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How To Increase Your Customer Retention: The Ultimate Guide
12th January 2023 • eCommerce Podcast • Matt Edmundson
00:00:00 00:51:10

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Attention all business owners! Are you looking to increase customer retention? Look no further because we've got the ultimate guide to help you unlock the potential of your business. Learn how to maximize customer satisfaction and get the most out of your customer relationships with Brandon Amoroso!

ABOUT BRANDON

Brandon is the founder and CEO of Electriq, a DRINKS company that scales brands with profitable e-commerce models built from innovative proprietary methods. Powered by the freedom and individuality of the Gen Z mindset, Electriq has fueled over 35 in-house specialists in a range of growth-focused strategies, including email/SMS marketing, SEO/content marketing, paid acquisition, and web design/development.

Here’s a summary of the great stuff that we cover in this show:

  • Having sold his ecommerce agency to drinks.com, Brandon shares his experience of transitioning from CEO to working within a larger organization. What started as an accidental involvement in customer retention turned into a focus for the entire company; they stopped doing anything related to paid acquisition in 2021.
  • Brands need to start with the basics when building a retention program and not try to do everything all at once. Brandon talks about how Klaviyo can help brands segment their data more granularly.
  • Ecommerce entrepreneurs should focus on customer retention by utilizing email and SMS flows. Subscription programs can be beneficial for long-term customers, but it is important to offer a try-before-you-subscribe option.
  • SMS marketing is a different and more personal communication channel than email and even has an outsized return compared to email. To get started, brands can create a segment of their best customers in Klaviyo and invite them to a VIP SMS subscriber list. Text messages that work well are authentic, fun, cheeky, and have personality from the brand.

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

Transcripts

Matt Edmundson:

Well, hello and welcome to the e-Commerce podcast

Matt Edmundson:

with me, your host, Matt Edmundson.

Matt Edmundson:

The E-Commerce podcast is all about helping you deliver e-commerce.

Matt Edmundson:

Wow.

Matt Edmundson:

And to help us do just that today.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm chatting with my very special guest, Brandon Amoroso from electriq

Matt Edmundson:

about how to increase your customer retention: the ultimate guide.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh, yes.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, but before Brandon and I jump into that, let me suggest a few other

Matt Edmundson:

e-commerce podcast episodes that I think you'll enjoy listening to.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, check out maximizing the lifetime value of a customer with Valentin Radu.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, that was a great episode.

Matt Edmundson:

Valentin's such a top bloke.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and the other episode you should check out.

Matt Edmundson:

Is customer value optimization, the real silver bullet of e-commerce

Matt Edmundson:

with the legendary Will Laurenson.

Matt Edmundson:

You can check out both of those episodes along with our entire of

Matt Edmundson:

archives of episodes, uh, on our website for free at e-commerce podcast.net.

Matt Edmundson:

I like to say this every week.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, Brandon, I'm always amazed by how many people check out past episodes,

Matt Edmundson:

you know, going back years, uh mm-hmm.

Matt Edmundson:

and, um, looking at those stats so you can see all of.

Matt Edmundson:

On the website, they're still there.

Matt Edmundson:

You can still listen to them.

Matt Edmundson:

Now.

Matt Edmundson:

This episode is brought to you by the e-commerce cohort, which

Matt Edmundson:

helps you deliver e-commerce wow.

Matt Edmundson:

To your customers.

Matt Edmundson:

Now, here's the question, right?

Matt Edmundson:

How do you stay on top of things in a way that works for you

Matt Edmundson:

and your eCommerce business?

Matt Edmundson:

Because there's always so much to learn about eCommerce given

Matt Edmundson:

the rate and speed of change.

Matt Edmundson:

Hence, we now have the eCommerce cohort.

Matt Edmundson:

It is a lightweight membership group with guided monthly sprints at cycle

Matt Edmundson:

through all the key areas of e-commerce.

Matt Edmundson:

So if you're working by yourself, whether, if you're working in a team,

Matt Edmundson:

it's gonna help you stay on top of what is going on in the market and

Matt Edmundson:

how it applies for your business.

Matt Edmundson:

It gives you clear and actionable jobs to be done, so you'll know

Matt Edmundson:

what to work on and you'll get the support to get it done that you need.

Matt Edmundson:

So whether you're just starting out in e-commerce or.

Matt Edmundson:

You may be like me, a bit of a dinosaur, someone who's been in e-commerce for

Matt Edmundson:

a really long time, a well established e-commercer as we like to say.

Matt Edmundson:

I encourage you to definitely check out ecommercecohort.com, or you can email

Matt Edmundson:

me directly, matt@ecommercepodcast.net with any questions that you may have.

Matt Edmundson:

Okay.

Matt Edmundson:

Let's get into it.

Matt Edmundson:

Brandon is the founder and CEO of Electriq, A drinks company that scales

Matt Edmundson:

brands with profitable e-commerce models built from innovative proprietary

Matt Edmundson:

methods powered by the freedom and individuality of the Gen Z mindset.

Matt Edmundson:

Electriq has fueled over 35 in-house specialists in a range of

Matt Edmundson:

growth focus strategies, including email, SMS marketing, SEO, content

Matt Edmundson:

marketing, paid acquisition web design and development, and basically

Matt Edmundson:

a whole range of other things.

Matt Edmundson:

So, uh, I'm excited to have this conversation with Brandon.

Matt Edmundson:

Brandon, welcome to the show.

Matt Edmundson:

It's great to have you here.

Matt Edmundson:

Thanks for joining me here on the e-Commerce Podcast.

Brandon Amoroso:

Of course.

Brandon Amoroso:

Thanks for having me.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh, no worries.

Matt Edmundson:

Now you are hailing in from, uh, Miami, Florida right now, which is no doubt gonna

Matt Edmundson:

have much warmer weather than, uh, what I've got here in, uh, well at least it's

Matt Edmundson:

sunny, sunny Liverpool here in the uk.

Matt Edmundson:

So, uh, but you were mentioning you're off to Toronto.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, fairly soon.

Matt Edmundson:

So you're gonna have colder climates very, very shortly, right?

Brandon Amoroso:

Yes.

Brandon Amoroso:

Fortunately though I will only be there for about four nights, so I won't

Brandon Amoroso:

have to deal with it for too long.

Matt Edmundson:

like, yeah, just keep telling yourself when it's cold.

Matt Edmundson:

You just, it's only a few more nights to go.

Matt Edmundson:

It's only a few more nights to go.

Matt Edmundson:

I should escape soon.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, welcome to the show, uh, Brandon.

Matt Edmundson:

Tell me about electriq, uh, and what it does.

Matt Edmundson:

What's your company?

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah, so we're a Shopify Plus agency that

Brandon Amoroso:

specializes in retention marketing.

Brandon Amoroso:

So say almost 90% of the time we're working with our clients on their email

Brandon Amoroso:

and sms, uh, marketing specifically, uh, the automations within their

Brandon Amoroso:

Klaviyo accounts, uh, helping them understand how like segmentation and

Brandon Amoroso:

personalization of that can increase and improve, uh, retention and ltv.

Brandon Amoroso:

And then second is web design and development.

Brandon Amoroso:

So really anything customer experience related, uh, from the

Brandon Amoroso:

moment that they begin that checkout process all the way through, uh,

Brandon Amoroso:

making their subsequent orders.

Brandon Amoroso:

That's where we step in and help brands navigate, uh, the Shopify

Brandon Amoroso:

ecosystem, all the tools that they should or should not be using.

