked on TikTok as well, like

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ha, ha,

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If I go on TikTok before I go to bed, that's it, I've lost an hour of my

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life, um, because it keeps you on there,

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sucks you in, doesn't it?

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yeah, I don't think it's necessarily that there's even a conscious decision

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about this is the platform for me, you know, it's just you go on and An

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hour later you're still there and then all of a sudden you're going on the

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next day, the next day, the next day.

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Because TikTok, before being TikTok, was an app called Musical.

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ly.

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It was very much just about the, um, like lip syncing and

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dance moves and stuff like that.

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is only about you can access the music and do these specific things and it didn't

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take off in the same way so you know when TikTok first started getting big

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in the past couple of years everyone's going well it's just a platform for

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lip syncing and dancing it's like well actually it's not because it's

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been around as that for about 10 years

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Mm,

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That was quite niche, whereas, yeah, that's its heritage and a lot of people

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are still doing that, but the potential of what it had and how much more it could

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do is what has made it grow because of the algorithm and, you know, the way

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it links, and obviously we'll get into some of this as well, but TikTok Shop,

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all of this stuff being able to be on there, like you can See a very short

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video of someone influencing you, you can click and you can check out and

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buy it without ever leaving TikTok, you know, like in the office every week.

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It's like, Oh, here's my latest TikTok purchase.

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I was influenced and all the Gen Z's buying things off TikTok.

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So from that perspective, this is why it's an amazing platform for brands.

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Because the, you know, it's almost like you don't know it's happening to you, uh,

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you know, and you're just being marketed to one of the things, the, when I first

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put this presentation together, it was for a specific event and the previous.

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Presentation that I had been doing at the same series of events before

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I did the Gen Z Z piece was around conversion rate optimization.

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And one of the platforms I spoke about was Amazon of, you know, look at

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how now, how easy it is to check out and, you know, do you think they were

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struggling to make money before they brought in the one click checkout?

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You know, they weren't, they were making.

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Multi billions, billions, whatever it is, anyway, but they still, they

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brought in the one click checkout and they made even more money

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because it took away thinking time.

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hmm.

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Mm hmm.

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know, I can't even consider, is this a good idea because I've

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already bought it, you know, so.

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It's the same thing, of this, everything being one click away, like so easy,

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so quick, that it's just there, and that's the opportunity for marketers,

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advertisers, is to be able to put stuff on platforms like this, that generation,

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and they just buy it, you know, without them really having to consider much else.

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Really powerful.

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Really powerful stuff.

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Well, let's dig into it then.

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Let's, um, I'm just going to pull a random thing on my desk.

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For some reason I have a torch.

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Um, not very, uh, Gen Z, to be fair, because they're all

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torches on the phones now.

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Uh, but how would I, how would I...

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Think about, uh, marketing then on TikTok.

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Say something like, or pick any product you'd like.

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This is a bit random, but, um, what, what are some of the

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things that I need to think about when approaching this platform?

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So...

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The content is going to be the main thing, you know, you can't go, oh, if

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I go on TikTok then just naturally, because the audience is there, they're

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going to buy from me, because if you don't create the type of content

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that they resonate with, that they want to see, it will fall flat, so...

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A term people UGC, which stands for user generated content.

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This is really, really big on TikTok, and certainly for anyone that spends any

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time on TikTok, they will have noticed, because I definitely have, a convergence

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towards pretty much all ads are UGC.

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So it's...

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Someone, another user on TikTok, it doesn't have to be an influencer,

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you know, it can just be someone who has created their own TikTok video

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about your product and you take their video and you use that as an ad.

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That is a really powerful way to get people to buy because you are not

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creating some polished sales video trying to tell people, um, you know,

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what to do or whatever else, it's just, it creates demand because it's like

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this other person, They look like me, they sound like me, whatever it is,

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and they're telling me I should have this, so, you know, I want it as well.

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And you will just see tons of ads like that, but the good thing is,

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because actually when I was telling this to someone else, they were

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like, well, no, I don't, I don't see any ads, and I'm like, this is

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one of the other benefits of TikTok.

