Right About Now with Ryan Alford - Catching up on e-commerce with Robbie
Episode Date: July 6, 2020On this episode, Ryan and Robbie discuss the changing role of marketing during times of unrest and how companies can use empathy to better serve customer needs. From the changing e-commerce landsca...pe to the big news involving Shopify and Walmart this episode is packed with both marketing news and actionable opportunities for brands of all sizes. Connect with Ryan and the Radcast on instagram. @RyanAlford | @Radical_Results | @GVLHustle | @the.rad.cast If you enjoyed this episode and want to learn more, join Ryan’s newsletter https://ryanalford.com/newsletter/ to get Ferrari level advice daily for FREE. Learn how to build a 7 figure business from your personal brand by signing up for a FREE introduction to personal branding https://ryanalford.com/personalbranding. Learn more by visiting our website at www.ryanisright.comSubscribe to our YouTube channel www.youtube.com/@RightAboutNowwithRyanAlford.
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Welcome to the Radical Marketing Podcast.
Here is your host, Ryan Alford.
Hey guys, it's Ryan Alford.
Welcome to the newest edition of the Radcast.
Probably we're calling it the Radcast now.
The Radical Marketing Podcast is now the Radcast.
I feel a little bit more rad right now.
Hey, you are always radical. I'm joined
by my partner in crime, Robbie Fitzwater, my friend, associate, confidant, and all-around
favorite person. And reason you have bad judgment in friends.
Robbie, good to have you here. And as always, and as I mentioned pre-show,
today's episode of the Radcast is brought to you by Monster Energy Drinks.
Unofficially, officially, it's keeping me afloat.
I had a little bit of a later night than I planned last night doing a little work.
But excited to be here with you today. Excited to be here with you today.
Excited to be here too.
I didn't have as late of a night probably.
You're a little bit cooler than I am sometimes.
I'm feeling a little bit old.
Getting in bed early now these days.
You still got this quasi-newborn at home.
Trying to balance the schedules.
Lots of very rigid schedules when when you're transitioning
with a 13 month old now so he's 30 oh you're over a year you're you're uh toddlering i guess right
toddling he's walking now and it's good oh boy taking we're taking our life into our own hands
oh yeah you're in it well cool man i know we want to talk today a little, you know, the state of business and marketing here in July of 2020, also known as the Twilight Zone.
You know, we talked, you know, the impact of both empathy and what we're seeing in e-commerce and just in business as a whole, talking some of the insights and trends.
But man, what a weird year it's been, hasn't it? I mean, yeah, I think 2020 is just absolute. Yeah. You're punching the teeth
at a little bit of everything. I feel like everybody's just kind of on a roller coaster
waiting for it to end and trying to figure out like, maybe it's going to slow down in August.
Maybe it's going to slow down in September, but right now everybody's kind of thrown for a loop I think we we throw like some of the biggest change in decades into a few months
and that's our lives trying to turn to trying to adjust and accommodate for it and yeah over 100
days in it's been a little bit interesting I think I feel like for everybody just kind of
trying to find that what that new normal looks like kind of find like a cruising speed and um yeah finding a blend of
where life ends and work begins where where where where the weekend is versus what's during the week
and it's all kind of the same right now so and I think it's, you know, to that point, like we've transitioned to this.
I think, you know, something like this happens and the market changes and all these snowballs start really advancing downhill.
You're still kind of like prepping for, but it's going to go back to normal, you know, like in another two weeks or like you you tell yourself that i think for the first
month or in the second month and now we're three and a half months in and you know the new normal
is certainly overplayed it's now like this is somewhat of normal you know like this is the
things that have happened and they're transpiring in commerce and in business and in marketing and customer service.
A lot of things we'll dive into are here.
And this is the reality of now.
I mean, it's it's similar to kind of the first time everybody used an Uber.
I feel like it's you used an Uber the first time.