Brandon Amoroso:

And then deploying that across email and SMS and their website.

Matt Edmundson:

Wow.

Matt Edmundson:

There's, there's a lot going on there.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, have, is this your, uh, how, how long has Electriq been around?

Matt Edmundson:

Is this a, a fairly new venture or has it been around a few years?

Matt Edmundson:

Uh,

Brandon Amoroso:

a couple years, but I, I was freelancing in like 2017 and 2018,

Brandon Amoroso:

uh, just for small Shopify businesses.

Brandon Amoroso:

And then, uh, Electriq officially launched about mid 2019.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

. And then, um, we were acquired back in April this year.

Brandon Amoroso:

Oh wow.

Brandon Amoroso:

By, uh, by a beverage technology company, uh, who was entering the Shopify space

Brandon Amoroso:

with their, um, own tax and compliance app for alcohol merchants to be able

Brandon Amoroso:

to ship across the united states.

Brandon Amoroso:

So it was stylized as a Shopify for wine, and that launched

Brandon Amoroso:

about six, seven weeks ago now.

Brandon Amoroso:

So now we have the agency running.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, but then that's another sort of business unit that I'm focused on as well.

Matt Edmundson:

Wow.

Matt Edmundson:

So you, you set up a business three years ago.

Matt Edmundson:

You get it acquired this year by, uh, drinks, I think it was drinks.com,

Matt Edmundson:

uh, bought out your mm-hmm.

Matt Edmundson:

, um, bought out your agency, but you are still involved.

Matt Edmundson:

That's all part of the, uh, the deal of the sale?

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah.

Brandon Amoroso:

So from a day to day standpoint, um, I was already in the process of, um,

Brandon Amoroso:

putting in sort of a, a VP and up, uh, level across electriq so that I

Brandon Amoroso:

wasn't running around doing 10,000 things every day and could focus more

Brandon Amoroso:

on like the, the long term strategy.

Brandon Amoroso:

So I'd say more and more of my time is being spent on, uh, the app and

Brandon Amoroso:

acceleration and adoption of it within, uh, the Shopify ecosystem, doing events,

Brandon Amoroso:

putting together all the content and resources, building things out like the

Brandon Amoroso:

help desk, uh, all the stuff that comes with being a Shopify Plus certified app.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, so it's been fun because I've been learning a lot along the way and.

Brandon Amoroso:

I still get to have the agency as well.

Brandon Amoroso:

So it's sort of the, the best of both worlds.

Matt Edmundson:

I was gonna say, it's interesting because you, we don't have

Matt Edmundson:

many people on the show that have been bought out as recently as you have.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, and you've gone from this sort of transition, which starts life as a

Matt Edmundson:

freelancer to running an agency, um, quite a rapidly growing agency by the

Matt Edmundson:

sounds of it, with the team size that you have, um, to then being acquired.

Matt Edmundson:

So now you are.

Matt Edmundson:

I guess you're employed by drinks.com.

Matt Edmundson:

You know, you've, you've sort of gone the full gamut of, of, uh, of sort

Matt Edmundson:

of statuses here, haven't you, from freelancer to CEO to, you know, working

Matt Edmundson:

with a, within a larger organization.

Matt Edmundson:

How have you found that whole transition?

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, there's definitely pros and cons.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, I inherently just have an entrepreneurial spirit, I would say,

Brandon Amoroso:

And so the, the nice thing about drinks is that it is still sort of scrappy

Brandon Amoroso:

and, and has that startup mindset.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

and being a part of the executive team there still allows me to have

Brandon Amoroso:

some, uh, autonomy and, and decision making sort of power that goes into it.

Brandon Amoroso:

Though obviously it's not the same as it was with the electriq because

Brandon Amoroso:

that was just a hundred percent me and, um, there wasn't necessarily

Brandon Amoroso:

as much, uh, red tape as you get when you start to get into larger.

Brandon Amoroso:

Uh, in larger organizations, but, um, I don't think the transition has been, has

Brandon Amoroso:

been too difficult, especially because they were, they were a client of ours.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, and that's sort of how this whole thing came to be.

Brandon Amoroso:

So already comfortable.

Brandon Amoroso:

Familiar with, with working with them.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

I figured you must be if you'd, if you'd sold to them.

Matt Edmundson:

But it's interesting that actually the sale came to an existing client.

Matt Edmundson:

They'd obviously, they'd used your services and gone, No, we, we wanna

Matt Edmundson:

bring this more full-time in-house.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, I've seen that actually quite a few times.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, bigger companies, they'll go to agencies, they'll use agencies, and

Matt Edmundson:

then they'll end up buying the agency.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, which is, is quite an interesting strategy, I think, from

Matt Edmundson:

corporations to do that these days.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, customer retention, uh, is technically what we're talking about.

Matt Edmundson:

So let's, um, let's dig into that.

Matt Edmundson:

So, um, how did you end up sort of getting involved in customer retention?

Matt Edmundson:

So you talked about email and SMS and the segmentation and

Matt Edmundson:

helping customers with that.

Matt Edmundson:

Was that um, something that was very intentional or was that something that was

Matt Edmundson:

kind of accidental getting involved with?

Brandon Amoroso:

I think a little bit of both.

Brandon Amoroso:

I never really enjoyed, um, the paid media side of things, everything.

Brandon Amoroso:

Facebook ads, the TikTok ads never was something that I could

Brandon Amoroso:

really get passionate about.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

. Um, and then as I saw Claviyo sort of continue to rise within the Shopify

Brandon Amoroso:

ecosystem, all the integrations.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, amongst the various app providers as well and how they all sort of

Brandon Amoroso:

came together in Klaviyo as the central hub of data on each customer.

Brandon Amoroso:

That was a lot more interesting to me.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, the ability to create these personalized experiences at scale

Brandon Amoroso:

by leveraging various different tool sets to get data plugged into Klaviyo

Brandon Amoroso:

that you could then create it off of.

Brandon Amoroso:

So, uh, we actually stopped doing anything to do with paid acquisition, uh, in 2021

Brandon Amoroso:

and moved entirely into just retention.

Brandon Amoroso:

And um, that was definitely a great transition for us because not only did

Brandon Amoroso:

it make our team more focused and you can't be an expert in anything or in

Brandon Amoroso:

everything, but it also was a lot easier in terms of the sales process with new

Brandon Amoroso:

potential clients because we have one very specific area that we focus on.

Brandon Amoroso:

Customer retention.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, we, you come to us in order to increase ltv and we're not a

Brandon Amoroso:

traditional email and SMS agency in the sense that we're not just doing

Brandon Amoroso:

things within your Klaviyo account.

Brandon Amoroso:

Like we're making recommendations that are more holistic

Brandon Amoroso:

across that customer journey.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

so.

Brandon Amoroso:

I sort of fell into it.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, definitely wasn't intentional to to begin with, but as I started working more

Brandon Amoroso:

and more within the e-commerce industry, saw how much opportunity there was there.

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Nice.

Matt Edmundson:

Fair enough.

Matt Edmundson:

Okay, I have a big question for you.

Matt Edmundson:

Is it Clavio or Klaviyo?

Brandon Amoroso:

I think they want us to say Klaviyo.

Brandon Amoroso:

But I can't remember what it was.

Matt Edmundson:

I just, I, I, I really should call them one day

Matt Edmundson:

and ask them, Listen, how am I supposed to put, Is it Klaviyo?