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The ad content is so native to the platform, you...

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I really don't know that it's an ad, so especially when you are looking at

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that user generated content, or even if you're not doing UGC, anything super

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authentic, not polished, very real, anything like that is going to work

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really well, so I would rather it.

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If someone had a product to sell, just say to them, you need to just get in front of

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the camera yourself and just talk through why you created it, and why it's good,

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and show it, or package it, all these type of things, instead of, oh, we're going

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to create this, we've got this idea, and we're going to create this, you know,

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fancy little mini advert, whatever, it's just, TikTok isn't the place for that,

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TikTok, it will only work if it looks native, like I say, the native stuff

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is people creating their own content.

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Content on there.

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So if you've got a product to sell, that's definitely going to be the, you'll

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get the best success on TikTok because you can link it up with TikTok shop.

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You don't have to, but it is a benefit to do that.

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So you link it up with TikTok shop.

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People can just buy on TikTok, like I say, they don't even

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have to leave the platform.

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Any details they signed up with, they're going to auto populate.

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If you've got Apple Pay, anything like that, that's all

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going to integrate as well.

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So you can check out really, really easily.

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Um, but even if you don't have a product to sell, you know, you can link off.

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I mentioned about university, link off to a page to sign up or find out, download

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the prospectus or whatever it may be.

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So you can still do anything like that.

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Um, with ads as well.

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Um, and obviously a lot of what I've said there is around ads and people

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probably go, oh, it's maybe not the first thing they thought about on TikTok.

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The thing is just about the content creation and going viral and

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stuff like that, which yes, that's nice, but creating the recipe

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for going viral is so difficult.

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yeah,

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you know, people should get away from thinking about that.

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And instead.

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Typically, most businesses we talk to, ultimately, the thing they're

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going to measure success on is sales.

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So, we're going to give them a strategy that will get them sales, so that, that is

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going to include an advertising strategy.

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Um, but we do work with...

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Um, some brands just creating organic content for TikTok as well.

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Um, so we work with Green Chef, who's part of the HelloFresh group.

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It's all their, like, vegan, vegetarian stuff.

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And we just film making meals and sharing the finished meal.

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And, you know, regularly those videos get in excess of 2 million views per video.

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Because he's just giving people what they want, you

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mm,

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See something satisfying, something that looks real, and it's all filmed

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on a smartphone, you know, there's no studio production and, and all of

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this because it's, it's what looks right and works for the platform.

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So yeah, get, getting, getting the content right and then pairing that

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with an advertising strategy, um, is what's really going to help drive

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growth and sales if you're using TikTok to target your audience.

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Well there's a lot there, I'm definitely going to check, was it Green Chef?

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I'm going to go check it out, uh, and have a look at some of that,

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because I, I see they're the kind of, if I'm on TikTok and I, I, I limit

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myself to TikTok, because like you, I just get sucked into this universe.

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Um, they're the kind of things that I see, the sort of, the 7, 15 second

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videos where someone goes, you know, chops an onion, throws it in a frying

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pan, you hear the sizzle, so you've got the, the sound effects now are

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a big thing as well, aren't they?

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Um, you've got all of that, 15 seconds later, you've got a big dish or whatever

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it is, and you, and you, you're like, wow, I can, and then if I want to, I can dig in

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and find out a little bit more about it.

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I guess if I'm...

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I can see how that would work for Green Chef.

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If I go back to my torch example, because I'm just kind of curious.

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The things in my head then are, unboxing videos would be quite

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good, um, Uh, just messing around at night, I suppose, showing how

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bright it is would be quite good.

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Um, dropping it from a building and it not smashing because it's

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in this aluminium case would be all those kind of things, isn't it?

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That's the kind of thing you're talking about.

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It's not a, it's not a presentation going, right, three reasons why this

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torch will outshine your competition.

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Uh, reason number one, uh, because no one's going to watch that, right?

