Right About Now with Ryan Alford - Weekly Marketing and Advertising News: Bed, Bath, & Beyond; Home Happier; Shop-streaming; Dollar Tree Media Network; New York Post Shopping Widget; ACE Hardware DIY Influencers
Episode Date: April 22, 2021Welcome to another weekly marketing and advertising news update from The Radcast! In this episode, host Ryan Alford and co-host Reiley Clark, dissect this week's marketing and advertising headlines.Th...ese are today's topics:Bed, Bath, & Beyond -- Home Happier Campaign.Brazilian Company, Magalu, and Deezer team up to create a shop-streaming service for musicians.Dollar Tree's new Media Network.New York Post placing shopping widgets on posts to make shopping for products easier.ACE Hardware DIY Influencer partnership.If you enjoyed this episode of The Radcast, leave us a review on Apple Podcasts. Subscribe and share the word if you love our podcast, so we can keep giving you the strategies to achieve radical marketing results! You can follow us on Instagram @the.rad.cast | @radical_results | @ryanalford | 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
you're listening to the latest radcast news update here's ryan and riley
hey guys what's up welcome to the latest edition of the radcast it's the marketing
and news episode it's friday april 16th and we come to you live well live today at least for us in our podcast studio
home of radical the baddest the coolest the motherfucking greatest digital agency on the
planet i'm lively on a friday riley what's up hey no yeah that was a lively introduction we
got the energy today we're gonna put that uh in our headline on the website
now yeah that's our new intro b-a-m-f agency yeah yeah i had to say that in my head had to
type out the acronym let me get a little more of my coffee here before i start thinking about
acronyms how's your week on it wait pause we have some big news today just internally um especially for you yeah bradley's podcast with
you dropped officially it did yesterday yes being thursday the thursday the 15th depending on when
you listen to this the dropping bombs podcast went out to vegas last week episode aired yesterday
beginning a lot of positive feedback which which I really, really appreciate.
So go give it a listen.
You can search for The Real Bradley.
I actually gave him shit for that name and said, dude, just be Bradley, man.
I've seen people do that anymore.
They go, they do it because people take your username.
Like on Twitter, someone was Bradley and he didn't want them, you know, they may even be posing as him.
So that's why they come out the real, you know, a lot of people had, you know, the posers
or they just want, someone's already taken their name.
And so that's why do this now.
I secured Ryan Offord at Ryan Offord on every platform in like 2007 or eight, like whenever
Instagram came out,
go back in your time machine. But it was awesome. Brad was great. Great interview. I listened to
the, you know, you do it in live. I felt good. Went back and listened to it. I think we definitely
dropped some bombs. Brad has some good knowledge. He's a natural marketer as well. I think there's
some innate marketing in certain people and he definitely has it. And I felt like we had a
really great energy and the feedback's been great. So go listen to dropping bombs. 2021
marketing strategies is kind of the working title. I like that. That's awesome. Yeah, it was fun. A
lot of fun. Talked about my my background talked about some recommendations and you know
it was a wide-ranging conversation yeah yeah but it's good because i mean you've been back this
week and you know you had a couple weeks of just all the all the activities vegas we're just we're
just on the world tour here exactly exactly the uh but yeah it's been a good week back in the
office we uh are busy as all get out, which is good.
We're hiring.
We've got like five positions open.
And so if you know anyone looking for a marketing advertising job,
wanting to potentially transport to Greenville, South Carolina, give us a call.
We do some remote stuff, but it has to be a pretty specialized position.
We like to keep the teamwork is what makes the dream work. So
I still like, we got a nice space here. We are open for business here in South Carolina. And so
we are definitely safe, but look, we got to get shit done. We got clients that need
to feed some babies. Exactly. Exactly. Exactly. No, yeah. No, it's been a great week and,
babies exactly exactly exactly no yeah no it's been a great week and you know still excited about the website the radcast.com the new website uh all of our content's aggregated now with all the
episodes it looks awesome yeah it does look great it really it really turned out well and i even use
it as this morning i was going back and i was looking. My sheets came in from Sheets and Giggles. I saw your, that was.
I haven't slept on them yet.
I'm sleeping on them tonight.
I was messaging with Colin last night.