And at first it was a little bit intimidating, kind of embracing a new behavior and trying something different because you're getting into
a new car, you're getting in with somebody you don't know. But a lot of people tried it. And
after that first time, it's a lot easier to do those things. And you realize, hey, that saved
me a lot of time. Maybe next time I travel in a city, I'm not going to get a rental car. I'm just
going to take a few Ubers.
And a lot of the way that we've kind of changed our behavior kind of falls in that same category where we're trying something.
We've tried new things.
Some things we may use moving forward.
But sometimes some of these things we're probably definitely going to use moving forward because it saves us time.
It saves us frustration. And at the end of the day, it's another way for a business or an organization to connect
in a powerful way that adds value to the customer and kind of is a nice transaction for both parties.
And you see, again, grocery store and online delivery right now.
I don't know if my wife and I, we tried it here during,
started during the pandemic and it'll be hard to go back at this point just because
we're used to purchasing from our phones. We have all of our orders ready to go and I, we can have
our delivery ready to go within the day and it just makes it seamless and easy for us. Again,
ready to go within the day and it just makes it seamless and easy for us again having a 13 month of 13 month old home it also makes it nice not to have to navigate the the the kind of the treacherous
place that is the grocery store um again it's kind of a death trap now but um for for a 13 month old
again it could be dangerous for a little man trying to grab everything but trying to try to
navigate that saving time and energy it saves us a lot of time and a lot of effort.
It's going to change the way we shop, though, because the switching cost is suddenly higher because if we haven't ordered it in the past, it's not on our previous orders.
really matters and really is important because if you're picking it from,
if you're picking an assortment of products,
just kind of from your screen, like you would an e-commerce business,
that brand that's recognizable on a new environment,
it's pretty important. And once you've purchased it,
once you're going to probably purchase it again,
because it's easy and it's efficient for you.
So I think there's some really super fascinating components just in that area alone
that are going to be like, just exciting to kind of see moving forward. And sorry, I jumped into
the weeds there, but no, it's good. The it's funny when you think about it, going to the grocery
store sucks. Like, I'm sorry. I know there's some men, some women out there that might enjoy that experience but i think i can speak for the
majority in saying you don't really enjoy going spending an hour at the grocery store if i could
sit there and catch up on uh game of thrones or whatever i'm doing and and click click click
how much better is that i mean and you, like we talked about pre-episode,
like these sacred cows, like, well, you're never going to go,
you know, we started buying books online
and we started buying other things.
I'm never going to buy groceries because I got to see,
I got to feel that bread.
I got to know those grapes are ripe.
And, you know, it's a sacred cow.
We're never going to shop for groceries online.
But good grief, it made sense 20 years ago. It most certainly makes sense now. And it's like,
that's, these are the sacred cows that need to be just moved out of the way so that we can really
start advancing the ball in a lot of businesses. And I think that's, if we have one thing to
counsel businesses is to be thinking like anything that's been sacred
based on in person or some unnecessary system of delivery should be rethought right now right
and and like we see this happening in a lot i feel like that's happening in a lot of industries
right now too because you see kind of some people that are taking this kind of opportunity and doing fascinating things with it like um my wife um was trying to purchase some
face wash or cosmetics and as opposed to having a person kind of like set up a booth at a store
and have like have them kind of give her a consultate a one-on-one consultation she could
do it over zoom and if you had a few people at scale,
you could do multiple of those every day. And suddenly you're scaling a one-to-one interaction
and that person can opt in as opposed to passively walking along and seeing it at a mall or at a
department store. So it kind of makes this one-to-one interaction or one-to-one engagement super, again, personal, really
unique for that individual.
And then it's just that human-to-human touchpoint that really maximizes that lifetime value
because we're really kind of yearning for that interaction that we're kind of missing
in some ways.
But how do they bring that to a digital space?
It's not going to be completely the same. But if you can kind of change the direction of your approach to kind of promotion and kind of consultation with an individual product, there's a lot of different a lot more of a passionate advocate for that brand, because they know this person who's an expert helped me with it and helped me solve my problem.
