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How To Develop A Creative Strategy For Your Brands' Advertising
19th January 2023 • eCommerce Podcast • Matt Edmundson
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Get creative with your brand's advertising! In this episode Colby Flood shares his insight on how to develop an innovative and effective marketing strategy. Discover the tips and tricks for designing creative ad campaigns that will get your message across to the right audience.

ABOUT COLBY

Colby founded Brighter Click in 2019 to create an education-first agency that focuses on performance and proactive communication led by education. Hired the first team member in 2020 and saw 300% growth in the next 12 months. By 2022 they managed over $20 million ad spend for their client and the agency has 7 full-time employees. Brighter Click helps eCommerce companies 2-3x their current Facebook marketing performance. The only agency that leads all communications through education.

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

  • The three levels to Creative Strategy – CMO, Graphic Design, and Research. CMO is the person that is setting the USP, the buyer personas, the messaging that goes across all channels. The next level is the actual graphic design work where you would look at the brand guidelines, making sure you fully understand the USP. And see how you can match your brand voice/identity to different levels of the funnel. And then start doing research on the brand and also your competitors.
  •  Colby says, “A creative is what people are seeing for the ads. So that could be influencer content, that could be graphics, video production, or even PR to put into your actual ads. Whatever is going in that 1080 by 1080 or 9 by 16 square for people to look at. I would say put 10% of your budget focused on that.”
  • Brighter Click is an agency that is focused on creative strategy. They work with clients to provide paid media strategy and production as well as paid ad management.

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, I'm gonna be chatting with Colby

Matt Edmundson:

Flood from Brighter click about how to develop a creative strategy

Matt Edmundson:

for your brand's advertising.

Matt Edmundson:

But before the magnificent Colby and I jump into that, let me suggest a

Matt Edmundson:

few other podcast episodes that at some point I think you should check

Matt Edmundson:

out, uh, try the ultimate Facebook ad strategy for your e-commerce

Matt Edmundson:

business with Meredith Kallaher.

Matt Edmundson:

She was an absolute legend, uh, and How to 10x your investment with an

Matt Edmundson:

agency partner with Chase Clymer.

Matt Edmundson:

Great conversation with Chase about that.

Matt Edmundson:

You can find both of those and our entire archive of episodes on our website for

Matt Edmundson:

free at ecommercepodcast.net, which coincidentally also has the ability

Matt Edmundson:

for you to sign up to our newsletter.

Matt Edmundson:

And each week we will email you all of these links, plus the links

Matt Edmundson:

and notes and transcript from today's conversation with Colby.

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You, if you are on our newsletter list, you'll get direct to your inbox,

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totally free, totally automatic.

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It's amazing.

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It's brilliant.

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Do it.

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Sign up now.

Matt Edmundson:

Have a go.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, 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:

Colby, I am sure just like me, you have come across a whole bunch of

Matt Edmundson:

folks stuck with that e-commerce website, or they've just got siloed

Matt Edmundson:

into working on just one or two areas.

Matt Edmundson:

And miss the big picture, something I know we're gonna get into today's conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Funnily enough.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, well enter the e-commerce cohort to solve this particular problem.

Matt Edmundson:

Cohort is a lightweight membership group with guided monthly sprints that cycle

Matt Edmundson:

through all the key areas of e-commerce, the sole purpose of which to provide you

Matt Edmundson:

with clear actionable jobs to be done so you will know what to work on and

Matt Edmundson:

get the support you need to get it done.

Matt Edmundson:

So whether you're just starting out in eCommerce or if, like me, you're

Matt Edmundson:

a well established eCommercer, you've been around a wee while as they say.

Matt Edmundson:

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

Matt Edmundson:

uh, or email me directly at matt@ecommercepodcast.net with

Matt Edmundson:

any questions that you may have.

Matt Edmundson:

ecommercecohort.com is today's sponsor.

Matt Edmundson:

So do check them out.

Matt Edmundson:

And actually, what I should have done and didn't do, Colby, is I should

Matt Edmundson:

have put the thing on the screen.

Matt Edmundson:

There you go with the WebLink.

Matt Edmundson:

If you're watching the YouTube video, uh, that's, that's my bad.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, anyway, let's get into this.

Matt Edmundson:

So Colby founded Brighter click in 2019 to create an education first

Matt Edmundson:

agency that focuses on performance and proactive communication led by education.

Matt Edmundson:

He hired his first team member in 2020 and saw 300% growth in the next 12 months.

Matt Edmundson:

By 2022, they had managed over $20 million in ad spend for their clients, and the

Matt Edmundson:

agency has seven full-time employees.

Matt Edmundson:

Brighter Click helps e-commerce companies just like yours, just

Matt Edmundson:

like mine, 2 to 3x their current Facebook marketing performance.

Matt Edmundson:

They are the only agency that leads all communication through education.

Matt Edmundson:

That is all a big, uh, interesting statement Colby, and I'm

Matt Edmundson:

super keen to get into this.

Matt Edmundson:

So welcome to the show.

Matt Edmundson:

Thank you for joining us all the way from Raleigh, North Carolina.

Matt Edmundson:

Great to have you here.

Matt Edmundson:

How, how are we doing today?

Colby Flood:

I'm doing well.

Colby Flood:

Thanks for having me.

Colby Flood:

I'm excited to, uh, see what we can unpack today.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh yeah, absolutely, Absolutely.

Matt Edmundson:

So tell me about Brighter Click and, and what, what's, what is Brighter

Matt Edmundson:

Click, what does it do and why?

Colby Flood:

What is brighter click?

Colby Flood:

That's a great question.

Colby Flood:

So we are a team of high achievers.

Colby Flood:

Does that sound motivational there?

Matt Edmundson:

We need some, we need some funky music, don't we?

Matt Edmundson:

To go, We are high achievers.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Sorry.

Matt Edmundson:

Carry on.

Colby Flood:

Okay.

Colby Flood:

Eighties corporate video . Um,

Colby Flood:

Onboarding new team members?

Colby Flood:

Yeah, so we're an agency.

Colby Flood:

We started out focused on uh, Facebook, Instagram management.

Colby Flood:

We really niched down to e-commerce in that area.

Colby Flood:

One thing we've been moving towards as of late is also focusing on creative

Colby Flood:

strategy, cuz we see kind of the writing on the walls, that, that's where the

Colby Flood:

industry is going with things is the focus on creative for paid media and specific.

Colby Flood:

So we work with clients, um, to provide paid media strategy and production.

Colby Flood:

And I'll emphasize strategy and we can talk about that later.

Colby Flood:

And also paid ad management as well.

Matt Edmundson:

So how did you, how did, because this has been around

Matt Edmundson:

since what, 2019 did I say in the bio?

Matt Edmundson:

Um, yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

So what were you doing before you started Brighter clicks?

Colby Flood:

Yeah, good question.

Colby Flood:

So, um, I had worked in house with, uh, companies doing marketing and

Colby Flood:

always saw that divide, um, between communication with the company and the

Colby Flood:

agencies that we were working with.

Colby Flood:

And I started going freelancing before I started Brighter Click.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

. And if you want me to be frank with you, in the intro you said started.

Colby Flood:

2019 hired first team member, 2020 felt like I needed to be official

Colby Flood:

and have a company name and not just be Colby Flood as I was freelancing.

Colby Flood:

So, uh, started it January, 2019 and then, um, just continued to scale up.