He was like, it'll be life-changing, brother.
He's like, he says, as soon as you get in, I want you to message me tomorrow night.
What's up, man?
I'm in, I'm in.
Talk to you soon, man.
Sheets and Giggles, eucalyptus sheets.
But then we've washed and dried them. And I'm like, oh. And we have nice sheets. talk to you soon man but sheets of giggles eucalyptus sheets but then
we've washed and dried them
and I'm like oh
and we have nice sheets
I mean we have like
those premium ones
from Costco or whatever
right
and you know
they feel nice to me
but this feels a little
silky
so yeah
but sheets and giggles
I was looking
for his episode
because I wanted
to find something
and I went on
theradcast.com
and I did a search for sheets and sure enough any topic you're looking for entrepreneurship
instagram personal branding mother whatever you want to look up I may not have maybe I don't know
if that's gonna be on there but yeah who knows I don't know no but it going to be on there, but. Yeah, who knows?
No, but it's good.
It's like really exciting.
We have a lot of really cool episodes coming out and we're, you know, jam packed with recordings in the next couple of weeks too, which is awesome.
And the episode that's coming out on Tuesday is a phenomenal episode with, again, he's
our reoccurring guest now.
Love him.
Samrat Saran and his buddy from Rochester School of Business, Salim Holder.
Salim Holder is CMO of Fourth Avenue Market.
If you're familiar with that company, really awesome conversation about e-commerce and
just building your community and your brand.
And it just hit everything that we talk about here.
So it was just awesome.
Yeah, really good conversation. You know, we've talked about this before. We love all of our
guests equally and very appreciative, but you know, I might have an off day. The guests might
be nervous. There's stuff that just happens and the conversation may not flow as freely.
Well, this just flowed really freely. We were all kind of on the same wavelength, even digitally.
Really great conversation about Fourth Avenue using community, using kind of giving back to the black community combined with the power of neuro and all the other things we've been talking
about from a marketing standpoint. It was just a really, really cool. I think it's going to be
enlightening and helpful
to businesses of all sizes so i would definitely give that a listen coming out tuesday the 20th
yes yeah so all the same bat channels all the same bat times yeah that's an old batman there's
old batman same bat channel same bat times if you're older if you're over 40 is that the 60s is that oh it's like the 60s batman the one with the bam pow and what's his uh who yeah and the weird tight adam west yeah
and the tight suit that kind of makes you uncomfortable yeah it's a little uncomfortable
it's a classic i was always on a cracker barrel and i was like oh that's interesting
yeah but uh it's fun though but yeah, I think that's it.
Here's Riley with the news.
Here is the Radcast News.
All right.
Again, our topics today, I think, really hit a lot of the conversation that will be coming out on Tuesday.
But this is all really important stuff to talk about in a real tangible way. Our first topic, Bed Bath & Beyond, is trying to improve the shopper experience by really focusing on, they quoted like the sanctuary of the home,
and really just trying to focus on how people, obviously in a COVID world and a lot of people
now working remotely, you know, your home is where you're spending the bulk of your time anymore.
you know, your home is where you're spending the bulk of your time anymore.
And this is a really interesting strategy to focus on creating your space in your home, really focusing on the human, the customer and really awesome kind of strategy.
And, uh, but we had different opinions on the video.
Yeah.
Uh, all right.
I'm going to, I'm going to do a, where they got it right and where they got it wrong. Here we go. That could be the whole segment of all of these. Hold anything where they got it right. I'm going to do where they got it right and where they got it wrong.
Here we go.
That could be the whole segment of all of these.
Hold on.
Where they got it right?
It reminds me of Colin Cowherd.
He does a where Colin was right, where Colin was wrong.
Well, we'll say we're bed, bath, and beyond.
We're not scared to steal a good stick around here.
But look, love, the tagline, home happier. Is that what it is tagline, home happier.
Is that what it is?
Yeah, home happier.
Cool.
Look, Bed Bath & Beyond, if anyone is going to put a stake in the ground and own the positioning
of the home and the importance of the home and to be the brand that can kind of bring
that all together, Bed Bath & Beyond is positioned to do that.
They've had some declines.
Obviously, COVID crushed them with retail stores.