And I feel like scaling that is really kind of cool to see. And where groups normally thought,
hey, I need a sales team out in the field doing these things. Like they're suddenly saying,
hey, why don't we put our sales team on Zoom? And hey, when this is all over, we may want to
keep them doing this because this is a lot more effective for them.
They're going to sell more, so they look a lot better.
And then it's a lot more efficient for customers because you don't have to go to the mall to suddenly get the insight you'd look for for specific products.
Exactly.
And talk about the evolution of e-commerce.
Hearing you talk, I'm evolution of e-commerce, like hearing you talk.
I mean, I'm thinking like ideas right now. Think about an Amazon would make the most sense.
But think about any, you know, any considered purchase or any consultative purchase.
If the if on the e-commerce site, you're you're browsing and right there, I know there's chat and there's stuff like that, but if someone can integrate the pop-up,
like a live person like you and I are right now, like pops up console,
like I'm looking at us and use the makeup example.
I'm looking at blush and I'm wondering if it has this chemical that might be
bad for my skin or whatever those, I don't, my blush days are, are past me.
But all I'm blushing is when, when you know my two-year-old
says something uh he shouldn't have uh at a store you know about his bowel movements but uh
but the uh but in all seriousness but that live yeah you got pop-ups but you're gonna see the
integration of like a live person pop up right there and there's going to be this demonstration and there's just so much opportunity for you know they talk about e-commerce in the future and
everything's moving online but now it's just like turning these dials of how much further can the
customer experience how much it can be improved when you kind of remove yourself from the notion
that it has to be in person yeah Yeah. And so much discovery for purchasing
used to happen in a store, in a location. You would find the things that you wanted. You didn't
know what you wanted, but you would go find it. You would find the ones that was the perfect fit
for you. But now so much discovery can happen in the digital channel that how do you take what was
an in-store experience at one point and bring it to the digital space and that's where it's really
kind of lining up where um that that high level of empathy around what somebody's looking for what
they need and how to serve them best is really becoming a differentiator for brands that are
doing it well and the ones that are kind of leading the pack in so many ways.
And like some of these groups are already doing it and they're just kind of expanding it now,
but can learn a lot from some of the more innovative industries around. Like again,
cosmetics is doing some really cool stuff and some really fascinating things are happening there.
But how do you apply that to other fields and other spaces too? Because I mean,
I'm sure for clothing, that's the same thing exists.
Like you've had a salesperson helping you with clothing,
like helping with fit or helping with like what to look for,
like just going to look good with my skin tone.
And suddenly you can do that on an over, over the, over a zoom call.
And there's lots of different verticals that this fits into.
So finding ways that you can do that and even
if you can't do it live even positioning yourself like hey schedule a consultation with our expert
like our fitting expert we'll have time at this time of the day and it's like a calendly where
they just jump into it and kind of go go into a conversation it's super easy for everyone around
and it just gives you part of your life back. And it's probably something that people are going to be looking for on a longer term because they want more niche products.
They want products that speak better to who they are as individuals and who they are as buyers.
So they're going to want something that's a little bit more human and a more human experience through a digital channel.
So trying to find ways to do that at scale is going to be really kind of interesting
to see different people giving me a try. And I think that kind of leads us into that,
the whole notion of the opportunity importance of customer service. You know, everything we're
kind of talking about is servicing. We're talking probably broadly about both new and existing customers but the the real it's so funny like
i worked working on large brands um you know back in the day even them it acquisition was always the
blinded tunnel like it was always acquisition acquisition acquisition acquisition like 80 90
percent of the time thought process, you go to the
C-suite meetings and you spend 90 minutes on acquisition and 10% on CRM or customer-based
marketing or whatever. And now looking through the lens of the way with which you service your customers and the opportunity for increased LTV, increased
upsells, increased referrals. Customer service is becoming as much or more important than any acquisition strategy?
So again,
it's knowing who your customer is and know what they need and kind of forecasting how to serve them best.