Colby Flood:

The client base continued to scale up the work until I mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

needed to bring on people, uh, to keep growing that way.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, it's interesting the amount of people that I speak to, Colby

Matt Edmundson:

that started off, they were in a company.

Matt Edmundson:

They learned some stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Thought they could do it better or different or for whatever reason, um,

Matt Edmundson:

Providence, whatever you want to call it.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, they then set up their own little sort of freelance agency, do quite well,

Matt Edmundson:

and they, they quite quickly grow their freelance business into a full on agency,

Matt Edmundson:

especially around sort of marketing type stuff, which is, which is quite interest.

Matt Edmundson:

It's quite an interesting journey for me to see people go through that.

Matt Edmundson:

And you're, so, you're not the exception.

Matt Edmundson:

That's, that's for sure.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, but here you are, the founder, CEO of Brighter Click . And you,

Matt Edmundson:

you started out with this statement, the writing is on the wall for paid

Matt Edmundson:

media, but you're a paid media, or you started out as a paid media agency.

Matt Edmundson:

So what do you mean when you say that Paid media?

Matt Edmundson:

The, the, the writings on the wall.

Matt Edmundson:

What does that mean?

Matt Edmundson:

Because it sounds, if I'm honest with you, it sounds a bit kind like, whoa.

Matt Edmundson:

Okay.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, that's a bit high and intense.

Matt Edmundson:

So I wanna pay attention to this.

Colby Flood:

That's a good Gary v eye catcher statement there for you,

Colby Flood:

Um, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Colby Flood:

So, uh, the way we've seen it is, so over the past year, year and a half, all you've

Colby Flood:

heard about is all these updates, right?

Colby Flood:

iOS 14.5, Facebook's losing targetability with audiences.

Colby Flood:

We're losing match rate with our pixel to retarget people.

Colby Flood:

The platforms are seeing damage from that because they're losing

Colby Flood:

trust with the channel to market on.

Colby Flood:

And then we're seeing for marketer perspective, we're losing data, right?

Colby Flood:

We can't do as much.

Colby Flood:

About two months ago, two and a half months ago, um, from the time of this

Colby Flood:

recording, Google put out Performance Max.

Colby Flood:

Facebook put out Advantage Plus.

Colby Flood:

Now, some people may see positive, some people may see negative, but

Colby Flood:

these are like the V1 of the platform doing the media buying for you.

Colby Flood:

Even TikTok just came out with in the past week.

Colby Flood:

New targeting abilities to where if you really look at it, it's

Colby Flood:

just a simplified targeting.

Colby Flood:

You can choose people who may be interested in buying makeup or

Colby Flood:

people who may be interested in buying bikes, which is just taking

Colby Flood:

three or four targeting tactics and making it a click button, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, the platforms are starting to automate the media buying, and there's gonna

Colby Flood:

be one thing left for marketers to pool lever wise, and that's

Colby Flood:

gonna be creative in messaging.

Colby Flood:

So if you think about it, 2015, Prime time for Facebook ads.

Colby Flood:

It was all about audience and, uh, bid cap and campaign structures,

Colby Flood:

CBO abo and what are you doing?

Colby Flood:

And there wasn't as much focus on the messaging.

Colby Flood:

You could throw up an ad, you could get 10 x return.

Colby Flood:

That's not the case anymore.

Colby Flood:

And we're having to go back to being marketers.

Colby Flood:

It's not as much about growth hacking tactics now it's

Colby Flood:

about marketing and messaging.

Colby Flood:

So I believe in the next two years.

Colby Flood:

Um, we're gonna see the platforms really automating all the media buying and the

Colby Flood:

purpose of a media buyer is going to either transform or diminish because

Colby Flood:

it's gonna be about creative strategy.

Colby Flood:

That's my personal opinion with it.

Matt Edmundson:

That's really interesting cuz I, I, we've had people

Matt Edmundson:

on the show talking about, you know, the effects on like Facebook Ads.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, I'm just gonna pick on Facebook ads, um, because they were the ones in the

Matt Edmundson:

headlines over the changes with iOS.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

And a few of the bits and bobs.

Matt Edmundson:

And so, um, we've had people on there say, No, it's not as bad.

Matt Edmundson:

Everything's okay.

Matt Edmundson:

Life's still good.

Matt Edmundson:

And we've had people coming on going, Oh man, the, the world is fallen

Matt Edmundson:

out of our, you know, the bottom's fallen out of the world right now..

Matt Edmundson:

And so what you are saying is, is it seems to be fairly consistent with

Matt Edmundson:

what I'm hearing across the, And to be fair, what I'm experiencing my own

Matt Edmundson:

e-commerce businesses, that actually the, the, with Facebook ads, um, it

Matt Edmundson:

has become a lot harder to get some kind of value out of, uh, Facebook ads.

Matt Edmundson:

And one of the things that you said that I just wanted just to touch on

Matt Edmundson:

a little bit is the other comment you said is the channels are losing

Matt Edmundson:

or the channel is losing trust.

Matt Edmundson:

And what do you mean by that?

Colby Flood:

I've heard.

Colby Flood:

So you keep seeing in reports.

Colby Flood:

Um, where is marketing budget gonna go in 2023?

Colby Flood:

Right.

Colby Flood:

And as I get on sales calls with potential clients, I hear time and

Colby Flood:

time again, we're not sure Facebook is still the place to be marketing.

Colby Flood:

Maybe we need to be doing a different channel cuz people

Colby Flood:

aren't seen as good results.

Colby Flood:

So I think there's a general buzz about Facebook that people just

Colby Flood:

aren't as confident in it in 2022 as they were in 20 16, 17, 18, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

And people were believing because of the shifts that we've had that

Colby Flood:

maybe it's gonna have some troubles.

Colby Flood:

And of course, Zuckerberg's been working on Metaverse and all these news things

Colby Flood:

and all this stuff is happening, so I think its just kind of shifting

Colby Flood:

people's perspective a little bit.

Colby Flood:

We're still seeing great performance, um, on Facebook ads.

Colby Flood:

It's just not as easy for smaller brands as it used to be Facebook ads.

Matt Edmundson:

So, and that's an important point because I'm like

Matt Edmundson:

the guys that have been calling you on the phone, I'm set, I'm sat, I'm

Matt Edmundson:

literally sat here talking to the guys in our marketing team , Uh, we had

Matt Edmundson:

a brainstorming session last week.

Matt Edmundson:

You know, we went out and we, uh, for one of our econ businesses, and,mand

Matt Edmundson:

one of the questions I asked the team is, Listen, do we, do we even spend

Matt Edmundson:

money on Facebook ads next year in terms of, you know, budget and performance?

Matt Edmundson:

Given what we are seeing at the, the moment, the way it's going, and

Matt Edmundson:

actually just the sheer avalanche of people as in the end user who are not

Matt Edmundson:

using Facebook or Instagram anymore, you know, just so it seems to me to be

Matt Edmundson:

both sides that ads, the ads people are leaving, but also the users, they're

Matt Edmundson:

not using it as much as they should.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm sat here as an ecom business thinking about that.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, but I, I then I, I've just heard you say, actually you can still

Matt Edmundson:

get great performance with the ads.

Matt Edmundson:

So should I bail or should I stay?

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, is the, is the question.

Colby Flood:

Can I ask you a few targeted questions?

Colby Flood:

Do you mind?

Matt Edmundson:

You go for it.

Matt Edmundson:

No, no, absolutely.