They're obviously retail store driven.
And so I like the premise of this.
It's based on the insight and the fact that people are home.
Home is now the sanctuary.
It's always been the sanctuary, but it's like work, play, everything else now, family.
And so I think they're spot on with the strategy.
But I was missing the video was a little choppy for me.
You know, we do this for a living.
So I guess we can we can judge.
I'm sure our stuff gets judged, too.
None of us are perfect, but it was a little choppy for me.
I felt like it was the VO was really good.'m really getting down into the nigger to here but the vo the girl that's
on there felt great she felt appropriate i like tagline i liked what they were trying to do it
felt a little flat at the end though but uh it's just a little chopping around the home the shots
the way it was shot so it kind of did i put it in the i put it in the video i mean it kind of it's
just like transition some of the transitions just didn't make sense to me but hey uh the other thing
is i didn't see the omni channel like you know e-commerce is booming it's grown seven times
what it was expected to in one year and where's the omni channel there was no mention of that
you know online offline experience and yeah i know they're investing all this stuff back in the stores, all these things for the home.
Typically, people go and want to feel, touch, feel, look like for the home.
But look, we're buying cars online now.
So like, where's the what is the omni channel approach and how is this how is this needle being thread in the online experience?
And maybe I admittedly will give them time to figure that out.
Maybe I missed it in the story, but I was kind of following along in the pieces, and no one seemed to mention that.
And I'm like, that feels like a little bit of a disconnect here in 2021.
But again, like the notion here, like that it's based on a true insight, uh, video felt a little flat for me or commercial.
Hopefully that commercial gets,
uh,
repurposed appropriately for the right channels.
And they don't just shove the TV spot into a tick tock and Instagram.
But,
uh,
we'll see.
I have my doubts,
you know,
but not because I doubt bed,
bath and beyond,
but just a lot of brands still do that.
And it drives me crazy,
but we'll see. Cool. Play cool. Cool. Tag lot of brands still do that, and it drives me crazy. I know.
We'll see.
Cool play.
Cool tagline.
Let's bring it all together there.
Omni-channel approach and see if they can move the needle and get things back headed in the right direction.
I still like the postcard with the 25% off. Just going to say the big-ass postcard my mom put on the refrigerator.
The home was spotless, and we've got uh 17 by 11 postcard on the fucking refrigerator i'm like
yeah 25 off one item brilliant though every woman in america they used to be shoved in their
pocketbooks hanging out of them do not do not bail on that approach as long as you don't do that you
can do whatever else you want exactly so. So the spot's actually fine.
No, just kidding.
Just kidding.
No, but no, that's a great topic.
And our next one focuses on a Brazilian company who is trying to focus on improving, again,
kind of improving specifically how musicians are able to purchase instruments and ensuring
that when you know, when you
hear something on a, they're calling it like shop streaming, and this is becoming a term that you're
going to see more of. And if you haven't seen it already, it's a way of like combining e-commerce
and live streaming. But essentially you're going to be hearing a, you know, a song or whatever it
is, and you're going to go, oh my gosh, a guitar is that? And then you're going to be able to link it to the guitar, actually purchase the guitar. It's really cool way
of who are your influencers? Who are your people? What are they using? And how can you get that
exact same product? Super cool concept. All right. A few, few layers to this. First,
I'm going to start with a personal story. I grew up in a family of musicians. My dad's band actually, you know, we have a 5,000 square foot old building here that we co-work half of radicals in half of we have our studio. My dad's band comes and practices here on Monday nights.
families into music. I played guitar and piano growing up. I still pick at the guitar a bit.
I'm good. Good guitar player, I guess, but can't sing worth shit. But all to say, growing up,
Dave Matthews was all in high school. And you'd hear Dave Matthews and I'd be like,
man, what kind of guitar does he play? What that you know so i think there's a total insight here for music junkies that do hear music and they want to know that number one the bigger play
though here is you know magalu i'm probably butchering that the brazilian equivalent of amazon
the way that they're bringing this to life through being able you know they're using deezer which if everybody's heard of
it's it's probably more popular in brazil but like it's it's here in the u.s another platform for
music podcasts everything else uh and to be able to kind of go to there bring up a song and then
shop directly within the app all integrated this is the future of commerce. This entertain, this, you know,
your experience on the phone,
entertainment combined with shopping,
combined with engagement.