Cause probably the people that are coming back,
like speaking to your point,
like the cross out those,
those customers are going to also be a,
like they're likely going to order more or they're likely going to purchase
more because they've consistently purchased more and more of a basket from your business. And if you
serve them well, they're going to continue to do that. So once you, if you're a cosmetics business,
like I can't, sorry, keep using cosmetics. If you buy a mascara, suddenly you buy a lipstick,
you're probably going to buy both of those for a consistent period of time too. So your average
order value doubles and that lifetime value increases as time goes on.
And in a lot of ways, it's almost looking at this as like,
how do you position your business
almost like a subscription model?
So like thinking about this from like,
how do we just keep people coming back in regularly
and keeping them and maintain that relationship over time?
Because it's super important because again,
kind of to your point,
that a customer acquisition is one way to grow a business.
And every marketer spends so much time and attention on that,
like new customers, new customers, new customers, new customers.
But you're not paying an acquisition cost on a second-time purchaser.
And you're also not really being forced to do much of it.
If you're adding value to the relationship,
you're probably going to be driving that lifetime,
that average order value up too.
So it just naturally makes sense.
And that's kind of,
you see a lot of businesses trying to pivot towards that model.
Like, how do you get that, that almost like,
I think that the Scott Galloway, the Rundle,
like the reoccurring bundle that people are purchasing.
And that's, I mean, such a positive thing to have for a business.
And again,
it's focusing on different things, but lifetime value is probably going to be that metric that's going to be kind of that North star for so many more businesses now, because you can suddenly see
it. It has a little bit more transparency and it's, it's a little bit better understood in the
organization, but again, customer service, everybody knows about the bad customer service
experiences they've had, but the remarkable ones, the ones that really stand out, people almost
tell other people about them because it's so rare that you have a remarkable customer service
experience that it's a differentiator in so many ways. That's the closest touchpoint to your
business as a brand that anybody's
that most people are ever going to get so making that experience great and seamless is really
important yeah what um i i don't know that we know yet the true economic impact, you know, that all this has.
I mean, most certainly you've seen marketing budgets, I think,
come down pretty universally.
I think some stuff started to pick back up and, you know,
we've been fortunate being on the digital marketing side and the e-commerce
side, you know, which has been fortunate.
But I'm still, you know,
But I'm still, you know, stopping short of any prognostications on exactly what the true economic impact is eight, ten months from now.
I mean, what's your crystal ball showing on that?
I mean, there's already been drastic, and all I know is we can't keep printing money.
Honestly, yeah.
I mean, in normal times, I'd be like, yeah, I think these are the reasons I think this is going to happen.
I just, like, 2020 is just such a dumpster fire.
Like, this is years to make a prediction.
Like, this is absolutely going to be wrong. I think a lot of those, again, kind of that share of wallet where those dollars are going, are going to stay in a lot of those
channels, I think, because it's gone over there. It takes between like 21 and 30 days for a new
behavior to become a habit. And I think a lot of these cases where people are trying, like,
again, grocery delivery or a lot of these things. I think they're going to continue on.
I also think some of these businesses are going to see, hey, this is an effective channel for us to be using from a business perspective.
So we need to continue this onward.
I think I do see some drop from where we're at now in e-commerce sales going down slightly.
But it went from 15% to around 30% really fast
this year. And if it goes down to 28 or 25%, that's still a 10% jump in a year that like,
we weren't really expecting it. And it took 20 years for it to get to 15%.
Yeah. So again, kind of people that have been kind of the band-aids been ripped off for so
many people, them trying these new behaviors, these new things it gets easier and easier every time so next time they order online they're
like okay this is a shopify store i know how to use like they're gonna they're gonna send me a
code to my iphone for shopify and i'm gonna use that so i don't even have to worry about my credit
card information like lots of ways to make it seamless and easy for them and they're gonna
have more confidence doing that.
It'll be up in the air a little bit more, but I think the businesses that are really doubling down on how to make sure that they create a good experience and a valuable experience are going to be the ones that come out of this stronger and better because they've really honed their craft and become better for the new world we're going to be living in, whatever it looks like.