Colby Flood:

What's your, what's your AOV for your store?

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, about in Sterling it's about 50 Sterling.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, so it's whatever, about $60.

Colby Flood:

And refresh me on your product type or your,

Matt Edmundson:

So the site that I was talking about is the

Matt Edmundson:

site which sells these, It's the supplements, the vegan supplements.

Colby Flood:

Okay, so here's what I would tell you, and kind of going

Colby Flood:

towards creative, uh, Facebook ads is getting more difficult for non-well

Colby Flood:

known branded companies or products.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, right?

Colby Flood:

Um, and specifically with supplements, because that can be a more difficult niche

Colby Flood:

to be in in terms of marketing that way.

Colby Flood:

So the key thing that I would really focus on, regardless of, or regardless,

Colby Flood:

whatever the right word is there of which platform you're gonna go to, is

Colby Flood:

making sure to not skip the branding and the messaging part of the business

Colby Flood:

and not saying that you have, just kind of speaking in generalities now.

Colby Flood:

Sure.

Colby Flood:

Um.

Colby Flood:

And focus on making sure you have your USP marked down.

Colby Flood:

And then really go into what is your messaging gonna be on the platform.

Colby Flood:

And there's some great things you can do specifically for your product.

Colby Flood:

Things like pr, which people often forget about.

Colby Flood:

Um, but just to kind of.

Colby Flood:

Loop all that.

Colby Flood:

Before I go on a long tangent on creative strategy, cause I'm sure

Colby Flood:

we'll loop into that is focus on your, your ads or your creative budget.

Colby Flood:

And I always tell people, 10% of your marketing budget,

Colby Flood:

put that towards creative.

Colby Flood:

And as you scale your marketing spin, your creative spin should scale as well, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, there's someone, um, there's a marketer on LinkedIn I saw put out a good statement

Colby Flood:

saying like, if you purchase a Super Bowl ad, you're not just gonna throw up

Colby Flood:

some creative, you're gonna be spending tons and tons of money on that ad, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, your focus is gonna be on the quality of that ad.

Colby Flood:

Social media should be no different.

Colby Flood:

You should focus on the quality of the creative you're putting out as well.

Colby Flood:

So with a, with a AOV of 50, um, I mean, it's definitely possible.

Colby Flood:

Getting a sub 20 CPA can be difficult, especially in your niche.

Colby Flood:

And I imagine without seeing your account right now, you're

Colby Flood:

probably seeing higher CPMs.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, um, and higher CPCs in your account.

Colby Flood:

Uh, do you get, do you get rejected ads at all for your product?

Matt Edmundson:

Occasionally, yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, we have to reword things.

Matt Edmundson:

Um,

Colby Flood:

and that's one thing to watch if you, if your ratio to rejected

Colby Flood:

ads to approved ads gets offset.

Colby Flood:

Facebook will naturally raise your cpm.

Colby Flood:

So what you need to do is you need to get those ads approved, Don't run 'em,

Colby Flood:

don't feel the need to, and then launch a Facebook like campaign with just.

Colby Flood:

Dozens of ads to reset that ratio, that'll help out with your CPMs.

Colby Flood:

But yeah, sorry, I get on tangents here.

Colby Flood:

I love, uh, kind of going through those, but I would say don't

Colby Flood:

top tip, don't abandon ship.

Colby Flood:

Just don't maybe put all eggs in one basket if possible.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

No, fair enough.

Matt Edmundson:

Well, you've talked about this, um, the, the idea of putting 10% of my

Matt Edmundson:

marketing budget towards creative.

Matt Edmundson:

Let me be, um, let's be super clear at the start.

Matt Edmundson:

When you say creative, what do you mean?

Colby Flood:

That's a good question.

Colby Flood:

So, uh, the way I would define it is what people are seeing for the ads.

Colby Flood:

So that could be influence or content, that could be graphics, that could

Colby Flood:

be video production, that could be pr to put into your actual ads.

Colby Flood:

Whatever is going in that 1080 by 1080 or 9 by 16 square for people to look at.

Colby Flood:

I would say put 10% of your budget focused on that.

Colby Flood:

Right.

Colby Flood:

And there may be spin that goes into the ideation of it or the, the, uh, tracking

Colby Flood:

of it, those types of things as well.

Matt Edmundson:

I like it.

Matt Edmundson:

I like it because what you're saying is, uh, uh, Colby is, and, and if I can

Matt Edmundson:

paraphrase, and maybe you can correct me if I'm wrong, um, actually Facebook

Matt Edmundson:

ads, it's not dead is just different.

Matt Edmundson:

And for the longest time, people like me have just thrown quick, cheap, and

Matt Edmundson:

easy content or creative onto Facebook because we could and we didn't have to.

Matt Edmundson:

And it worked.

Matt Edmundson:

You're right.

Matt Edmundson:

And we didn't have to think about it.

Matt Edmundson:

But in the world in which we now live, actually, I really

Matt Edmundson:

have to think about that.

Matt Edmundson:

If I want to come out on top, right, I have to think about this creative.

Matt Edmundson:

I have to think about the, the quality of the creative.

Matt Edmundson:

Am I, am I understanding that right?

Colby Flood:

Yes, and I'll give you, uh, some validation to that, which is,

Colby Flood:

uh, I've, we have a couple of kind of enterprise clients and I was on a call

Colby Flood:

with them, one of them before this call here, and they just let me know that

Colby Flood:

Facebook just announced, cuz they were in the initial run of it, like three

Colby Flood:

or four days ago, that it's launching an accelerator program very similar to

Colby Flood:

TikTok, where it will match companies.

Colby Flood:

That get approved to be in the program with a content creation agency

Colby Flood:

to create free content for them.

Colby Flood:

Facebook's paying for it a hundred percent.

Colby Flood:

Wow.

Colby Flood:

Cause it's starting to see that creative is, so they said the categories are

Colby Flood:

video production, edits on existing creative or influencer content.

Colby Flood:

Wow.

Matt Edmundson:

So the Facebook's paying for it.

Matt Edmundson:

I, I mean that in itself is a headline right there, right?

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, I've never known Facebook pay for anything.

Matt Edmundson:

So, um, it's quite an interesting, So I get what creative is, and I

Matt Edmundson:

understand that I need, I now need to start thinking about creative.

Matt Edmundson:

So what are some of the building blocks that you would have me

Matt Edmundson:

think about in terms of strategy?

Matt Edmundson:

What is creative strategy?

Matt Edmundson:

What should I be thinking about?

Colby Flood:

Yeah.

Colby Flood:

Um, and I'll answer that and let me give you one little tiff here,

Colby Flood:

one little, uh, pet peeve of mine as you're looking at creative.

Colby Flood:

Um, one of the biggest problems you'll see oftentimes with the quality of

Colby Flood:

creative is the setup of communication and responsibilities, which is if

Colby Flood:

you work with a creative agency and they are not ideating the strategy.

Colby Flood:

or they are not hands on with media buying.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, It oftentimes leaves the business owner as the creative strategist who

Colby Flood:

may not be running Facebook ads and may not have experience on creative

Colby Flood:

for Facebook ads, communicating with a graphic designer who's learning the

Colby Flood:

business and doesn't know Facebook ads to create the creative mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

So one little thing I would say is make sure there's someone

Colby Flood:

in that chain of communication.

Colby Flood:

Ideally, the person responsible for the strategy that knows Facebook ads very

Colby Flood:

well and knows creative strategy for them.