This is the future of shopping
because you're going to see this more and more.
You're going to be watching a TV show
and you're going to see a girl with a blouse on.
You're going to, I want to buy that.
You're going to be able to click a button.
This is coming.
If it's, and and but this is like the
manifestation of it you know within the music app really smart have no idea how many instruments
still sell but obviously magula is making a you know a category they're growing in and so you know
i love it who wouldn't want to know what like axl rose or slash from gungeon roses what what bass
player what what what is he playing there?
What else is instruments?
And you'd probably be surprised
how many instruments are in certain songs.
Sometimes you don't realize it
and there's like 14 things going on.
A hundred percent.
Just give me more cowbell, baby.
Where did the cowbell get bought?
Just give me the cowbell.
I can play that.
Ding, ding, ding.
It's going to be interesting though.
You know, I was thinking about this a little bit too.
It's going to be interesting how this manifests into other areas, too.
I mean, you're talking about women's, you know, blouse or, you know, whatever it is.
And that's obviously, I think, coming, too.
But I'm waiting for, you know, you're watching a live soccer game and, you know, you see
like your favorite soccer player like running and you're like, you know, OK, I want those
cleats like and there's like a price tag or something like 474 dollars what oh my god dude if you think that's expensive have you did you ever
you swim did you swim oh yeah okay swimsuits like racetrack or race oh yeah ridiculous insane yeah
but that's another tangent there's like gold in them or something i don't know it has to be
it has to be those things are 500 but, you're seeing the integration. Look,
shop streaming, live streaming, whatever streaming, all this intersection is coming
together with live commerce. There's my name, live commerce. I think I'm going to set up.
Let's see if that URL is available. Probably not.
I'll edit that out. No, I'm just kidding.
Do not take that. Do not. So if you're listening to this before we can go do it, live commerce. But that kind of is it.
That's true. call it this notion of frictionless buying what you want, when you want intertwined with
entertainment and what you're doing naturally, because here's what's happened. I'm going to go
deep here. So you have this situation with cookies are going away. Ads are diminishing because people have ad fatigue.
And so we have never really found,
and Samrat actually got around to this.
You're going to listen to a little bit of this on Tuesday.
It actually ties right in.
And he's so right on this.
And I've been thinking about this.
Online was set up to be where you bought what you saw in store somewhere else.
It wasn't ever thought of as
discovery and natural selection the way you go and shop. Some stores have come around to this,
gotten better at it. This is like the evolution of online commerce for the way that we will be
marketed to and buy things in a more natural setting. I'm watching entertainment that I choose to watch.
And instead of having an ad, I have an influence or something like that. I'm engaging with,
you know, cause that shirt, that book that, you know, it's product placement from like the
soap operas, like literally soap operas were, you know, they had a box of soap sitting on the
counter while she was talking about something dramatic in her kitchen.
And that's where the name soap hoppers came from.
And this is the digital evolution of all of that come true, which is and you can buy it and have it at your doorstop the next day.
And so this is just the evolution of commerce.
That's what we're looking at here.
And like some brands are certain doing things and it's tactical.
commerce. That's what we're looking at here. And like some brands are certain doing things and it's tactical, but this is really a more broad changing of the way that we shop and the way that
we engage with content and the way that brands have to build experiences with their clients
and with their customers. So there you have it.
Yeah. Nice. No, that was, that was really good. And I think it's a perfect segue kind of into our next topic, which is Dollar Tree is creating this customized digital platform,
essentially to give you real time digital, this real time digital experience of what brands you're
looking for, what products you're looking for, and just trying to connect it in an easier way.
And, you know, we talked about this a bit pre-episode, you know, too,
but there's a lot here that, again, you're talking about, you know,
cookies going away, this ad kind of thing going away,
things kind of going in-house a little bit more.
And this is just showing that kind of evolution as well.