Matt Edmundson:

Or clavio?

Brandon Amoroso:

There's a right way to say it.

Brandon Amoroso:

They've got t-shirts with the phonetic spelling on it.

Brandon Amoroso:

as a joke?

Matt Edmundson:

Okay.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

But maybe they should just send me one of those , So, um, Clavio

Matt Edmundson:

or Klaviyo, you've mentioned that this is the platform that you use.

Matt Edmundson:

Is this, is this your sort of platform of choice for, uh, email marketing?

Matt Edmundson:

Um, especially around customer retention?

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah.

Brandon Amoroso:

We only use Klaviyo for email, SMS marketing, uh, with any

Brandon Amoroso:

brand that's on Shopify.

Matt Edmundson:

And why, why Klaviyo?

Matt Edmundson:

Why that particular product?

Brandon Amoroso:

Because of.

Brandon Amoroso:

Sort of the number in depth of integrations that it has with the

Brandon Amoroso:

rest of, um, with the rest of our app, uh, tech stack for merchants.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm, everything from the customer service platform to the reviews

Brandon Amoroso:

platform, to the loyalty platform.

Brandon Amoroso:

Everything integrates with Klaviyo, so we get that unified view of a customer.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, and then there's been a lot of investment amongst, uh, the various apps.

Brandon Amoroso:

Into making their Klaviyo integrations more robust.

Brandon Amoroso:

So there's some specific features and functionality that only exist

Brandon Amoroso:

amongst, like Recharge and Klaviyo, for example, that you wouldn't

Brandon Amoroso:

get in any other email platform.

Brandon Amoroso:

So that is the main reason.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

. And then, um, for us, it just makes sense to, it's not like we're a

Brandon Amoroso:

team of, uh, a hundred people.

Brandon Amoroso:

It makes more sense to go all in on one platform and truly be experts

Brandon Amoroso:

within that versus saying, Oh yeah, we do, uh, email and SMS marketing

Brandon Amoroso:

across Klaviyo, uh, MailChimp, list track, editable, and so on.

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah.

Brandon Amoroso:

It just doesn't, it would spread us too thin.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

No fair play.

Matt Edmundson:

It's interesting.

Matt Edmundson:

I, I mean, I've been around e-commerce for a fair few years now, and it's

Matt Edmundson:

interesting to me that Clavio or Klaviyo seems to have sort of come out of nowhere.

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, not recently, but there were definitely other contenders in the market

Matt Edmundson:

when they came onto the market, um mm-hmm.

Matt Edmundson:

And they, I think they've, it feels to me like they've revolutionized

Matt Edmundson:

the whole industry a little bit.

Matt Edmundson:

And so they seem to be, and I don't have any data to prove this is just.

Matt Edmundson:

What I, what I see, feel kind of thing.

Matt Edmundson:

They seem to be the market leader, or at least one of the market leaders now in

Matt Edmundson:

this whole email marketing side of things.

Matt Edmundson:

And a lot of people talk about 'em very favorably.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, we in fact use Klaviyo ourselves, uh, for our own e-commerce brands.

Matt Edmundson:

And so, um, it's just, it's really interesting to sort of chart their

Matt Edmundson:

story and, especially because there were other companies around beforehand

Matt Edmundson:

that maybe haven't done as well.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh,and so maybe they've just been faster at adapting.

Matt Edmundson:

And one of the things like you say, that I like about 'em is they do adapt

Matt Edmundson:

with a whole bunch of other stuff through their, through their APIs.

Matt Edmundson:

So watch this space.

Matt Edmundson:

We should probably get someone from Klaviyo onto the podcast

Matt Edmundson:

and talk to 'em about, actually a little memo to self, uh, there.

Matt Edmundson:

So, um, this ultimate retention program uh, of yours, Brandon.

Matt Edmundson:

Let's talk about that.

Matt Edmundson:

So, over the last few years of doing all of this, you've, you've figured a

Matt Edmundson:

few things out, it's fair to say, right?

Brandon Amoroso:

I would hope so.

Brandon Amoroso:

. . Matt Edmundson: Yeah.

Brandon Amoroso:

Otherwise, it's gonna be a really short interview.

Brandon Amoroso:

I'm just saying.

Brandon Amoroso:

So, what have you, um, what have you learned?

Brandon Amoroso:

What, Just gimme an overview of the, the sort of the,

Brandon Amoroso:

this, this idea that you have.

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah.

Brandon Amoroso:

So you get sort of the basic framework of which to build your retention program.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

, um, when you get up and running with, with the Shopify store, but

Brandon Amoroso:

everything is sort of, um, you, you're getting the, the basics.

Brandon Amoroso:

You're not necessarily extending it.

Brandon Amoroso:

And that starts all the way with, I mean, uh, Shopify for example,

Brandon Amoroso:

provides the ability to send out an abandoned cart email.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

. So if you're a brand that just is getting up and running, Shopify can support

Brandon Amoroso:

that for you, but truly to extend that functionality, you're gonna wanna get

Brandon Amoroso:

up and running with Klaviyo, build out abandoned cart flows there, segment it

Brandon Amoroso:

based off of like what the cart size is.

Brandon Amoroso:

Is it a new or returning customer?

Brandon Amoroso:

Are they one shop buyer or subscription customer?

Brandon Amoroso:

And so anything within e-commerce can start out very simple and

Brandon Amoroso:

then become very complex quickly.

Brandon Amoroso:

And so it's all about sort of identifying what are the lowest hanging

Brandon Amoroso:

sort of, uh, fruit optimizations and initiatives that we can push forward,

Brandon Amoroso:

that's gonna drive the most roi.

Brandon Amoroso:

Because if you try to do everything all at once, you are going to end up doing

Brandon Amoroso:

everything sort of half baked and not, not really in a, in a strong, cohesive manner.

Brandon Amoroso:

So, Part of what we've been focused on is which of these things are the

Brandon Amoroso:

initiatives that we want to tackle first?

Brandon Amoroso:

And so there's very specific.

Brandon Amoroso:

Sort of changes to a brand setup that we wanna make, day one, whether

Brandon Amoroso:

they're large or small, because we know they're gonna have the most

Brandon Amoroso:

outsized, uh, return on investment.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

versus other areas which are more of a nice to have, or, Hey, you're

Brandon Amoroso:

a, you're a really large brand, you can invest and get to this point.

Brandon Amoroso:

So we are going to focus on this with you.

Brandon Amoroso:

Everything from like your campaign sending strategy could be uh, based off

Brandon Amoroso:

of a couple of key segments, but you can get as granular of your segmentation

Brandon Amoroso:

as, as you could even dream of based off of how much data's in Klaviyo mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

. So, uh, sort of a walk before you run approach.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

. Matt Edmundson: I like that.

Brandon Amoroso:

I like the, the walk before you run.

Brandon Amoroso:

And I , I laughed or I smiled when you said, you know, things in e-commerce can

Brandon Amoroso:

start off relatively simple and become horrendously complicated quite quickly.

Brandon Amoroso:

Uh, and if I, I could just hear, uh, all over the globe as people were listening

Brandon Amoroso:

to the show, people just going, Amen.

Brandon Amoroso:

Amen.

Brandon Amoroso:

Amen.

Brandon Amoroso:

Because we've all been there, haven't we?

Brandon Amoroso:

Uh, where things have just got horrendously complicated

Brandon Amoroso:

and unnecessarily so.

Brandon Amoroso:

So how do you stop that?