You know, just it seems like as good a time as any, you know, like looking at the landscape of e-commerce and changes.
And since you use the word Shopify in that last sentence, I'll use it as a bridge.
But the Walmart Shopify thing, you Shopify thing was just announced this week.
And I think in any other moment in time, that would be like the cannonball into the water.
But I think just because of the news cycle and everything else, it's not been quiet,
but it's probably quieter than it would have normally been.
But that's quite the behemoth of the news uh and the
opportunity for you know the million plus shopify small business small medium businesses uh to have
yet another channel direct channel with which to market and sell products it's pretty big news
i mean it's again i love that they did this and i'm so glad they did it as a partnership as opposed
to an acquisition yeah i was convinced like i truthfully like walmart the natural next step
made sense for shopify like it's they've been trying to do this for years jet didn't work out
the way they wanted it to um they've just never been able to really master the whole e-commerce
thing and even acquiring like smaller brands, like the Bonobos,
those have never been as successful
as they've wanted them to be
once they've been acquired by Walmart.
So this is kind of their opportunity
to kind of like distribute those shots.
But again, it's a platform
that gives those smaller groups,
those kind of the mom and pop stores,
a lot of power and a lot of,
again, opportunity
because they are never going to
necessarily outscale amazon but they can do their they can serve their niche and their community
better than amazon ever could because that's the only thing they specialize in they care about it
they focus on it and for them it's this kind of like blank canvas that they can really create a
business on that kind of makes the friction of all the things you have to do so much easier like again you you could probably speak to this is like
again building a shopify website how hard is it versus building a website 10 years ago or five
years ago it's you know night and day i mean really the the you know the the things you had
to worry about you know 10 years the cart experience, the product organization,
the integration.
It's written as complicated as all that stuff was.
The integrations that are now just automatic through Shopify, the biggest opportunity with
Shopify is really just the tech stack that you layer on top of it. And that's why you hire
someone like an us or another firm or whatever, you know, is for the knowledge and understanding
of those that the tech stack that you layer on and the person and the branding of it. But good
grief. I mean, now, I can't even in my right mind, nine out of 10 businesses that would approach us, I would be putting on Shopify.
I mean, you and I have had this discussion many times.
Even when we first started working together, I had my inhibition, not because I love Shopify, but I was still of that mindset that it wasn't right for certain businesses.
for certain businesses.
But as we're working with a fabric company that's got 20,000 SKUs
and gladly putting them on Shopify,
my mindset has changed with just the power
and the flexibility and the integrations
that 10 years ago would have taken a dev team of 20
and about $200,000.
Yeah, a lot of a lot of a lot of a lot of people
in a room in a dark room coding for days at a time and then it's gonna break and then you're
gonna have to fix it and and readjust and so much of that it's like creating a shopify account like
if you wanted to create a shopify store it's like almost as easy as like making your own facebook
page like you have to put like a few things here
and there, like fill it in and make sure your payment gateway is okay. But really it's super
simple and you can have one up in like a few hours. So it's, it takes away all that friction
that was there in the past and allows those merchants, those people that are really doing
it well to focus on what they do well, as opposed to worrying about all those like,
like nuts and bolts of running a backend of a website. Like you just got to keep, keep your business running and humming. And it's
going to be an efficient, it's going to be an efficient business because they get to focus on
either the marketing or the business, as opposed to focusing on all the technical sides of the
website. So it's a platform that kind of like an Amazon, it, it kind of a distributes a lot of the power across
the, across the network. And as more and more people see how it's done and see how easy it is,
we're going to see more and more groups jumping onto it. I think like Heinz ketchup was made,
made a Shopify account the other day, like Heinz ketchup. You never would imagine a CPG business
jumping on Shopify, but it's so easy. And suddenly they can sell direct to consumer.
And guess what? When you sell someone on Amazon, like it's, easy. And suddenly they can sell direct to consumer.