Yeah. Well, Walmart is doing that. We talked about that a few weeks ago. So what's happening is these big retail
brands have all this customer data and they have all of these platforms. They have apps,
they have their websites, they have media channels channels and they're figuring out they've got to monetize. They have this ability to monetize in other ways, especially when you're a curator of things. This is no different than Amazon, who's a product listed, you buy ad space. If you want to get recommended or do all these things, you pay to play to be in the search bar.
Pay-per-click, same thing with Google.
Well, Walmart's, the Dollar Tree's of the world are setting up essentially their own ad networks.
They say media networks, but let's just make it as clear as possible.
This is an advertising network where brands can buy ads that get placed within these mediums that Dollar
Tree has their app, their website otherwise. So if you have products within the store, it's going to
make a ton of sense to promote here. If you need to get after rich targeting towards the segments
that Dollar Tree serves, which is typically lower household income or frugal people like my wife.
And that's if you,
you,
they have all this first party data at their hands and with cookies going away,
like we mentioned,
where you can't track first party data,
who he,
who has the data is he who winneth the game. Is that an old English proverb or something?
No, it's a new English proverb. And so you got to know who you're targeting. And with the cookies
going away and not being able to do that by just checking two boxes on Facebook like you used to,
you need that first party data so that you can know how to serve the most appropriate content to them.
And that's what drives me a little bit crazy.
I know it's about privacy.
I totally understand it.
I believe in that.
I don't want people like tracking my every move.
You know, like that's scary shit.
But I want to be served relevant ads.
You know, like I don't.
What's that line?
I mean, you know, I'm, you know, a straight white man.
I don't want pantyhose in my feed. I mean, you know what I mean? Like because suddenly they don't know how to, you know, I get what you're saying.
Yeah. You know, like I just why do the content be relevant?
And so I think some of what we're doing is going to hurt and make the ads worse.
But, you know, brands are transitioning to other monetary, you know,
ways to monetize.
They're also transitioning to other media, like we talked about with Magulu.
And, you know, so it's a good evolution, but we'll see.
But it's still limiting.
It's still going to be a walled garden where, you know,
you don't have access to the entire internet.
Like the beauty of like DSPs in general ad buying when you do programmatic is it covers, you know, 75% of the internet.
So that wherever that customer is on any website, whatever, you can hit them.
You've got scale and reach.
This is going to be a limited scale and reach. This is going to be a limited scale and reach, and it's behind a wall garden, I imagine,
because you could probably buy directly through Dollar Tree's,
whatever their ad network's going to be called.
And so, you know, I'm sure they'll make money.
I'm sure it'll make sense for the certain brands.
I mean, if you're selling in Dollar Tree,
why wouldn't your first dollar's pitch probably be on this ad network?
100%, right.
But we'll see where it goes.
But times are changing.
Speaking of times changing,
New York Post,
I almost said New York Times,
wrong publication.
New York Post, though,
this is, I think this is interesting.
I feel like you and I
have different opinions on this
when we talked about
this little pre-episode.
But the New York Post is essentially providing shopping widgets for you in some of their art not all the articles but
in some of the articles where they are touching on you know this is the product this is why we
recommend you use this product or this is why you need this product here's a widget to shop for this product, you know, at this direct
store, wherever it is. I know you think this is just following the money and, you know, whoever
obviously had the biggest money to put their, you know, ad essentially in this widget. But, you know,
I maybe I just, you know, think too positively, but I just would hope that, you know, they are
being honest with, no, this is a really good product and here is that.
But that goes into the whole conversation of honest branding anymore anyway.
Okay.
Here we go.
This is called, if you didn't know.
Okay, so the New York Post, historically a newspaper.
All these newspapers lost a ton of money when the printed newspaper is essentially dead.
I mean, there's still, you know, 30 or 40,000.
The circulation for these papers used to be in the millions.
And now it's like 30 or 40,000, you know, like New York Post might be more than that, but like the smaller ones, even less.
So they had to make up the revenue somewhere.
They're monetizing their websites. No problem. My problem is mistaking editorial journalism
for advertisement is what I call this. Advertainment, advertorial, where these brands are paying to be here, and then they get placed in media.
And look, I love native advertising.
Like, we do that for clients, where we do want it to look and feel and not be like an ad,
where it feels like it's part of the content.
If there's a story about a certain thing, the product naturally flows in.
And maybe I'm splitting hairs here.