Brandon Amoroso:

How do you prevent, um, shiny object syndrome?

Brandon Amoroso:

How do you prevent, uh, the desire to change everything in instant because

Brandon Amoroso:

you feel like everything needs to be changed cuz stuff just isn't working.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, how, how do you avoid going down that road?

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah, so the biggest thing for me is when you're doing

Brandon Amoroso:

anything, just making sure that you have documentation around it.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, and if you are going to be, like implementing testing, for example,

Brandon Amoroso:

that you have a, a framework to log and analyze those test results moving forward.

Brandon Amoroso:

So you're not just like testing for the sake of testing.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

, but I think the best example..

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, we've been in a couple of Klaviyo accounts where it's

Brandon Amoroso:

just an absolute nightmare.

Brandon Amoroso:

It's likes a hundred, there's like a hundred flows.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, they have been set up by like four or five different agencies.

Brandon Amoroso:

There's been in-house people that are tweaking them as well.

Brandon Amoroso:

No one really knows what customers are getting which emails and texts at

Brandon Amoroso:

what point of their, of their journey.

Brandon Amoroso:

And, uh, there's no consistency in terms of, uh, branding across, across them.

Brandon Amoroso:

And I think that spawns out of not having sort of documentation mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

and basically a, a roadmap of this is what we built out in Klaviyo.

Brandon Amoroso:

This is like the last day that it was edited.

Brandon Amoroso:

This is what we're currently testing within the flow.

Brandon Amoroso:

So it really comes down to just organization and, and managing

Brandon Amoroso:

that and having somebody like in house who's, who's truly owning it.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

Because if you just throw five different agencies at your Klaviyo account, then

Brandon Amoroso:

you're constantly going to be reinventing the wheel, and you're not going to

Brandon Amoroso:

know if there's any incremental benefit or ROI to that, to that decision.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, we had, um, we had one agency looking after

Matt Edmundson:

our Klaviyo email list, uh mm-hmm.

Matt Edmundson:

or our Klaviyo email, uh, the whole thing that we're looking after Klaviyo.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and in April this year, I think it was April, April

Matt Edmundson:

May, we switched out agencies.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, and we, we bought somebody else in that could make a big difference.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, cuz we, we just sort of, actually, something's not right.

Matt Edmundson:

It's not performing how we, how we think it could.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, and so they've made a whole bunch of changes.

Matt Edmundson:

And so actually in hindsight, what I wish we'd have done was.

Matt Edmundson:

Exactly what you've just said.

Matt Edmundson:

Right.

Matt Edmundson:

Had the documentation from agency number one saying this is all the stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

Because the confusion after doing that, bringing in that second

Matt Edmundson:

agency has been quite stark.

Matt Edmundson:

Mm-hmm.

Matt Edmundson:

and we that we then integrate on top of it.

Matt Edmundson:

We integrated a new, um, dashboard.

Matt Edmundson:

Right.

Matt Edmundson:

A BDI.

Matt Edmundson:

So we, we, we integrated this new dashboard, which also beautifully

Matt Edmundson:

integrates with Klaviyo.

Matt Edmundson:

And so, um, we were having all this, we had the website and now we've got

Matt Edmundson:

this dashboard talking to Klaviyo.

Matt Edmundson:

Plus, we've now on our second agency Wow.

Matt Edmundson:

We're still trying to unpick, I think a whole bunch of the problems that

Matt Edmundson:

came about as a result of doing that.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, because we didn't understand how stuff was all gonna work together in terms of

Matt Edmundson:

what other people had done and who was getting what and who wasn't getting stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, so it's been a really steep learning curve.

Matt Edmundson:

But when you talk about, and, and, and I sit here in hindsight, right,

Matt Edmundson:

Brandon going, we should have done what you've just suggested, um, because it

Matt Edmundson:

would've saved us a whole lot of pain.

Matt Edmundson:

But if I'd sit, sat here and listened to you talk and had not gone through that,

Matt Edmundson:

I'd have just gone something like that.

Matt Edmundson:

Makes sense.

Matt Edmundson:

But documentation that's not sexy is it?

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, I, that that whole getting organized thing is just not sexy.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and so it'll probably become task number 806.

Matt Edmundson:

To-do list.

Brandon Amoroso:

Yes, it is.

Brandon Amoroso:

It's not sexy, but it'll, it'll save you a lot of time in, in the long run.

Brandon Amoroso:

And it doesn't have to be complicated either.

Brandon Amoroso:

Just it's very, very simple.

Brandon Amoroso:

It could be a spreadsheet just tracking.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

, um, what's been done and when, and if you are testing, what are you testing?

Brandon Amoroso:

What's the desired outcome?

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, there's actually an interesting thing I was reading about how if you

Brandon Amoroso:

don't write down your expected outcome from like a test that you're running,

Brandon Amoroso:

if whenever you get the results, Even if they're not originally what you

Brandon Amoroso:

had expected, like human nature will rationalize whatever the actual result is.

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah.

Brandon Amoroso:

If you don't have it written down like, hey, this is what our hypothesis was.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

. Um, and the reason why that's important is because if you just are

Brandon Amoroso:

constantly rationalizing whatever the results are, there's no way to

Brandon Amoroso:

reflect on, oh, what should we have done differently or tweak differently

Brandon Amoroso:

to improve, like CTR, for example.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm..

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, so that was something that I found pretty interesting as well.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, No, that's a good point actually.

Matt Edmundson:

That whole, um, mapping expected outcomes because you're right, because, uh,

Matt Edmundson:

it, it helps you if you're objective enough, it means you can analyze your

Matt Edmundson:

thinking, um, and to go actually, so we didn't achieve this outcome.

Matt Edmundson:

It was either better or it was worse.

Matt Edmundson:

So what led me to believe that this was the expected outcome is actually

Matt Edmundson:

quite an interesting question, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

And why, Why did I go down that road?

Matt Edmundson:

Um, it, um, have you ever, ever read the book Black Box Thinking

Matt Edmundson:

with, is it Matthew Syed?

Matt Edmundson:

I think that's the guy that wrote the book.

Brandon Amoroso:

I, I have not.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, but I will, I'll add it to my list if you, uh, you recommend it.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

He's, um, his whole, the whole premise of the book is how do

Matt Edmundson:

you deal with failure, Right.

Matt Edmundson:

And.

Matt Edmundson:

And he, he contrasts, uh, the airline industry and the medical industry

Matt Edmundson:

in the states and how they, how they both deal with failure and how the

Matt Edmundson:

medical industry really doesn't like failure and does everything to avoid

Matt Edmundson:

it because of the million lawsuits that are gonna come their way, whereas

Matt Edmundson:

the airline industry learns from it.

Matt Edmundson:

Right.

Matt Edmundson:

And, uh, we now have some of the safest stats ever coming out of an

Matt Edmundson:

industry that was notoriously unsafe.

Matt Edmundson:

And it's because of how they deal with this.

Matt Edmundson:

And I think the documenting of your hypothesis is a simple idea, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

It's like, if I jot this down, um, rather than just brushing over

Matt Edmundson:

it because we don't like it when we're wrong, but analyzing it and

Matt Edmundson:

going, What can we learn from that?

Matt Edmundson:

I think it's a really powerful idea.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, super, super powerful.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

So.

Matt Edmundson:

Customer retention.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, what are some of the, what are some of the components then that

Matt Edmundson:

we should be thinking about, uh, as a, as eCommerce entrepreneurs?

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah.