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It's not the old sort of sales, uh, long form sales.

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But it is very much 17 seconds, just bang, get it out there.

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Um, and recording that on your smartphone, being super casual about it, not

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looking for the high production value.

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Yeah, I mean, you say that there has to be, I, I, well, let me,

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let me not make that a statement.

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Let me make it a question.

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Does there have to be at least some form of production value?

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Because I see a lot of these things.

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That look like they have no prediction value, but then I sit

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and think about someone thought long and hard about how to put that.

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That was not an accident.

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Do you know what I mean?

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yeah, definitely.

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You know, when, when I'm saying doesn't have to be kind of super polished.

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It's in my mind, I'm going, you don't have to have a film crew, it doesn't

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have to be filmed on a high spec camera.

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But you definitely have to Think about what you're doing, have a creative idea.

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I mean, you've just reeled off a number of creative ideas there,

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obviously, for your torch.

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Not everyone is naturally so creative that they could think of those, but it's

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giving people that idea of, you know, it doesn't have to be hard, like a torch is

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really boring, and you've just thought of loads of fun ways to show it, and

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that's, that's what TikTok's all about.

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The beauty of TikTok as well, for a brand, is...

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Unlike any other social media platform, the assets they make

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available to brands are unbelievable.

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So you can go into TikTok Creative Center and you could search for

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a torch and it will show you all the best performing videos.

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to do with torches, you know, it can show you everything that's trending right now,

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trending influences, trending hashtags, trending songs, trending video styles that

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you can copy, you know, so you don't have to be a creative to be able to actually

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start compiling a strategy of the type of content that, that you should create.

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Um, but then yes.

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Equally, as much as I say it's super easy, you just pick up your phone and film

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it, if it's really poor quality video, if the audio is muffled, anything like

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that, that's not going to work as well.

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You know, it definitely needs to be to a certain standard, um, of production,

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but it just doesn't have to be.

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You know, what I would have considered five or six years ago, if I was like,

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my company needs a video, what I was going to have to invest to get one

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video production that would go into it.

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Whereas now, you know, the challenge we have is, well, we need to charge

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X for how much we're going to film.

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But actually the outcome is the client gets four 15 second videos, you know, so

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how much do they want to pay for that?

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yeah, yeah.

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So it, It just does come to, it doesn't have to be a super resource heavy

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investment to get something, you know, that's going to work for you on there.

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So if I'm, if I'm say, you know, I've got my torch, I'm sold into TikTok.

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I've got a few ideas of things that I'm going to film.

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Um, is it a case of four videos is fine?

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Or is it a case of I have to do four videos a week and just constantly,

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you know, like the old blog posts, you couldn't just write one.

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You had to just keep churning them out.

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I say old blog posts because people still do them, but do you know what I mean?

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It's that kind of, is there a, is there a consistency thing that I

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need to think about with TikTok?

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Consistency is absolutely the right word.

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So, TikTok themselves say that to grow your channel, you should

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post at least three times a day.

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Oh, wow.

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Now, I take that with a massive pinch of salt and we don't advise

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that to anyone because that's just so out of reach for so many people.

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I think that works if you are a person, an influencer who wants to

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grow a channel and you can invest all your personal time in it.

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But for a brand or a business, I think it's that quite often

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unachievable, um, but what we have seen is the key is consistency.

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You know, if you post once a week, make sure you post once a week.

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You know, if you post once a week, then you have three weeks off.

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What you'll find is the one, the week you come back, you probably won't get

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seen as much as you were getting seen when you were posting consistently.

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Every week.

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So you definitely do have to commit to a kind of plan with it and

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make sure that you stick to that.

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And then there's also certain things around the advertising side as well.

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You know, you can't just produce one piece of collateral and that's

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your ad and that will just run.

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Your ads need to have constant new content added as well.

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TikTok may serve anywhere to like three to seven different pieces

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of content for your ads at a time.

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Um, so if someone's seen one of your ads, they may then show them another one to

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try convert them and they want you to kind of refresh it at least every week.