And guess what? When you sell someone on Amazon, that's Amazon's customer. Suddenly when you sell on Shopify, it's your customer and you can bring them back in and that LTV can increase and
increase. So for so many of those businesses, it makes so much logical sense and it's getting
easier and easier as the barriers go down. And then we're not reinventing the wheel every time
either. Because like you said, like the tech stack, like somebody's figured out shipping with Shopify.
So again, add an app, like somebody's figured out email with Shopify and an app, like it's just
simple, easy things you can do to, to make your process seamless. And hopefully again,
automate as much of that, as much of the work you're not going to be as skilled at and really do good work.
Yeah.
Now, you hit three buttons and suddenly your 10 to 2,000, how many ever products do you have, can go straight to Amazon and straight to Walmart.
All of it go there syncing automatically at two of the largest marketplaces in the world.
And, you know, it's two button clicks away.
And so it's just unbelievable.
It makes it really easy.
And that's a game changer that it is kind of that it represents in so many ways.
And then I know like Shopify Fulfillment is trying to come online soon.
So they want to have like, hey, if you can't warehouse it, you can't fulfill it.
That's a big problem for a lot of groups.
Warehousing and fulfillment, it's more of a headache than a lot of people expect it to be.
But if Shopify is doing that for you, again, at a percentage, naturally.
But if they're able to do that for you, that's another piece you don't have to worry about.
So again, you can almost be product-focused and product and customer-focused. And you don't have to worry about. So again, you can almost be product focused and product and customer focused, and you don't have to worry about the warehousing. You don't
have to worry about the fulfillment because they can handle it for you. And it's just opportunities
that they're opening up for those smaller retailers and smaller shops that are really
exciting to see kind of moving forward because that's where the real magic in our economy is going to happen is because amazon's going to grow amazon's going to continue to grow
but people are going to want more and more niche products because they really want to jump on board
with the story of the business that makes it like you care passionately about some a few things like
the commodities people can buy on amazon the the small, again, really thoughtful niche products can be bought on Shopify.
Exactly.
Is, what else are you seeing out there that, you know,
feels news and noteworthy?
I think we talked a little bit pre-episode that I thought was pretty interesting.
The whole how connected marketing is now to the entire business.
You've got sales and marketing and customer service and operations and all this, and now it just feels like marketing has not necessarily their hands, but definitely just feels at the table in all of those.
It's a reality right now. I think the CMO is a more likely role as a CEO next step is the next step than
there ever was in the past,
because you have so many hands in so many cookie jars across the organization.
Like if you blend together marketing with PR and then it,
and then PR it and then customer service,
that's basically what marketing entails right now.
It's like every different customer touch point in so many cases,
because you have to understand what the customer needs what the
customer wants and how how they how they think act and feel and when finding a way to kind of
tie all those together in a really seamless package is going to be kind of like a differentiator for
so many businesses so the marketer has to kind of wear so many different hats but they have to
be kind of customer obsessed in so many ways because they're touching that customer in so many different places and finding ways to position the company.
Like you hear feedback from customers who haven't been happy with something or whatever.
That's an opportunity for them to grow and change. And it's kind of more magnified in this space because if you're in a digital space, the operations completely change and that storefront is suddenly your website or your app.
And that's where so much of this interaction is happening.
And again, lining those things up really smoothly and seamlessly is going to be a differentiator moving forward.
lining those things up really smoothly and seamlessly is going to be a differentiator moving forward.
So it's interesting how, you know,
at a certain time in place you had a product or service and you had
packaging and you had marketing and I, you know,
having worked on Verizon for a number of years,
we had different cell phones coming out and it was Droid and this
and that. And there's like, you know, the catchy campaign that was about that. And it's not that
there's not room for that anymore. There's still room for that. But now as a marketer,
consumers want so much and deserve so much transparency in every single asset of where did you get the components of that
thing how was it made who was who was working on it what's what's the makeup of your company what's
the it's not just catch me with a gimmicky product and and win me my heart mind and soul now there's
just like this and i don't know if it's self brought on or if it's
reality if consumers really want to know but you have to like that the luggage of the marketer
you went from i just had this carry-on bag and man now i got the carry-on bag the two-week luggage
and everything else to kind of go with me and how i tell those messages you know yeah i i have to i
have to understand it had a message around supply chain transparency and
like not having messaging that's not going to resonate.