Brandon Amoroso:

I mean, the easiest place to start is going to be your email and sms.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

flows.

Brandon Amoroso:

Those have the most outsize impact on, on customer retention.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, then from there, there's some more, I would say sort of soft initiatives

Brandon Amoroso:

that you can push forward that don't have as necessarily of a direct, uh,

Brandon Amoroso:

correlation to, Oh, like I can see how many people clicked on this, how

Brandon Amoroso:

much revenue was driven through it.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm..

Brandon Amoroso:

But like, if you don't have a strong customer support team, uh, in place,

Brandon Amoroso:

then your customer retention is naturally going to suffer from that.

Brandon Amoroso:

And something that we've been, uh, chatting through with, with is how

Brandon Amoroso:

brands should be looking at customer service not only as like a retention

Brandon Amoroso:

hub, but somewhere that actually additional revenue can be, can be driven.

Brandon Amoroso:

And so they're now, they're now, uh, rolling out, uh, analytics within the

Brandon Amoroso:

platform that allow us to track like, Oh, this CS agent actually made $5,000 this

Brandon Amoroso:

month in additional revenue from their interaction with customers chatting in.

Brandon Amoroso:

Uh, so that's, that's a really crucial component that I think a

Brandon Amoroso:

lot of brands have looked at as a cost center historically, which is

Brandon Amoroso:

definitely not, um, the way that you should be approaching it today.

Brandon Amoroso:

Another thing is subscription programs, they are, um, beneficial

Brandon Amoroso:

obviously from a LTV standpoint.

Brandon Amoroso:

But not a tremendous fan of the companies that have like 40% off your

Brandon Amoroso:

first subscription order and then essentially set it up so that you have

Brandon Amoroso:

to become a subscription customer in order to be a customer of their brand.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

, the way that we like to approach it is much more of a try

Brandon Amoroso:

before you subscribe, approach.

Brandon Amoroso:

And so maybe the first order or the first two are one shot, but then because of

Brandon Amoroso:

the email and SMS flow, so we have set naturally that customer will get pushed

Brandon Amoroso:

into a subscription program, um, for something that they actually like because

Brandon Amoroso:

it's a lot easier to keep a customer as a one shot customer and then like

Brandon Amoroso:

transition 'em into subscription versus if they start out on a subscription and then

Brandon Amoroso:

they churn significantly more difficult to ever get them back as a customer.

Brandon Amoroso:

Okay.

Brandon Amoroso:

I don't know if there's something to do with like, It's like the way the

Brandon Amoroso:

human brain works or something, but you, it's almost like you're canceling

Brandon Amoroso:

that relationship with that brand.

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah.

Brandon Amoroso:

If you're, if you're unsubscribing from, uh, your subscription program, whereas

Brandon Amoroso:

the one shot's much more transactional and, uh, so we much prefer that route.

Brandon Amoroso:

And uh, and I'd say the last thing though, there's a bunch of other

Brandon Amoroso:

stuff, but one of the most impactful.

Brandon Amoroso:

Uh, things that we do across all of our clients when we get started with them is

Brandon Amoroso:

move their transactional communications outta Shopify into Klaviyo, okay?

Brandon Amoroso:

Because about 15 to 20% of a brand's, uh, website traffic

Brandon Amoroso:

goes to that order tracking page.

Brandon Amoroso:

So we set up custom order tracking pages that have like product cross

Brandon Amoroso:

sells, additional brand information.

Brandon Amoroso:

If you're a one shot customer, we show you all the benefits

Brandon Amoroso:

of the subscription program.

Brandon Amoroso:

If you are a subscription customer, we push you into the referral, uh, program.

Brandon Amoroso:

And then we're also able to like test and create personalized transactional

Brandon Amoroso:

journeys in Klaviyo where, I mean, these emails are getting 90% open

Brandon Amoroso:

rates, like 25% click through rates.

Brandon Amoroso:

It is such a higher, um, engagement than you're gonna see with

Brandon Amoroso:

your marketing communications.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

. And so if you just leave them in Shopify, you have no idea what is

Brandon Amoroso:

happening with those customers.

Brandon Amoroso:

You can't see the data, you can't do any testing.

Brandon Amoroso:

You can't make it personalized.

Brandon Amoroso:

So getting those over into Klaviyo has been a huge unlock for us.

Brandon Amoroso:

That is, I mean, if you're a customer who just places, uh, an order of the

Brandon Amoroso:

brand for the first time, most of your experience with that brand is

Brandon Amoroso:

gonna be the transactional journey.

Brandon Amoroso:

Your order confirmed, order out for your shipping, order delivered, and so on.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, so making sure that that is really set up for success.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

branded, the whole thing is very important.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, it's a really interesting point and I, and I wanna

Matt Edmundson:

just dig into this a little bit more because, um, it's a bit of a, a bit of a

Matt Edmundson:

soapbox for me, if I'm honest with you, uh, Brandon, in the sense that the most

Matt Edmundson:

neglected emails are our transactional emails for just about every e-commerce

Matt Edmundson:

business I've ever worked with and they're the most opened emails by clients.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, I think I've read a stat, I dunno if it's still true, but,

Matt Edmundson:

uh, the, your order is shipped.

Matt Edmundson:

Email, you know, with the tracking information is opened by sort

Matt Edmundson:

of 60 to 70% of your people.

Matt Edmundson:

That's a lot, right?

Matt Edmundson:

Of opens.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, and all they tend to be is just emails.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh oh Matt, you're order shipped.

Matt Edmundson:

Here's a tracking number.

Matt Edmundson:

Thanks.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, you know, Right.

Matt Edmundson:

And that's it.

Matt Edmundson:

And usually that comes from the shipping company.

Matt Edmundson:

I don't even send it out.

Matt Edmundson:

And so, um, that, that whole transactional email, um, getting them

Matt Edmundson:

out of Shopify, and to Klaviyo, you can do then so much more with 'em.

Matt Edmundson:

What sort of things have you found Works really well with the transactional emails?

Brandon Amoroso:

So, simplest thing we do is just create a separate

Brandon Amoroso:

transactional journey for one shot customers and then create a different

Brandon Amoroso:

one for subscription customers.

Brandon Amoroso:

Because we want to, uh, be speaking to them differently.

Brandon Amoroso:

Uh, for the one Shot customers, we are promoting the subscription program,

Brandon Amoroso:

additional products that they should try.

Brandon Amoroso:

Whereas on the subscription customer side of things, we're, we're reinforcing some

Brandon Amoroso:

of the perks and benefits that they're getting for being a subscription customer,

Brandon Amoroso:

just to continue to let them know that, uh, but then they're a subscription

Brandon Amoroso:

customer, so they're gonna be more likely to refer a friend than somebody who's

Brandon Amoroso:

just purchased, uh, as a one shot order.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

. So then we promote the referral program, uh, pretty heavily.

Brandon Amoroso:

So that's just one basic example of how you can then personalize the

Brandon Amoroso:

transactional journey to make it a little bit more relevant for that customer.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

No.

Matt Edmundson:

Brilliant.

Matt Edmundson:

Brilliant.

Matt Edmundson:

Absolutely.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, so you've, you've, you've got these different workflows for your one stops,

Matt Edmundson:

uh, for your subscription and for your, um, you know, and you're sending

Matt Edmundson:

them down these sort of different journeys, you're dealing with them.

Matt Edmundson:

What are the sort of forms of segmentation do you use?