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So that's more of a consideration if you're doing an ad to make sure

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you've got several pieces of content that can be used for part of that.

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Um, but that's very easy.

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You could take exactly the same content and just re edit it

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and put it in different order.

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You know, there's lots of ways you can do that without going, Oh,

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does that mean I have to have...

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X amount of different creative ideas.

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No, you just have to have different videos.

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So it, there's ways of managing it all.

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yeah.

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No, very, very fair point.

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And in fact, uh, uh, did a, a podcast with Amelia Coomber.

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Uh, dear listener, if you wanna check out more on that strategy

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that, um, close this mention, Amelia digs into that a little bit.

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Um, So I've, I've, I'm obviously having to, if I'm invested in

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TikTok, I've got to be in it.

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I can't just dip my toe.

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I've got to put a mixture of organic content out there, add

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specific content and, and, and somehow make all of this work.

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Um, just dig into, you mentioned the TikTok Creative Center, just

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dig into what that is a little bit for people that might not know.

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And is it something that you have to, you know, do a secret handshake to get into?

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No, absolutely not.

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If you've got a business account, you can get into there.

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Um, you can also, there's lots of things to know with TikTok.

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Typically, brands may prefer to have a personal account rather than a business

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account because the access to music is limited on a business account.

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However, a business account is going to give you the features

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like TikTok shop and advertising.

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So there's pros and cons that you may want to weigh up and you can change.

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At different times.

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So you may prefer if you're going down more of an organic strategy initially

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to keep your profile personal because you're able to jump on a lot more

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trends with having the full library of videos and music available to you.

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But then when you want the business features, you may go that in direction.

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You can also advertise on TikTok and have a business account without

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having a TikTok page with content on.

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We would always recommend that you do have that.

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But you can get started with a business account without

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needing to set up a profile.

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So a few things there to consider.

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But yeah, if you've got a business account, you can

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log into the Creative Centre.

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So I've just opened it up in front of me, just talking through it.

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So this section called Inspiration, you can look at the top ads and all

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of that can be filtered by country, uh, By date, lots of different

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filters to make it specific to you so you can see what's performing well.

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So we always look at that if we're starting a new ad strategy for a client.

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Again, as, as I said earlier, like we were looking at data, we aim to

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take the guesswork out of anything.

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Like we're pretty sure we know what works, but let's look at the data.

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So whilst we have some amazing ideas, well let's see what ads have

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been performing well, so you can have a look through all of that.

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You can look at keyword insights, so we are seeing that TikTok is growing

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as a search platform as well, and it's getting a lot more linked with SEO

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you can have a look at keywords and hashtags, and what is performing well,

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what you should get on board with.

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You can look for creative ideas, top selling products.

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Then in terms of what's trending, you can look at trending hashtags,

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trending songs, trending creators.

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Trending TikTok videos.

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You can download trend reports that give you different perspectives on things.

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Um, you can also create videos in Creative Center.

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It's got a lot of creative tools, um, video editor templates as well.

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You can download creative strategies in there.

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It's so, so worth anyone who is already using TikTok but doesn't know how to use

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it properly for their marketing efforts or is thinking of getting involved, just

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go and spend some time on Creative Center.

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Like, it's honestly brilliant, the, the access to resources that they give you.

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And also probably worth mentioning.

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Seeing as this chat is about Gen Z, not just about TikTok.

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When we were doing the piece on Snapchat, Snapchat had very similar.

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So if you sign up for a Snapchat business account, they have a great creative center

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and you can get a lot of insights similar to what we could go and pull off GWI.

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We could go look on Snapchat and it'll tell us, um, right, if we want to look at

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an audience between this age range, what are their interests, what type of content

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do they engage with, all of this stuff.

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So you can start with getting a really clear idea and shaping your...

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Marketing strategy around content that is really readily available to you.

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You know, so for TikTok in their top 10 interests, we can filter

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that down specific to Gen Z.