Colby Flood:

But as we're looking at creative strategy, The key to start is going

Colby Flood:

to be the research phase, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, I'm coming from an agency perspective.

Colby Flood:

Some of these things will just kind of mold and adapt if you are

Colby Flood:

the business doing that, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, we always start top down.

Colby Flood:

So I say there's three levels to creative.

Colby Flood:

There's gonna be the CMO level, and that's the person that is setting the

Colby Flood:

USP, the buyer personas, the messaging that goes across all channels, right?

Colby Flood:

You take that information and you move it to the ad strategy level,

Colby Flood:

which is what we're talking.

Colby Flood:

Which is going to be determining what part of the USP and the

Colby Flood:

messaging and the personas you're gonna try to hit with your channel.

Colby Flood:

And then the, the next level is going to be the actual graphic

Colby Flood:

design work, the creation of it.

Colby Flood:

So I would start by looking at the brand Bible and the brand guidelines,

Colby Flood:

making sure we fully understand the usp.

Colby Flood:

And ideally if you have like brand voice or brand identity.

Colby Flood:

So let's say friendly, approachable, um mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, funny, those types of things.

Colby Flood:

Looking at how you can match those to different levels of the funnel if you're

Colby Flood:

wanting to kind of be targeted that way.

Colby Flood:

Okay.

Colby Flood:

And then we want to start doing research on the brand and also your competitors.

Colby Flood:

So I would look at doing competitor research, going through the competitors

Colby Flood:

Facebook ad libraries, and looking for, And when I say messaging and

Colby Flood:

themes, The goal is to be as broad with it as possible to start.

Colby Flood:

And here's what I mean.

Colby Flood:

So go through your competitor's ads and we wanna see from their messaging, if they're

Colby Flood:

talking about things like founder story or benefits of use, or ingredients and

Colby Flood:

supplements, like what are the super high level things that they're talking about.

Colby Flood:

And with the creative, we wanna look for creative structures.

Colby Flood:

And my best way to explain that is if you go to three or four of your

Colby Flood:

competitors, , and you especially see this in the clothing companies a

Colby Flood:

lot, and you look at their creatives.

Colby Flood:

If you're looking at it from a.

Colby Flood:

Forget about the pictures and just focus on the structure

Colby Flood:

of how the creative is placed.

Colby Flood:

You will see trends, so let's say there's one where it's three images,

Colby Flood:

50% of the screen on the left side is just one image, and on the

Colby Flood:

right side it's two images stacked.

Colby Flood:

So that would be a three panel image right there.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm..

Colby Flood:

So that's a structure, or it may be the product.

Colby Flood:

Keyed out where it's just a product laid over top of a lifestyle

Colby Flood:

photo of somebody with a quote that's a flat lay lifestyle combo.

Colby Flood:

You wanna be looking for those trends within their creatives as well.

Colby Flood:

So do the competitor research that way.

Colby Flood:

And then you really want to get a voice for your business or for your customer.

Colby Flood:

So we look at, of course, your Google Analytics data, right?

Colby Flood:

To understand who Google is saying is your best customer.

Colby Flood:

But Reddit comments, Um, reviews, right?

Colby Flood:

Comments on your Facebook ads.

Colby Flood:

We wanna look for the pros and cons, right?

Colby Flood:

Because with the pros, we can double down on those in our messaging, but

Colby Flood:

with the cons, we understand what may be holding somebody back as they're

Colby Flood:

transferring from top of funnel to middle of funnel or from middle to bottom

Colby Flood:

of funnel of not making a purchase.

Colby Flood:

And if we don't spearhead that and give them some messaging to address those

Colby Flood:

cons with either counters or validation, uh, they're gonna go do their own

Colby Flood:

research and then they're gonna end up going with a competitor of yours.

Colby Flood:

Right?

Colby Flood:

So we wanna find the pros and cons in the messaging and then look through

Colby Flood:

your own Facebook ads and have that same structure mindset and see, okay.

Colby Flood:

When we talked about founder story, they performed very well.

Colby Flood:

When we talked about, um, discounts, it performed very well.

Colby Flood:

Right?

Colby Flood:

So you've done research on your brand, you've done research on your

Colby Flood:

competitors, and now take a step back and really understand what's

Colby Flood:

going on in the world, right?

Colby Flood:

We have a lot of things going on in the world right now.

Colby Flood:

Is there any of world event financial, um, country to country that may be changing

Colby Flood:

the buying habit of your customer?

Colby Flood:

The answer right now especially is going to be yes.

Colby Flood:

Right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

. And because of that, maybe it's recession, maybe it's um, a global conflict.

Colby Flood:

How can you empathize with your customer and resonate your

Colby Flood:

messaging towards that, right?

Colby Flood:

To, to understand that something's going on.

Colby Flood:

That's the research phase.

Colby Flood:

Now, I could keep going on cuz there's a couple other phases, but I'll, I'll

Colby Flood:

give a, I'll give a rest there and, Say, uh, any, any thoughts or anything

Colby Flood:

as we're kind of looking at that?

Matt Edmundson:

Well, one, you started with research, uh, which

Matt Edmundson:

is, uh, uh, which is interesting.

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, everything that I had to be fair, any framework that I

Matt Edmundson:

teach always starts with research.

Matt Edmundson:

You've gotta know what's going on.

Matt Edmundson:

And so, uh, instantly, I'm, I'm with you, Colby.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm not gonna lie.

Matt Edmundson:

You, you've won me over already.

Matt Edmundson:

because you talk about the input.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, yeah, absolutely.

Matt Edmundson:

I, I, I understand the importance of research.

Matt Edmundson:

What's interesting is, um, you are, you are researching both your stuff

Matt Edmundson:

as in, you know, your ads, your, the reviews on your ads as well as

Matt Edmundson:

your competitors, and you're trying to draw this sort of information

Matt Edmundson:

out, which shapes the creative.

Matt Edmundson:

have you done, let's, have you done any, any projects or any case studies

Matt Edmundson:

recently where actually you were surprised by stuff that came out in

Matt Edmundson:

the research where you had one idea, you did the research and it changed

Matt Edmundson:

what you did, It changed the outcome, uh, of, of what ended up happening?

Colby Flood:

Yes.

Colby Flood:

We're actually, so we're working on a project right now for a, um, home

Colby Flood:

security company, and they're more.

Colby Flood:

Location based.

Colby Flood:

They're in a couple of states in America, whereas you have like ADT

Colby Flood:

and Ring who are nationwide, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

. So we were looking at, um, in the research phase, really understanding

Colby Flood:

what we wanted to do and.

Colby Flood:

One thing we were going into, it was really focused on price comparison as

Colby Flood:

the idea, because Ring you can very easily, um, purchase that off Amazon.

Colby Flood:

You can set it up yourself, right?

Colby Flood:

Yeah.

Colby Flood:

You can go.

Colby Flood:

But the biggest thing that we were seeing from researching that specific company

Colby Flood:

and then also the ads of competitors as well, was really focusing on the community

Colby Flood:

aspect and, and showing the idea of how.

Colby Flood:

They're to help build a community, a safe community.

Colby Flood:

And also they are a community focused provider as well.

Colby Flood:

Like being very niche targeted with your location, which is

Colby Flood:

counterintuitive to Facebook ads if you know about kind of audiences on

Colby Flood:

Facebook ads, because it's hard to do small location based ads that way.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

. Um, but that's one thing, and we're actually in the

Colby Flood:

process of building that out.