And I have to understand how a tech stack works too.
And just all of these finite things, it becomes really daunting,
really fast. And like, again, it probably, again,
there's opportunity for burnout there, but it's,
it's kind of becoming that again again, a more and more important role. And in a
lot of organizations, it's hard because it doesn't have the weight it deserves in so many cases.
Like, again, as a marketer, I feel passionately and strongly about this, but it's really hard to
do all of those things at the same time. And in so many cases, like you need to, a lot of people
need to either delegate and get those off their plate or need more resources for the marketing organization or giving more power to the marketing piece of the organization to make those decisions and have, again, you're going to hear it before the product is shipped, after it's shipped, what their experience is like.
And again, a lot more transparency because nobody buys anything without reviews anymore like you go use reviews at the grocery store anymore so like i'm going to
creep on amazon when i'm at the grocery store like again back in the old days like 100 days ago but
you need that like that's a kind of table stakes that people use now like you don't make decisions
without a review so you need that social proof and you again that whole experience ties
back into how do you make how do you make a seamless journey for everyone and give them
what they need along the along that path you know these are interesting times my friend um but
always good to catch up um and you know i think it's
the case studies that are going to come out of like this year will be fascinating
it's gonna be it's yeah i definitely think so i think this will be one of the times that we just
like look back and like wow did that all happen like that was all 2020 and just like 2019 was
crazy enough like 2020 2020. Yeah.
Everybody's just hoping for a very nice slow down right now. Like moving down, like, yeah.
Just trying to figure out a way to like make it a little bit slower and make
a little more calm, but yeah. Exciting things going on. What, what's been,
what's the coolest project you have on the, in the, on the hopper right now?
You know, we, I mentioned the fabric company you know there's a
company that working with that's you know been in business for 30 or 40 years if not longer i
think it's three generations i'm probably shortchanging them 10 or 20 years but a long time
and they're moving to e-commerce um they just have price and selection that will really immediately
put them in the national leadership position uh with their e-commerce presence and it's fascinating
taking something that's just been offline a hundred percent you know a lot of times companies
come to us and it's like improving a digital experience or improving e-commerce um but taking a historically always offline
business that has the volume of opportunity that they have is is fascinating and interesting
scary and great at the same time so um you know, you know, they, they, they're leaning on
us heavy and we're there to kind of, and that's both, um, a responsibility, but also exciting
because when you know, you can help someone and it doesn't mean, you know, we get everything right
or anything like that, but generally speaking, we know what we're doing.
And so it's fun watching that all come together and building that kind of from the ground up.
I mean, that is a tall order, especially a large organization.
No digital presence and suddenly becoming an online brand.
Yeah.
No pressure all day. Yeah, no pressure we accept it gladly well cool man it's been good i uh love catching up with you
look forward to the next one and um i hope everyone has a great fourth including yourself
and you've been trying to that closet now i know or bedroom yeah this is yeah i guess better in this yeah kind of studio
now kind of yeah the studio yeah yeah yeah exactly um whatever whatever our house is like everybody's
like on a spaceship right now you're spending your whole life in one space um yeah have a good
fourth have some good time with the fam maybe you'll probably get on a lake i'm guessing oh yeah oh yeah we'll be on the boat but cool man well that's all for today's episode of the radical
marketing podcast now known as radcast my producer will be very upset if i don't start
naming that more radcast and i appreciate robbie fits water coming on. Go follow Robbie on LinkedIn. Great insight, great takes, and we'll look forward to having him on soon. And we'll see you next time.
You guys have a good one.
To learn more about Radical, visit radical.company on the web or follow Ryan on Instagram at Ryan Alford.
Thanks for listening to the Radical Marketing Podcast.