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So the number one interest in TikTok content for Gen Z is gaming.

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So gaming first, then food.

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And then kind of within there, within the top 10 as well, you've got things like

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fitness and wellness content, skincare, um, Lots of gaming stuff, actually, and

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lots of skincare stuff, um, and yeah, food, food and drink, so you can start

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seeing what it is that they're already doing, and then you know that's what

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I need to go and create and produce

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Yeah, wow, that's awesome.

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Top advice, uh, there, uh, how long do you think it would take, uh, for someone

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who's never really done TikTok, never really done Snapchat, but goes, actually

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a big chunk of my audience is, is Gen Z, I need to go get my head around this.

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How, how, how much time investment do you think is involved in, in

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learning about these two platforms?

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Is it, is it a case of you'll pick it up in an hour?

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Is it a case of, yeah, you got to set aside a month in your diary, mate?

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Um, I don't think that much time, I think, you know, if you go and just

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actually study the resources, study the platform, I do think it would be

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beneficial if you have someone within the demographic, if you want to use

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it because you want to target Gen Z.

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Speak to your NZ people, you know, they'll, they'll tell you how they're

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using that platform, what they like, don't like, you know, if you don't have

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access to the data that we have, you can still find out, oh, well, how are you

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interacting with brands on there, and maybe we should do that, um, you know, so.

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A couple of days would, would probably be sufficient to giving yourself time to look

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through the resources and, and get to know it, and then it's just about building out

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a, a strategy to produce the content, but to give you an idea, I mean, we've just...

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Um, brought on a new client who, I mean, it's not targeting Gen Z, but

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they're going with TikTok and TikTok is a very new platform for them.

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And we're going to do like within a month, we'll have produced a full

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strategy for them that includes all the data, what they should do, who

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we're targeting, the type of content.

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And then we're doing a quarterly filming day.

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So we'll spend one full day.

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Getting content that will feed us for a quarter,

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right,

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um, you know, content to post and that'll be for both their ads and organic.

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So if you can set aside the time or work with an agency who can do that for

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you, um, then, you know, it's, I think the unknown often makes it seem more

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out of reach and like a bigger deal if you've not got involved in it yet, but

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I'd say just rip the bandaid off, get involved, um, and it's, it's not as

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hard as you might think it would be.

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So let's talk costs then because, um, I mean, if you, if people are listening to

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the show been around a while, they've, they'll have some understanding of

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costs involved with advertising on Meta.

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They'll have some understanding of costs involved in advertising on Google, um,

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and the corresponding conversion rates and what Google brings in typically what, you

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know, Meta is going to bring in typically.

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How does, say, TikTok and Snapchat, how do those platforms compare, say, with Meta?

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Right.

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A lot cheaper.

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So, yeah, I mean, I would still probably assign the same budget,

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but we can do more with the budget.

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I don't have any specific examples, I'm trying to think, but I, it's that

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paid media team that run it, because I would love to give you one of like,

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cost for acquisition, um, on some of the campaigns we're running, but...

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You can definitely get a lot more for your money on TikTok than you can on Meta.

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Okay.

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So definitely worth looking at.

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And in terms of funnel, right, so everyone talks about, um, you know,

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the different stages of that funnel.

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The awareness section, the, you know, top funnel, middle

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of funnel, bottom of funnel.

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We use a lot on Meta, don't we?

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Um, TikTok, Snapchat.

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Where, where is that aiming in terms of, are we brand awareness?

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Are we, I mean, you've talked about doing direct conversion ads.

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So we, where are we doing all of them on these platforms?

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What, what's your thinking on that?

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Yeah, definitely.

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It depends on the strategy.

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So for some people, if it's brand awareness and it's about we just need

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to create lots of fun content, be seen by lots of people, you know, we

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may be looking to raise awareness, but it could be something that is

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not a physical product to check out.

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So we want people to know about us.

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But it's not gonna be the place that they're really gonna transact.

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Whereas for other companies, it absolutely could be the place that they can transact

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with that checkout feature on TikTok shop.