Colby Flood:

I don't have any data on.

Colby Flood:

Finished test results.

Colby Flood:

I can maybe check back in on podcast two there.

Colby Flood:

But, um, that is one thing that we've, we've currently seen the, the

Colby Flood:

research phase is super important because your customer's voice is

Colby Flood:

the most impactful kind of needle of where you should be moving that way.

Colby Flood:

We're North Star.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

And that would've imagined impacted not just their Facebook ads, but their,

Matt Edmundson:

their website messaging, everything.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

It's like, it, it's where you are sort of going down one route.

Matt Edmundson:

You've done this research and actually, no, this is not, that's

Matt Edmundson:

important, but it's, this is way more important over here.

Matt Edmundson:

So we need to, we need to show pictures of this and communities

Matt Edmundson:

and, and used language of community and so on and so forth.

Matt Edmundson:

Just being heavy on the pricing, I would've thought.

Colby Flood:

And that's the goal with Facebook ads, and not even just

Colby Flood:

Facebook, but any, any marketing channel you're on, is it, It can be a,

Colby Flood:

a mass market pretester for what you should focus on in your website, right?

Colby Flood:

If you're noticing that messaging is performing very well and then.

Colby Flood:

Over time, you don't build out landing pages for that.

Colby Flood:

There's gonna be a, what you call like a loss of cent or a, a disconnect

Colby Flood:

between the messaging on your landing page and the messaging on your ad.

Colby Flood:

And you can see conversion drops from that or increases if you match it.

Colby Flood:

So even if you don't, um, have the bandwidth or the team to rebuild

Colby Flood:

the whole website, building out specific landing pages on your

Colby Flood:

e-com store that match what you're seeing, perform well on the Facebook

Colby Flood:

ads can be very beneficial for you.

Matt Edmundson:

Super top tip there.

Matt Edmundson:

That's an extra bonus, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

Um, what, how would you monitor the performance and understand

Matt Edmundson:

what's performing well, if you outsource, say your ad buying to

Matt Edmundson:

another company so you know your pet peeve going back to the start.

Matt Edmundson:

You've got, you've got multiple people involved in the whole thing.

Matt Edmundson:

So I, I, I know plenty of people, for example, that might go well, Facebook

Matt Edmundson:

ads, we just kind of give that to that agency over there and, and we spend

Matt Edmundson:

this much and we kind of think it generates this much of behavior that's

Matt Edmundson:

probably about as much as they know.

Matt Edmundson:

Is there an easy way to get started with that?

Matt Edmundson:

If I want to go find out or is it quite involved?

Colby Flood:

For tracking?

Colby Flood:

So, um, we'll, I'll go with two things.

Colby Flood:

One is gonna be naming conventions and one is gonna be tools that I would suggest.

Colby Flood:

So naming conventions.

Colby Flood:

What we do, uh, at Brighter Click is we'll focus on assigning specific naming

Colby Flood:

tags in your ads to specific creatives.

Colby Flood:

So, We'll create a spreadsheet and one tab, or one spreadsheet is gonna

Colby Flood:

be for your copy, one's for your headlines, one for your landing

Colby Flood:

pages, and one for your creative.

Colby Flood:

And every row is a different creative or a different copy, right?

Colby Flood:

So what we'll do is we'll say, Copy is CO creative is CR.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

headline is HE and landing pages LP.

Colby Flood:

And every row gets a new number.

Colby Flood:

So you'll have an ad that we'll take from those.

Colby Flood:

And let's say you create one ad and it's gonna be, um, CR 10, CO2, HE3,

Colby Flood:

LP1, so you know which assets that are.

Colby Flood:

And then when you track that with your tools, we use.

Colby Flood:

Uh, if you wanna stay platform specific, you can use Supermetrics, but that

Colby Flood:

helps you kind of segment it out.

Colby Flood:

Now, looking at specific tools, I would suggest one, we are

Colby Flood:

affiliated with, one, we are not.

Colby Flood:

Just kind of full transparency there.

Colby Flood:

Um, Triple well is super important for overall data tracking, not just creative.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

. Overall, because first party data is super important.

Colby Flood:

Now that's the one that we have affiliation with, The one we do not

Colby Flood:

have affiliation with, that is for creative tracking is motionapp.com.

Colby Flood:

Motionapp.com is a very, very important tool for creative tracking.

Colby Flood:

Great thing is, is um, they set it up for you as well.

Colby Flood:

So they walk through your business and they set up what you wanna be tracking.

Colby Flood:

They build out those dashboards.

Colby Flood:

I would highly suggest if you're wanting to put your focus towards creative to

Colby Flood:

look at or look at motion or something similar for your creative tracking.

Matt Edmundson:

That's fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

We will of course link to those in the show notes.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, so Colby, you, you talked about the research phase.

Matt Edmundson:

You said there's a couple more.

Matt Edmundson:

What are those?

Colby Flood:

Yeah, so once you go through research, really start looking

Colby Flood:

at your strategy planning, right?

Colby Flood:

So, , we've gone through, we've looked at the ads your competitors are running.

Colby Flood:

We understand what type of creative, what type of messaging they have.

Colby Flood:

We've gone through your audience.

Colby Flood:

Uh, reviews comments, and we've gone through the past performance

Colby Flood:

of your account as well.

Colby Flood:

Now you wanna really start mapping out what creative and messaging

Colby Flood:

structures you're gonna use for each level of the funnel.

Colby Flood:

And ideally when we do this, we look at, um, always starting

Colby Flood:

messaging first because messaging has to come before creative.

Colby Flood:

The messaging is the purpose, the creative, uh, is

Colby Flood:

designed based off of that.

Colby Flood:

Yeah.

Colby Flood:

And we'll try to pick three to four messaging themes at

Colby Flood:

each level of the funnel that you're gonna be running ads for.

Colby Flood:

And then from there, try to find at least three to four creative structures that

Colby Flood:

are going to match those messaging themes.

Colby Flood:

So let me give you an example.

Colby Flood:

Um, We work with a company called Great Wrap.

Colby Flood:

They're a sustainability business out of Australia.

Colby Flood:

They take when you make french fries and potato chips.

Colby Flood:

Little fun fact here, there's a byproduct waste from it.

Colby Flood:

They take that, which gets turned into little pellets and

Colby Flood:

they make cling wrap out of it.

Colby Flood:

So like GLAD Wrap.

Colby Flood:

They make cling wrap and their goal, their brand mission is to eliminate

Colby Flood:

plastic waste from the world, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

one roll at a time.

Colby Flood:

So when we started working with them, They were a fresh startup.

Colby Flood:

We understood there was a lot of things we were gonna need to uncover, right?

Colby Flood:

So, We're gonna need to educate people on this.

Colby Flood:

We're gonna need to normalize the product.

Colby Flood:

We're gonna need to familiarize people of the product, right?

Colby Flood:

So we needed to understand what type of messaging themes, and what

Colby Flood:

type of creative themes we're gonna put at each level of the funnel.

Colby Flood:

Well, since we wanted to educate and kind of normalize, we looked at top

Colby Flood:

of funnel of what can we do there?

Colby Flood:

And we went with PR content.

Colby Flood:

They were very active with.

Colby Flood:

Uh, PR campaigns and we would just take Channel 10 News.