Matt Edmundson:

I mentioned you mentioned earlier about you've got a, a flow

Matt Edmundson:

around abandoned carts, right?

Matt Edmundson:

Mm.

Brandon Amoroso:

So I'd say the most complex abandoned cart flow that we've

Brandon Amoroso:

done is taking into account, um, if it's a new versus returning customer.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm..

Brandon Amoroso:

And then if it's a returning customer, is it a one shot customer

Brandon Amoroso:

or a subscription customer?

Brandon Amoroso:

And then, um, also taking into account what is the cart size as well?

Brandon Amoroso:

So you have a bunch of different branches going on in there.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

within that flow.

Brandon Amoroso:

And, uh, the reason why we're checking for, is it a new

Brandon Amoroso:

versus returning customers?

Brandon Amoroso:

Because if it's a new customer, then we are just going to communicate with them

Brandon Amoroso:

differently and maybe even have higher incentivization through the form of offers

Brandon Amoroso:

to get them to make that first purchase.

Brandon Amoroso:

Or if you're a returning customer, we might reference

Brandon Amoroso:

whatever your previous order was.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm, um, or include information in there about, uh, certain

Brandon Amoroso:

profiles or characteristics that we have on that customer.

Brandon Amoroso:

Then one shot versus subscription is important cuz if you're an active

Brandon Amoroso:

subscription customer and you abandon checkout, we're probably going to not

Brandon Amoroso:

be as aggressive in our communication with you because you're an absent,

Brandon Amoroso:

you're an active subscription customeer.

Brandon Amoroso:

Umrif you are not then, then we will be.

Brandon Amoroso:

And then the cart size is important too.

Brandon Amoroso:

Cause if you have $500 a product in your cart, maybe we give you a code.

Brandon Amoroso:

Whereas if you only got $50 in it, you don't say anything.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, so that's just one example.

Brandon Amoroso:

But you can continue sort of further down the, the rabbit hole there.

Brandon Amoroso:

I don't know.

Brandon Amoroso:

Let's say you have like a quiz on your website that, or you have a review

Brandon Amoroso:

request process that asks people for their skin type, since it's a

Brandon Amoroso:

skincare brand mm-hmm., you could then split out the, uh, flow based off

Brandon Amoroso:

of skin type and reference in there.

Brandon Amoroso:

Like, Oh, hey, you have dry skin, so you should be also looking

Brandon Amoroso:

at these relevant products.

Brandon Amoroso:

And you can sort of continue on, on down the path there, but it's really all about

Brandon Amoroso:

leveraging, uh, zero and first party data.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm., like you can get a lot, uh, a lot of the way there with first party data.

Brandon Amoroso:

And then from there look at, hey, what else would we need to make this

Brandon Amoroso:

more relevant, um, for the customer?

Brandon Amoroso:

And that's typically where zero party data will come in, in the form of like quizzes,

Brandon Amoroso:

um, reviews, post purchase surveys.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

stuff like that.

Matt Edmundson:

Super powerful stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

I, it's, it's, um, it goes back to, uh, I mean, it, it sounds complex,

Matt Edmundson:

Brandon, what you're talking about, but it really isn't, and, and you are

Matt Edmundson:

talking about actually just putting yourself in the shoes of your customer.

Matt Edmundson:

If your customer is this type of customer, What sort of

Matt Edmundson:

stuff do we want to give them?

Matt Edmundson:

If they're this type of customer, what's gonna make sense for them

Matt Edmundson:

and let's give them that information rather than just doing this sort of

Matt Edmundson:

blanket one size fits all type thing.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, email and sms.

Matt Edmundson:

You mentioned about sms, doing SMS stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and have you found that there's a difference between email and sms

Matt Edmundson:

in terms of its, I know, I know a lot of people, for example, who

Matt Edmundson:

will do email but won't do sms.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and so I'm kind of thinking, um, what would be the reasons why I should

Matt Edmundson:

start looking at something like sms?

Matt Edmundson:

Is it too competitive yet?

Matt Edmundson:

Do, you know, what I mean?

Matt Edmundson:

These sorts of questions.

Matt Edmundson:

I wonder what you thought about that.

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah, I don't really, I don't see a reason why, um, any

Brandon Amoroso:

brand would not do SMS marketing.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, it's a different communication channel for sure.

Brandon Amoroso:

Like you can't treat it in the same way that you treat email marketing.

Brandon Amoroso:

Otherwise, you're gonna end up with a lot of unsubscribes, and you're also

Brandon Amoroso:

gonna have to pay a lot because it's pay per text sent out versus email, which

Brandon Amoroso:

is not like, I mean, I have a hundred thousand contacts in my Klaviyo account.

Brandon Amoroso:

I can send them as many emails as I want.

Brandon Amoroso:

I'm not going to be charged on a, on a usage basis.

Brandon Amoroso:

Whereas, uh, there's carrier fees associated with text.

Brandon Amoroso:

So if it's an SMS or an mms, you're paying for that message to go out.

Brandon Amoroso:

So that just makes it a less, um, frequent communication channel.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm, and you're also in somebody's text message inbox.

Brandon Amoroso:

So it's much more personal and you need to treat it in, in, in a higher regard

Brandon Amoroso:

than you do email, where people are used to being on hundreds of email lists

Brandon Amoroso:

that they just sort of click through and it's not, it's just not the same.

Brandon Amoroso:

Uh, but SMS has an outsized return compared to email.

Brandon Amoroso:

I mean, click through rates are, are significantly higher.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, the ROI is usually significantly higher.

Brandon Amoroso:

So any brand that's, that's not doing it, the easiest way to get started in

Brandon Amoroso:

a, in a way that wouldn't open it up, the floodgates would be to basically

Brandon Amoroso:

create like a segment of, of your absolute best customers in Klaviyo.

Brandon Amoroso:

Invite time to a V.I.P SMS subscriber list where you can send them, uh,

Brandon Amoroso:

like new product announcements and launches before you send them

Brandon Amoroso:

to the rest of your email list.

Brandon Amoroso:

Uh, start to build some exclusivity around that channel in, in that way.

Brandon Amoroso:

Or, I mean, just add in a, a two step popup on your website if you

Brandon Amoroso:

want to open up to everyone and have email capture be on the first page.

Brandon Amoroso:

And then the second screen would show, uh, that SMS lead capture.

Brandon Amoroso:

And with some of our brands, we incentivize SMS sign up by

Brandon Amoroso:

saying, Well, if you give us your phone number, then you're gonna

Brandon Amoroso:

be entered for a chance to win.

Brandon Amoroso:

Uh, something like a gift with your order or you can do an

Brandon Amoroso:

additional percentage off.

Brandon Amoroso:

Maybe it's 10 for email, 15% for sms, um, but pretty much across the

Brandon Amoroso:

board of any brand that we work with, the LTV of SMS subscribers is higher

Brandon Amoroso:

than that of email only subscribers.

Matt Edmundson:

Okay.

Matt Edmundson:

That's an important point.

Matt Edmundson:

Right.

Matt Edmundson:

And I like your strategy there for getting the, uh, the SMS subscribers.

Matt Edmundson:

So what you, you mentioned treat the SMS box differently to the inbox.

Matt Edmundson:

What sort of, um, text messages work well in your opinion?

Brandon Amoroso:

More like authentic, fun, cheeky, uh, personality from the brand

Brandon Amoroso:

than your standard like email marketing.

Brandon Amoroso:

Here's a bunch of pretty pictures and design.