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So it is going to depend on the business.

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We would, you know, um, approach that on a strategy by strategy basis.

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But it can serve for all funnel.

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Right, so all the stages of the funnel are okay on these platforms,

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Yes,

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fascinating.

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Can you, uh, I, I know that people who listen to the podcast don't

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always sell physical products, right?

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So they're not always selling torches, for example, maybe they're selling

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digital products like a course, you know, how to learn the piano in 30 days

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or whatever, you know, is going on.

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Um, does that.

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I kind of know the answer before I ask the question, but let me ask

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it anyway, um, digital products on TikTok, as well as physical products,

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I assume we can advertise both?

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Absolutely.

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Yeah.

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We, we are doing at the moment,

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Okay.

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And would you, I'm kind of curious, Clay, you obviously have

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your, um, marketing agency, Trio.

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Um, I, I'm showing my age.

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I'm really sorry, but every time I use the word Trio, I've got, um, there's

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an old, yeah, I've got that in my head.

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The old TV commercial.

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Um, would you advertise or promote your agency on TikTok?

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Yeah, I mean, we have done a TikTok ad before, um, for us

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and we are active on TikTok.

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So, I mean, we haven't been the consistency thing we're

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struggling at for ourselves.

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Um, but absolutely.

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And there's a lot of agencies on there producing content and You know, it comes

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down to what your strategy is, so for example, for us, with social media, we

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have a specific strategy, well we have a motto for social media, you either

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want to work with us or for us, that is how someone should feel engaging

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with us, so we're using it both for engaging with prospective clients,

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but also engaging with prospective employees, and that is what social

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media works really well for, for us.

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We very rarely have to even advertise a job because people see us and what we're

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doing on social media and are approaching us saying, Oh my God, you look so fun.

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Have you got any jobs going?

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Um, you know, so that's, that for us is a win and is worth the investment.

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So even if we're not selling something, we're not going, Oh,

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well, did we win a new client offer?

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Well, no, but we, we recruited a load of great people off the back of it.

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So, um, you know, that's one of our strategies and it's what it works for.

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That's really interesting because, yeah, I mean, we spent the whole

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last however long, 45 minutes or so chatting about how to win sales and

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customers on things like TikTok.

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But if you're, uh, from the agency point of view, what the thing

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that you've drawn out there about.

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Recruitment using social media.

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And obviously if you're in recruitment and you're looking to recruit Gen

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Z, then being on TikTok and Snapchat makes an awful lot of sense.

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And I, I, so that's the flip side of it actually, isn't it?

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It's, it helps you bring in great people to your company.

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You're attracting top talent because of what's going on.

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So, um, and again, I hope you don't mind me asking the question.

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I'm kind of curious how you do it internally.

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Is it just you?

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Cause you're the, the owner, is it everybody?

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in your social media team has the same password on their phones and everyone's

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throwing content out um because I think it's I I've seen e commerce brands do

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it in multiple different ways do you mean in terms of the yes we can go

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batch film some ads and spend a day doing that but that sort of day to day

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stuff I'm kind of curious how you do it and how you've seen it done well

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Yeah, it's rarely me.

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Um, it's most often the Gen Z's in the office who want to create some

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TikToks and I'm like, yes, please do.

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Um, I actually think it should be me more.

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So, you know, I Engage in a lot of content that is like business owners,

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business founders, marketing leaders, sharing insights and thoughts.

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So, ideally, what I believe our strategy should be, you know, don't shoot me that

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we're not doing it, but if, if anyone else is to be taking advice, I should

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probably sit down once a month and create loads of short little videos that

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we could put out throughout the month, sharing industry tips, knowledge, advice,

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you know, we've spoken about so many.

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Insightful things today, I should be sharing all of that on TikTok,

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like if you've got something to say, share it with people, um, and

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then equally, still having the side.

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Where the team are sharing fun things of what's going on, you know, it

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doesn't have to be because you might find you'll see certain TikTok videos

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that you see time and time again from the same person, like more of the

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same because you watched one of their videos and you see the same thing.