Colby Flood:

Started out in the anchor room, went to their facility on interview, and then

Colby Flood:

went back to the anchor room, A normal two minute segment, completely unedited.

Colby Flood:

Channel 10 News is the headline.

Colby Flood:

What Channel 10 News put as the copy.

Colby Flood:

Why?

Colby Flood:

Cuz we wanted it to look as native as possible to Facebook.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

. And then bottom of funnel.

Colby Flood:

We wanted to familiarize, we just ran Founder story.

Colby Flood:

Organic photos of the founders holding the product, talking about two local

Colby Flood:

native Australians, married, couple, wanting to eliminate plastic waste

Colby Flood:

in the landfills and in the ocean.

Colby Flood:

And we saw massive results with them.

Colby Flood:

We tripled their revenue whole store two months in a row.

Colby Flood:

Um, just based off of that now.

Colby Flood:

Translating that into companies, right?

Colby Flood:

I would be looking at messaging themes.

Colby Flood:

What is gonna work at your top of funnel?

Colby Flood:

What do you think will resonate with the most?

Colby Flood:

And you can really pull that from your customer reviews.

Colby Flood:

Talking about what people like.

Colby Flood:

Is it the ingredients in your product?

Colby Flood:

Is it founder's story?

Colby Flood:

Is it, um, relatability to the viewer's problems, right?

Colby Flood:

With your creative themes.

Colby Flood:

Are you gonna want to be doing lifestyle photography?

Colby Flood:

A video about the founder's story?

Colby Flood:

Picking those messaging themes at each level, the funnel.

Colby Flood:

And it can be a little bit, try to stay general as I'm explaining

Colby Flood:

this here, cuz it can be, it's very different for each business.

Colby Flood:

But that's gonna be the next step for you, is really mapping out what you wanna do.

Colby Flood:

And the key thing that I'll kind of close on that thought with is, is don't

Colby Flood:

let perfection keep you from doing it.

Colby Flood:

Um, start testing right.

Colby Flood:

Start testing.

Colby Flood:

Have a good setup there.

Colby Flood:

Don't let fear of not doing it right, hold you back because if there's

Colby Flood:

no strategy, a movement towards strategy is hopefully gonna have

Colby Flood:

better results for you that way.

Matt Edmundson:

I like that.

Matt Edmundson:

Don't let perfection hold you back.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, you just gotta get going with something.

Matt Edmundson:

Right?

Matt Edmundson:

So you have top of funnel, you have bottom of funnel.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, do you have, uh, do you have Mid Funnel content as well, or are you,

Matt Edmundson:

and are they the three stages of the, the funnel that you're looking at?

Matt Edmundson:

Or do you have more?

Colby Flood:

That's a great question.

Colby Flood:

So, um, if we're going into setup wise for campaigns, so top of funnel

Colby Flood:

of course, just to define those, cuz people define them differently.

Colby Flood:

Cold audiences.

Colby Flood:

So interest based audiences and lookalikes.

Colby Flood:

People that have never come in contact with your ads.

Colby Flood:

Middle of funnel, we do run those.

Colby Flood:

That's gonna be people who have engaged with your brand but haven't added to cart.

Colby Flood:

So essentially Facebook page likes Facebook ad engager.

Colby Flood:

Same with Instagram, website visitor, no add to cart, bottom of funnel, add to

Colby Flood:

cart, checkout initiated with no purchase.

Colby Flood:

And then the key part of the whole account that so many accounts miss out on is

Colby Flood:

existing customers loyalty campaigns.

Colby Flood:

Those are super important for end of season sales.

Colby Flood:

New product releases, um, discounts, cross sales.

Colby Flood:

You see some of your highest returns with loyalty in Instagram reels and stories.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

. But those are the main levels of funnel.

Colby Flood:

And then what I will suggest always is have a separate

Colby Flood:

campaign for creative testing.

Colby Flood:

That's super important.

Colby Flood:

You wanna have a creative testing campaign ongoing cuz when you need creative.

Colby Flood:

You don't wanna have to figure out what creative you can run, you

Colby Flood:

wanna already have it ready to go.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh, okay.

Matt Edmundson:

So you're running these sort of creative campaigns just over here,

Matt Edmundson:

testing and figuring out what's working, so then you can assign that

Matt Edmundson:

correctly over here when you need it.

Matt Edmundson:

Yep.

Matt Edmundson:

Have I got that right?

Colby Flood:

Yep.

Colby Flood:

And run it to the respective audience, of course, or respective level of

Colby Flood:

the funnel that you're testing.

Colby Flood:

Yep.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, no, very clever.

Matt Edmundson:

Very clever.

Matt Edmundson:

Okay, so I've got, uh, research, I've got strategy planning, Uh, is there

Matt Edmundson:

anything else I need to think about?

Colby Flood:

Reporting and optimizing, right?

Colby Flood:

So you, you research, you plan out the strategy and then where we said,

Colby Flood:

don't let perfection hold you back.

Colby Flood:

You really start to learn as you go through the reporting that way.

Colby Flood:

So ideally, you have a setup like motion or you have a tool that you

Colby Flood:

can use because, um, sometimes you can test too much and when that

Colby Flood:

happens, you don't track it and then you don't learn from it, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, So making sure you're tracking it and then, uh, revise as you go.

Colby Flood:

The way that I would put it is have, uh, two week sprints.

Colby Flood:

So let's say you're doing 30 ad creatives per month.

Colby Flood:

Focus on building out a brief, getting 15 ad creatives put

Colby Flood:

out, launch them in the account.

Colby Flood:

Um, of course, don't launch 'em all at once and, uh, just sit there,

Colby Flood:

but launch them in the account.

Colby Flood:

And then a week, two week, start monitoring those.

Colby Flood:

Look for your themes and trends.

Colby Flood:

So, is founder story messaging doing well or bad?

Colby Flood:

Is this type of creative doing well or bad?

Colby Flood:

And then, Really start diving into how you can modify the next creative

Colby Flood:

brief for the next two weeks.

Colby Flood:

Right?

Colby Flood:

And then when you get done with month one, take a step back and look

Colby Flood:

at, were there messaging themes we need to double down on or change?

Colby Flood:

Is there creative that we need to double down on or change?

Colby Flood:

That's a high level.

Colby Flood:

When you go into a tool like motion, you can even start looking at, did

Colby Flood:

the first three seconds of this video perform well versus this video?

Colby Flood:

And what was different there?

Colby Flood:

But, we'll, we'll kind of keep it broad for now, cuz that's

Colby Flood:

a whole nother conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Duh.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm, I'm, I'm utterly intrigued by the whole thing.

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, you, if I'm honest with you, Colby, as soon as you said, if you're

Matt Edmundson:

gonna, you know, launch 30 pieces of creative this month, I instantly

Matt Edmundson:

go 30 pieces of creative and I, I'm in a cold sweat straight away.

Matt Edmundson:

Right.

Matt Edmundson:

And it's not even, I mean, we have a marketing team, so, um, I,

Matt Edmundson:

Is that, is that what we should be thinking about realistically?

Matt Edmundson:

Or is that just a figure you, you pulled outta the air?

Colby Flood:

It all, it all depends on, uh, how much you're spending, right?

Colby Flood:

So, um, here's what I would say, cuz this can really be contingent on the account.

Colby Flood:

A key indicator of knowing you need more creative is your frequency in your first

Colby Flood:

time impression ratio in your account.

Colby Flood:

Right.