Brandon Amoroso:

Which I would argue for email marketing, even some of the best performing emails

Brandon Amoroso:

are just like a simple text based email from the found, from the founder.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

But we've had a lot of success with like the founder taking a selfie at the

Brandon Amoroso:

warehouse and giving some cute like, anecdotal story to their subscribers

Brandon Amoroso:

with sort of a, a link out to whatever product they were referencing.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, and then making sure that you have people on the other end of that channel

Brandon Amoroso:

cuz it's a two-way communication channel.

Brandon Amoroso:

It's not mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

, it's not like email where most customers are not going to reply to your marketing

Brandon Amoroso:

emails, but uh, they definitely will reply to your text messaging, uh, campaigns.

Brandon Amoroso:

So the worst thing I think a brand can do is have an auto response that goes out

Brandon Amoroso:

when somebody sends a text back to your brand with something along the lines of.

Brandon Amoroso:

Uh, this inbox isn't monitored.

Brandon Amoroso:

Reach out to us at help@brand.com, uh, and we'll be able to better assist you there.

Brandon Amoroso:

Like that's a huge missed opportunity.

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah, to create a relationship with the customer, service them like on demand

Brandon Amoroso:

and get them to purchase, uh, product.

Matt Edmundson:

So what are some of the, um, brands that you've seen do

Matt Edmundson:

retention marketing well?What are, what is, I'm a, the reason I'm asking this,

Matt Edmundson:

Brandon, is I, as, as much as I hate all the email I get every day, I do

Matt Edmundson:

subscribe to people's email list, uh, and SMS list deliberately just to see what

Matt Edmundson:

they're doing so I can learn from them.

Matt Edmundson:

Right?

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and so I'm kind of curious who, who should I look at?

Brandon Amoroso:

So I could be self-serving and give you a client

Brandon Amoroso:

of ours, but, um, I, do that we don't mind, I, I, I'll, I'll go in a different

Brandon Amoroso:

direction, um, with an apparel company that I buy, uh, like my workout clothes

Brandon Amoroso:

from, it's called, uh, 10,000 mm-hmm..

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, and they have a, uh, like a loyalty program where, because I've purchased

Brandon Amoroso:

from them a certain amount of times.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, and I think it was something like three months had passed and I had not gone

Brandon Amoroso:

back and made another purchase before, but they just had a new, like colorway

Brandon Amoroso:

drop for one of their pairs of shorts.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, when sending out that communication to me, they referenced the fact that

Brandon Amoroso:

I had a $30 credit as a part of their loyalty program that I would be able

Brandon Amoroso:

to redeem just right within checkout.

Brandon Amoroso:

Right?

Brandon Amoroso:

So, um, I was just clicked the link, took me right into like the shop

Brandon Amoroso:

pay flow and there I was spending.

Brandon Amoroso:

$32 or whatever on a $62 pair of shorts.

Brandon Amoroso:

But the, um, they got me back onto the website, got me interacting with the

Brandon Amoroso:

brand again, and were able to personalize it because of the fact that I had

Brandon Amoroso:

purchased that type of short before and they were referencing the loyalty

Brandon Amoroso:

program and dynamically pulling in like how much store credit I had left.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

to make it more likely that I purchase or that I click through

Brandon Amoroso:

and actually make that purchase.

Matt Edmundson:

Great.

Matt Edmundson:

I like that.

Matt Edmundson:

I'll check them out.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, now we're due to the nature of when we record the e-commerce podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and when we air the E-Commerce podcast, they're two very different dates.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, so this episode will come out, uh, after Black Friday.

Matt Edmundson:

So I'm just curious in the closing minutes of the show, what are some of the tips

Matt Edmundson:

maybe that brands should think about?

Matt Edmundson:

Marketeers listening should think about?

Matt Edmundson:

They've gone through Black Friday, they've got a whole bunch of new

Matt Edmundson:

clients, um, top strategies here for, for keeping them and retaining them?

Brandon Amoroso:

So if you don't ask and hopefully you did this,

Brandon Amoroso:

but if not, then you can still, uh, recover the information.

Brandon Amoroso:

But something we like to do for Black Friday, Cyber Monday, is when people

Brandon Amoroso:

are checking out in that post-purchase survey, the first question that we

Brandon Amoroso:

ask is like, was this a gift or not?

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm, because if it's a gift, well then we're gonna communicate entirely

Brandon Amoroso:

different with that contact, then we will, if they say no, if it was a gift,

Brandon Amoroso:

why not surface them an offer to purchase for themselves right then and there?

Brandon Amoroso:

Put them into a separate bucket within your email and SMS account to

Brandon Amoroso:

communicate with them, uh, differently.

Brandon Amoroso:

And then you have the other side of the coin, which is who's the recipient?

Brandon Amoroso:

Trying to get that information so that you can continue to nurture

Brandon Amoroso:

that relationship with them.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, if it wasn't a gift, well then you're sort of within

Brandon Amoroso:

your standard retention flows.

Brandon Amoroso:

If you didn't do that, I mean, you could always just send out a

Brandon Amoroso:

campaign asking customers, Hey, was your recent order a gift or not.

Brandon Amoroso:

And then based off of that response, then you can start to

Brandon Amoroso:

personalize things a little bit.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

. Uh, but I think the, the most powerful way I found to retain the, the Black Friday,

Brandon Amoroso:

Cyber Monday customers is to sort of dig in and split your customers out based

Brandon Amoroso:

off of those that are uh, heavily driven by incentive versus those that aren't.

Brandon Amoroso:

And you can do that by looking at like AOV lifetime value, um, number of

Brandon Amoroso:

discount codes used, and then make sure that when you are sort of architecting

Brandon Amoroso:

your strategy of communication, uh, for December onwards, that you're

Brandon Amoroso:

taking that into, into account.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, I think those are really the two, the two most powerful things.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

No, very good.

Matt Edmundson:

Very, very good.

Matt Edmundson:

Thank you for that.

Matt Edmundson:

Brandon.

Matt Edmundson:

Listen, a question I like to ask all of our guests, uh, who have been on

Matt Edmundson:

the podcast is, um, you've just given the best keynote speech of your life.

Matt Edmundson:

Let's assume it's to, you know, the e-commerce cohort guys, because

Matt Edmundson:

they sponsor the show, right?

Matt Edmundson:

So you're in a hotel room, they're all sat there.

Matt Edmundson:

You've done, you've delivered your keynote customer retention.

Matt Edmundson:

They're all going wild.

Matt Edmundson:

Well done, Brandon.

Matt Edmundson:

That's awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, they're all going a bit crazy.

Matt Edmundson:

So you come on, you take your bow and you say, Listen, uh, all this

Matt Edmundson:

is possible because of a person, a book, a film, a play, a podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, who who do you thank, uh, at the end of that speech and why?

Brandon Amoroso:

Hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

I'd say it'd probably have to be one of my, um, one of my mentors who helped

Brandon Amoroso:

me along the way with building electriq everything from the very non-glamorous

Brandon Amoroso:

side of things like payroll and accounting and, and the contracts and all that,

Brandon Amoroso:

just horrible, horrible stuff that I hopefully will never have to do again.

Brandon Amoroso:

um, Through the more like organizational strategic side of things, talking about

Brandon Amoroso:

things like, uh, institutionalizing process and procedure so that

Brandon Amoroso:

you can actually scale while not, uh, stifling, uh, innovation.