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But then you go on the channel and you realize you've got loads of other

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content, but that's not showed to you because that's not what you engaged with.

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So.

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What TikTok's really great for is you can have different streams and, you know,

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themes of content without it going oh, but this is for one audience, that's

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for another, because, you know, if I was putting out a lot of educational

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stuff, it would serve that to people who would be interested in that.

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We could still have a team putting up silly stuff and days in the life,

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things they're doing in the office, and that would be served to the people.

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They're like that type of content.

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So yeah, in an ideal world, we would create a lot more, but we just put so

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much effort into our clients TikToks.

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Yeah, we don't have

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well rescued at the end there.

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It's like, um, I'm, I'm the same way.

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My e commerce websites are always the last websites I work on because you're

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so busy doing, uh, and you just sit there and you just think, oh, I should

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do this on our, um, you know, we're too busy doing clients or we're too

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was nice saying it, but I do.

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Yeah.

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It's like, they always used to say, isn't it about your builder,

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your builder comes around.

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Don't ever go around their house cause it'd be a right mess.

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Well, my husband is a builder, so I say that all the time.

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I'm like, I mean, I'm living in a house renovation all

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Right, just got used to it, that's why you spend a lot of

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time at the office, it's fine.

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Claire, listen, this has been awesome, and I'm sure a lot of people are

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interested to find out more, and if they do, if they want to connect with

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you, maybe got some questions, maybe even want to talk to you about getting

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your agency to work for them, what's the best way to get a hold of you?

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So to reach out to me direct, you can find me on LinkedIn, it's Claire Daniels, or

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if you want to get in touch with Trio, find out more about what it is that

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we do, the website is trio-media.co.uk

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trio-media.

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co.

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uk, and if you do get a hold of a Claire, if you do get a hold of a

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Claire, if you get a hold of Claire.

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Make sure you go tree o, forward slash tree,

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some people going, I don't get it.

Speaker:

they're the same people that go Hang on, you had a phone stuck to the wall.

Speaker:

It's still scratching there.

Speaker:

Yeah, sorry, it's very very different.

Speaker:

But listen, Claire, thank you so much for joining us.

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We will of course link to Claire and the website and all the social media

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stuff in the show notes, which you can get along for free at ecommercepodcast.

Speaker:

net and if you sign up to the newsletter Obviously, they will be coming to

Speaker:

your inbox automatically to you.

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Click away, connect with Claire on LinkedIn, on Snapchat or

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whatever platforms you prefer.

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I'm sure Claire would love to talk to you, um, but yeah, Claire,

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thank you so much for joining us.

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It has been an absolute treat.

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Oh yes it has.

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Thank you.

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It's been a pleasure.

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Oh no, it's been great, it's been great.

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So there you have it, another fantastic conversation lined

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up on e commerce podcast.

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Don't forget to like and subscribe to the show wherever you get your

Speaker:

podcasts from, it helps us reach more people and of course you get it all

Speaker:

direct to your phone, no doubt, free, automatically, all these things come.

Speaker:

Make sure you also check out e commerce cohort, like I say, some

Speaker:

really interesting things come in there, some new developments.

Speaker:

I'm going to be sharing those with you over the coming weeks, I'm very excited

Speaker:

by them, but check out ecommercecohort.

Speaker:

com.

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All that's left to say is, thank you Claire, that's it from me, that's it from

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Claire, thank you so much for joining us.

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Oh no, I need to do that.

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You can tell Claire I've been away for a little bit because I,

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I almost forgot to do the ending.

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Yeah, yeah, just rewind, blub, blub, blub, blub, blub.

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

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Yes, you are.

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Created awesome.

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It's just a burden you have to bear.

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Claire has to bear it.

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I've got to bear it.

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You've got to bear it as well.

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Phew.

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Phew.

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Professional to the end.

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Thank you so much for joining us.

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Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world.

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We'll see you next time.

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Bye for now.

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