Colby Flood:

So if you notice that your account frequency or a campaign frequency is, is

Colby Flood:

above 1.5 is starting to get much higher than 1.5, that's gonna be an indicator.

Colby Flood:

You need creative refresh.

Colby Flood:

And if you want to get even more validated with that, look at your

Colby Flood:

first time impression ratio, which is found within your ad set analytics

Colby Flood:

when your first time impression ratio for an ad starts to get to 70%.

Colby Flood:

which means on a scale of zero to a hundred, what percent of people

Colby Flood:

are seeing this for the first time?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, when it starts to get to 70, that's when you know you're gonna need to

Colby Flood:

start looking at changing creative.

Colby Flood:

When it gets to 50 or lower you, unless metrics are good, right?

Colby Flood:

You really need to start changing creative, because if performance

Colby Flood:

is bad, And met that first time impression ratio is low.

Colby Flood:

It's probably cuz it's burnt out.

Colby Flood:

And sometimes you'll see as you start taking this into account, Oh this,

Colby Flood:

this adds at 2%, this adds at 4%.

Colby Flood:

Right?

Colby Flood:

So those can be clear indicators for you.

Colby Flood:

It can be different for every account.

Colby Flood:

Um, I like to say 30 cuz it, it gives you a good amount of creative to test through.

Colby Flood:

Cuz not all creative is gonna be good creative, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

. So it gives you, it gives you room to hopefully have some creatives you can

Colby Flood:

scale with and test with that way.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, no, that's great.

Matt Edmundson:

And that's, it is probably worth, I'm assuming, actually it's probably worth

Matt Edmundson:

saying that 30 pieces of ad creative, some of those, are they, are they 30

Matt Edmundson:

individual different pieces or are they like five or six key ideas with

Matt Edmundson:

different variations of it attached?

Colby Flood:

That's a good question.

Colby Flood:

So, um, I wouldn't say it's 30 ad structures, right?

Colby Flood:

So like three panel versus flat lifestyle combo versus I would say

Colby Flood:

it's, uh, you pick your structures and you can definitely create some

Colby Flood:

variations of it that way so that you're.

Colby Flood:

Um, you have more to test with there?

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

So, Colby, I'm listening to you talk and I've, I've got again, uh, as avid

Matt Edmundson:

listeners of the show will know I, I'm an avid note taker and I've got plenty

Matt Edmundson:

of notes in my little journal here.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, where do I get started?

Matt Edmundson:

How, how do I, how do I get moving?

Colby Flood:

With a creative strategy that way?

Colby Flood:

Mm..

Colby Flood:

Yeah, I would say definitely get started with the creative research if I'm plugging

Colby Flood:

myself, one thing that we could provide, um, in the links here is we have a PDF

Colby Flood:

document that lays out this strategy.

Colby Flood:

It's a kind of a fill in the blank thing to make sure you

Colby Flood:

follow the right path that way.

Colby Flood:

Um, start with your research.

Colby Flood:

Really understand what your customers are saying and what

Colby Flood:

has worked in your account.

Colby Flood:

If it's not broke, as we say in North Carolina, if it ain't broke, don't fix it.

Colby Flood:

Uh, double down on it that way.

Colby Flood:

Um, and then start looking at making sure you have the resources

Colby Flood:

in house to create creative.

Colby Flood:

And if you don't find someone that does, and ideally, ideally, the same

Colby Flood:

person that is doing the production is also coming up with the strategy and

Colby Flood:

the ideation of what's gonna happen.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Listen, Colby, I'm, I am aware of time, uh, and the hour is fast approaching.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, so let me ask you, uh, a, a slightly left field question, if I may.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Now you've, you've in effect spilled your beans on the

Matt Edmundson:

whole creative strategy thing.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, As you know, this uh, podcast is sponsored by the e-commerce cohort, right?

Matt Edmundson:

Which is this sort of monthly mastermind group.

Matt Edmundson:

And there's people in the cohort and imagine they're all together in a hotel

Matt Edmundson:

room and you've spent three hours with them or however long it is outlining

Matt Edmundson:

your strategy, given them point by point, you know, this is what you do.

Matt Edmundson:

This is everything that I know.

Matt Edmundson:

It's your best speech you've ever done.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, I know you did a conference, didn't you?

Matt Edmundson:

An online conference.

Matt Edmundson:

I saw it on LinkedIn.

Matt Edmundson:

You've done your, your first conference really recently.

Matt Edmundson:

So you got that under belt.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

At what conference was that?

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, AD World.

Matt Edmundson:

Ad World.

Matt Edmundson:

So you've just done that, right?

Matt Edmundson:

And it could be Ad World, it could be the cohort.

Matt Edmundson:

You've done it, the crowds going wild.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Colby, you know, it's the best thing you've ever done.

Matt Edmundson:

You take a bow and you do that thing that they do at the Oscars, and you just

Matt Edmundson:

say, I would just like to thank, uh, who, who would you thank and why would

Matt Edmundson:

it be a person, a book, a, a mentor, a podcast, I don't know, whatever.

Matt Edmundson:

Who, are we grateful for?

Colby Flood:

For, for where I am right now.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm..

Colby Flood:

Yeah.

Colby Flood:

That's a great question.

Colby Flood:

Um, can I thank multiple people or do I need to limit it to one?

Matt Edmundson:

No, you got, We can have more than one.

Matt Edmundson:

That's fine.

Colby Flood:

10 minutes on the mic here.

Colby Flood:

Perfect.

Colby Flood:

Yeah, I mean, definitely family, um, for helping me through harder times

Colby Flood:

when I was younger, uh, 20, 21 years old, um, the team at Brighter Click.

Colby Flood:

Because they are doing amazingwork that way.

Colby Flood:

But I would really focus on, and this one's kind of out of the box, um,

Colby Flood:

the environment that the internet has created for access to knowledge.

Colby Flood:

That's, we are education first because, uh, I started the company

Colby Flood:

with that cuz I had to teach myself everything, uh, with marketing.

Colby Flood:

And I did that through ordering books off Amazon.

Colby Flood:

Going to AD World conference, taking online courses, edx.org, everything that

Colby Flood:

I could for marketing, for Facebook ads.

Colby Flood:

And we're at a point now to where, I mean, 30, 40 years ago, you were

Colby Flood:

limited to what the encyclopedia had on one page for one topic, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, like if you wanted to know about, uh, what a plane was, you had

Colby Flood:

maybe a page of knowledge that way.

Colby Flood:

We have infinite knowledge now.

Colby Flood:

You can really access anything you want, um, through the internet

Colby Flood:

and through, uh, books that way.

Colby Flood:

So that's a whole different passion of mine is education first, but

Matt Edmundson:

yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

And when, when you say education first, is that, is that because it has come out

Matt Edmundson:

of this you've had to teach yourself?

Colby Flood:

Yeah, I think so.

Colby Flood:

And I mean, I think I see how important it is, right?

Colby Flood:

So, uh, our education first has three pillars to it.

Colby Flood:

The first is, Really what feeds the rest, which is educating our team.

Colby Flood:

So you work at Brighter Click, like we strongly recommend, suggest not

Colby Flood:

sure the legality of saying, uh, require , uh, you take, you take a

Colby Flood:

paid course conference, something that we cover for you every quarter.

Colby Flood:

And we have channels within Slack that are just focused on education

Colby Flood:

and like, we're always looking to see how we can help our team members

Colby Flood:

grow, whether it be in their field.