Brandon Amoroso:

And I think that was, that's one of the more important things that

Brandon Amoroso:

I've, that I've learned is like, process is extremely important.

Brandon Amoroso:

You can't have a 40 person company, I'd say you can't even really

Brandon Amoroso:

have a 20 person company without having like process guidelines.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

. But making sure that it's sort of drilled into the organizational

Brandon Amoroso:

culture that just because we have these process guidelines doesn't mean this

Brandon Amoroso:

is like how you need to be doing it.

Brandon Amoroso:

There's nuance and we want to continue to improve.

Brandon Amoroso:

And so if there's ways that this process should be changed for the better that

Brandon Amoroso:

that, that idea should be surfaced and brought through the organization.

Brandon Amoroso:

Because you see really, really large companies who they

Brandon Amoroso:

have process guidelines and.

Brandon Amoroso:

Like, that's just the way it is and they're not getting changed

Brandon Amoroso:

no matter what, which can be, uh, really demotivating for Yeah.

Brandon Amoroso:

For a team, I think if they aren't able to sort of help craft and shape

Brandon Amoroso:

whatever the organization is doing.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, I think that was a long winded way of saying probably one of,

Brandon Amoroso:

uh, my mentors along the way.

Matt Edmundson:

And what's the name of your mentor?

Brandon Amoroso:

Uh, it would be Zach.

Matt Edmundson:

Zach, my, uh, my son is called Zach, so I just think it's

Matt Edmundson:

one of the coolest names in the world.

Matt Edmundson:

So Zach, if you're listening, thanks very much.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, much appreciate it.

Matt Edmundson:

Now, it's fair to say, uh, Brandon, you are not new to the world of podcasting.

Matt Edmundson:

You actually have your own podcast as well, don't you?

Matt Edmundson:

Why don't you tell the good folks about that?

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah, so the podcast I have is called the D2Z podcast.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, it is a little bit e-commerce focused just because that's

Brandon Amoroso:

the industry that I'm in.

Brandon Amoroso:

But really what it's more about is, uh, organizational sort of culture

Brandon Amoroso:

and entrepreneurship and how to take maybe a different approach than

Brandon Amoroso:

companies have done, uh, historically.

Brandon Amoroso:

And a lot of that is based out of sort of the, the Gen Z mindset and spirit around

Brandon Amoroso:

like autonomy and, and ownership and creativity and so we'll bring on a lot

Brandon Amoroso:

of, uh, founders from the software side of things, from the brand side to talk about

Brandon Amoroso:

growing from one person to five people to 10, to 20, to 50 to a hundred and so on.

Brandon Amoroso:

And what are some of the challenges, things that they learned along the way.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, so a little bit more about business growth as a whole than super tactical

Brandon Amoroso:

in the weeds on the e-commerce side.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Is it going well?

Matt Edmundson:

You enjoying it?

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah, it's been great.

Brandon Amoroso:

I've learned a lot.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, there's been some episodes where I, I really take a lot away for myself.

Brandon Amoroso:

Mm-hmm.

Brandon Amoroso:

in terms of things that I might wanna try, uh, within, uh, electriq

Brandon Amoroso:

or drinks or even just personal day-to-day stuff for, for myself.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, I see.

Matt Edmundson:

You're right.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm the same way.

Matt Edmundson:

I have a, a permanent notebook on my desk cuz I'm analog right.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and so I'm constantly taking notes.

Matt Edmundson:

And so I've drafted a few questions down, uh, from our conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

And tomorrow I always record the podcast the day before I go into the office.

Matt Edmundson:

So, uh, tomorrow I head into the office where we sit down with the teams and

Matt Edmundson:

It's just like, well, this is what I learned yesterday from

Matt Edmundson:

my conversation with Brandon.

Matt Edmundson:

So what are we gonna do about that?

Matt Edmundson:

So, uh, I totally get your your point.

Matt Edmundson:

I dunno who benefits more, whether it's listeners or whether it's me in these

Matt Edmundson:

podcasts, but I, I really enjoy them.

Matt Edmundson:

How do, um, how do people reach you?

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, how do people get hold of you if they want to connect?

Matt Edmundson:

. Brandon Amoroso: Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

So, uh, you can always go on LinkedIn, just Brandon Amoroso

Matt Edmundson:

or my website brandonamoroso.com.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, if you are interested in potentially, uh, working with the agency, then it's

Matt Edmundson:

electriqmarketing.com, but it's a q instead of the c at the end of electric.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, Which sort of have a little bit of that Klaviyo clavio thing going on there.

Matt Edmundson:

Because this name was available.

Matt Edmundson:

Right.

Matt Edmundson:

That's it.

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah.

Brandon Amoroso:

The people never know how to say it, which actually has worked out well

Brandon Amoroso:

because it, then they remember it.

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah.

Brandon Amoroso:

Versus if it was just a simple name then, and maybe they

Brandon Amoroso:

won't, it wouldn't be as sticky.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, but yeah, those would be the two best avenues.

Brandon Amoroso:

Um, happy to help, Fantastic.

Brandon Amoroso:

Help chat through anything.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Well, uh, you can reach out to Brandon at those.

Matt Edmundson:

We will of course put all his links in our show notes, which you can get

Matt Edmundson:

for free at ecommercepodcast.net.

Matt Edmundson:

Or if you're on our email list, we will email those out direct to your inbox using

Matt Edmundson:

the magic of customer retention marketing as we've been learning about today.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, so Brandon, thank you for joining me on the e-Commerce podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

Honestly, man, it's been an absolute blast.

Matt Edmundson:

Really, really appreciate you taking the time to join us today.

Brandon Amoroso:

Yeah, of course.

Brandon Amoroso:

Thanks for having me on.

Matt Edmundson:

No problem.

Matt Edmundson:

So there you have it.

Matt Edmundson:

What a great conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Huge thanks again to Brandon for joining me today and of course,

Matt Edmundson:

a big shout out to today's show sponsor, the e-commerce cohort.

Matt Edmundson:

Do head over to ecommercecohort.com for more information about this new

Matt Edmundson:

type of community that you can join.

Matt Edmundson:

Now.

Matt Edmundson:

Be sure to follow the e-commerce podcast wherever you get your podcast from because

Matt Edmundson:

we have more great conversations lined up just like today's one with Brandon.

Matt Edmundson:

I don't want you to miss any of them, so make sure you subscribe, uh, and in

Matt Edmundson:

case no one has told you today, dear listener, you my friend, are awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

Yes, you are absolutely awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

It is a burden we just have to bear.

Matt Edmundson:

Just the way it is, just the way it is.

Matt Edmundson:

Just something we've all gotta do.

Matt Edmundson:

So, uh, the e-Commerce podcast is produced by Aurion Media.

Matt Edmundson:

You can find our entire archive of episodes on your favorite podcast app.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, the team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon, Josh Catchpole, Estella

Matt Edmundson:

Robin, and the Mighty Tim Johnson.

Matt Edmundson:

Our theme song has been written by Josh Edmundson and my good self.

Matt Edmundson:

And as I mentioned, if you would like to read the transcript or show notes, head

Matt Edmundson:

over to the website, ecommercepodcast.net, where coincidentally you can also

Matt Edmundson:

sign up for our said newsletter.

Matt Edmundson:

So all of that said, I think that is it from me.

Matt Edmundson:

That is it from Brandon.

Matt Edmundson:

Thank you so much for joining us.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, it's been great to have you with us.

Matt Edmundson:

Have a fantastic week and I will see you next week.

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