Colby Flood:

We have a media buyer right now.

Colby Flood:

We're putting on a training, uh, path to go towards like a CMO role, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

really trying to give people that opportunity.

Colby Flood:

And then the second pillar is educating our clients.

Colby Flood:

99% of agencies just suck at communication and it's not just the speed of response,

Colby Flood:

cuz I know that's one pain point, but it's the quality and the detail of

Colby Flood:

response as well we'd like to make.

Colby Flood:

We're educating our clients through communication so that they have all

Colby Flood:

the information they need that way.

Colby Flood:

And then the third is educating the public.

Colby Flood:

I know there's a lot of people out there, so I, um, had to educate myself.

Colby Flood:

Thankfully, with my circumstances, I was in America.

Colby Flood:

I had the means to have a job that could afford to purchase those things.

Colby Flood:

But there's people at second turning points in life, leaving the military,

Colby Flood:

going through divorce in a country where, uh, the economic state is not the best.

Colby Flood:

That can't pay for things, right.

Colby Flood:

That can't pay for courses.

Colby Flood:

So our goal is to put out free education, um, to get people

Colby Flood:

the education that they need.

Colby Flood:

But yeah, I think it, I think it came from that cuz I understand that.

Colby Flood:

Your learning is not limited to college or the school that you go to.

Colby Flood:

It's continued.

Colby Flood:

Facebook ads was different three years ago than it is today, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, so a degree doesn't do much for you there.

Colby Flood:

It's all about continued education and the access to that.

Matt Edmundson:

I couldn't agree more.

Matt Edmundson:

And, um, it, uh, and like you, I, I have devoured more books than

Matt Edmundson:

I care to remember, more online courses than I care to remember.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, and a desire and a pursuit to understand, uh, my, my craft.

Matt Edmundson:

And, um, I think it's one of the most remarkable things.

Matt Edmundson:

And it's, uh, I mean, I went to, I don't, Did you do college?

Matt Edmundson:

I went to university.

Matt Edmundson:

Did you go to college?

Colby Flood:

I am a, a happy college dropout after one year that was not

Colby Flood:

focused on college, but I, I fully respect, uh, getting a degree fully.

Matt Edmundson:

It just, it's interesting because my kids, uh,

Matt Edmundson:

my two boys, I have three kids.

Matt Edmundson:

My two boys are at uni.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, Zach started the, this year was his first year at university, and I,

Matt Edmundson:

and Josh has been at uni a couple.

Matt Edmundson:

And I remember having conversations with, uh, friends of mine that own agencies

Matt Edmundson:

cuz Josh was interested in computer programming and they were saying to me,

Matt Edmundson:

Listen, if you wanna get into programming, probably best you don't go to uni.

Matt Edmundson:

Well, this is not what they would've said years ago.

Matt Edmundson:

You know, when I was looking at it, it's, but it's this whole thing now, actually.

Matt Edmundson:

The world is a different place where education is concerned and it's

Matt Edmundson:

all getting turned on its head.

Matt Edmundson:

So I love your philosophy.

Matt Edmundson:

I think it's great and I think it's, um, I can see why it will resonate.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, Colby, listen.

Matt Edmundson:

How do people reach you?

Matt Edmundson:

How do they connect with you?

Matt Edmundson:

Um, how do they get that free pdf?

Matt Edmundson:

. Colby Flood: Yeah, so free pdf.

Matt Edmundson:

If there's links provided in this, uh, podcast, um, I can

Matt Edmundson:

definitely send that over to you.

Matt Edmundson:

So there'll be that and some additional free content they can get for education.

Matt Edmundson:

If you go to our homepage, brighterclick.com.

Matt Edmundson:

In the home hero section.

Matt Edmundson:

So the top of the page, there will be a button to download

Matt Edmundson:

the current creatives that we're seeing performing for Facebook ads.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, we're not gonna spam you promise, Uh, don't have the bandwidths to do that right

Matt Edmundson:

now, , but you'll get a, you'll get a pdf.

Matt Edmundson:

What you will get looped into is what we're looking at

Matt Edmundson:

starting, which is every month.

Matt Edmundson:

We're just gonna send out a, a slide deck with the top creatives

Matt Edmundson:

we we're seeing performing that way.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, reach out to me on LinkedIn, Colby Flood.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, be glad to connect with anybody and just kind of, uh, talk

Matt Edmundson:

shop or talk opportunity there.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

And we will of course put all of the links, uh, that Colby has mentioned

Matt Edmundson:

in the show notes, so to the pdf, the software that he's mentioned.

Matt Edmundson:

We'll get, we'll get those off you as well, Colby, and we'll, we'll put those

Matt Edmundson:

in, uh, and we'll listen, we'll even put your affiliate link in because why not?

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, it makes no difference to anybody else.

Matt Edmundson:

Right?

Matt Edmundson:

So, uh, we'll add those to the show notes, uh, which you can get at

Matt Edmundson:

ecommercepodcast.net or you can get them direct to your inbox if you have

Matt Edmundson:

signed up for our non spam newsletter.

Matt Edmundson:

Cuz like Colby, we don't have the bandwidth either.

Matt Edmundson:

We only just remember to send the newsletter out more than anything else.

Matt Edmundson:

So, uh, it's, uh, it's a funny one.

Matt Edmundson:

Colby, thank you so much for joining me on the e-Commerce podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

Been an absolute treat, man.

Matt Edmundson:

Real pleasure to meet you and thank you for sharing your thoughts and insights.

Matt Edmundson:

Lots of stuff to think about, Lots of conversations to have.

Colby Flood:

Thank you so much for having me.

Colby Flood:

It was a great time.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh, it's been brilliant.

Matt Edmundson:

Brilliant.

Matt Edmundson:

So there you have it.

Matt Edmundson:

What a great, great conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Huge thanks again to Colby for joining me today and also a big shout out to

Matt Edmundson:

today's show sponsor ecommercecohort.com.

Matt Edmundson:

Do head over to the website, ecommercecohort.com for more

Matt Edmundson:

information about this new type of community that you can join.

Matt Edmundson:

Be sure of course to follow the e-commerce podcast wherever you get

Matt Edmundson:

your podcast from because we've got even more great conversations lined

Matt Edmundson:

up just like today's one with Colby.

Matt Edmundson:

And I don't want you to miss any of them.

Matt Edmundson:

And in case no one dear listener has told you yet today, let me

Matt Edmundson:

be the first person to do it.

Matt Edmundson:

You are awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

Yes, you are.

Matt Edmundson:

It's just a burden we all have to bear.

Matt Edmundson:

Some of us more than others, but we're still all awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

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:

The team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon, Josh Catchpole,

Matt Edmundson:

Estella Robin and Tim Johnson.

Matt Edmundson:

Our theme song was written by Josh Edmundson and My Good Self, and as I

Matt Edmundson:

mentioned, if you would like to read the transcript or show notes, head over to the

Matt Edmundson:

website, ecommercepodcast.net where you can also sign up for our weekly newsletter

Matt Edmundson:

and get all of the good stuff direct your inbox totally free, which is amazing.

Matt Edmundson:

So Colby, that's it from me.

Matt Edmundson:

That's it from you.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, thanks everyone for joining us.

Matt Edmundson:

This, uh, this well, this is the e-commerce podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, have a fantastic week wherever you are and I will see you next time.

Matt Edmundson:

That's it from me.

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