But when you set up like these articles that we recommend these five hand lotions or whatever it is, and then they've got the widget.
And look, I love relevant content at the right time.
But part of this is that good story here.
I'm not even knocking the New York Post here.
This is more just a universal feeling on this.
I just don't like it.
Just know this. I just don't like it. Just know this. If you're a consumer and you think that
you're reading the five best, this, the four best, this, two of these and all this sort of firsthand
one-to-one reviews that you, from someone you trust, don't believe everything you read. Like
it doesn't mean that some of these products probably aren't great, but they pay to be on these positions.
And so as long as we're clear on that, as long as it's clear, the difference between editorial content and ad content, then fine.
And I don't mind.
Look, I want it to be a better experience for the customer.
So, again, might be splitting hairs, but I think it's important that, you know,
we not get lured into thinking, wow, these are really recommended products. No, those are products
that got ads bought for them and they wrote an article around it, you know? And so just be
careful with that. If you're a consumer, if you're a brand, then hell, you should be getting involved here. Because if you can look like your products, you know, part of this ultra recommendation,
you know, I don't know.
And maybe look, look, for all I know, they have all these editors or these people that
are really making good, solid reviews.
But don't be mistaken that those people weren't paid the the media company wasn't paid to have that
run in there so totally and i i hear what you're saying on that i guess it's just more of like a
you know you you want you want to believe that that's there for the consumer you know what i
mean you want to believe that but like i have some land in iceland too
that can sell you so our last topic today does anyone want to buy some parcel of land in iceland
and just give me a call it's called 1-800-SCAM-YOU Yikes. On WWIFM. Yeah, exactly. No. So our last our last topic for today, Ace Hardware is trying to target an audience that hasn't historically been their original target audience before. And I think this is a really brilliant strategy to encourage the Gen Z millennials. You know, no, I was more of me more of me yeah i'm the gen z if you're watching
the video raleigh's like raising her hand i thought she was waving to someone outside of her studio
she is nope that's me no it's just i'm gen z over here gen z uh no but you know our first
we're first gonna be after gen z gen alpha going back to a but But pause. Gen, I'm going to get on this for a second.
Alpha omega.
Gen alpha.
That's like the first, right?
But like alpha, you know how people are like, I'm an alpha male or an alpha female or whatever.
You think we're just setting up that generation to be alpha?
You're setting them up to be arrogant.
Like, I'm like, don't do that to them.
These are the toddlers that had iPads, you know,
that's that generation.
Anyway, I'm done off that tangent.
But anyway, I'm Gen Z.
Gen spoiled.
Yeah, exactly.
So no, but us Gen Zers and millennials,
the zillennials of us,
we, you know, first time home buyers,
like we're getting really into this DIY trend.
And so this is really a smart way
for ace hardware they're trying to partner with you know the gen z millennial people that are the
diys on you know social platforms to encourage essentially the connection of ace hardware your
diy projects and how you can make that dream come true from ace really cool concept it's kind of
making me consider go to ace more versus los i mean i like
it look you're seeing a lot of these i'll call them an older brand i'm even around as long as
i can remember so that i'm 43 years old so it's a 40 year old brand at least right maybe uh god i'm
old the uh i don't feel old but that sounds old you, you know? Yeah. I digress on that.
But you're going to see these historically older brands that still need to market and do business with a younger audience, leveraging influencers.
Very smart.
This is what they need to be doing.
Yes.
They have all these channels where, because here's what happens.
You have all these channels now.
because here's what happens.
You have all these channels now.
And look, when it was just Facebook and you could,
if the brand that did it right
still tweaked their creative a little bit
for the platform,
you could trust that Ace Hardware
could do that themselves, potentially.
Hopefully with a good agency,
they could make that happen.
Ace Hardware hardware excuse my
it sounds like bad grammar but i think it's still in the dictionary ace hardware ain't putting a
cool tiktok together video themselves well without a lot of damn help and i think and so thus they're
leveraging the natural environment the influencers that are doing this already so that it builds credibility,
it makes the content better,
and it creates and makes the brand seem more relevant.
Win, win, win.
And so you're seeing brands that do this
and they can't keep up with the demands of the content.
So you've got to pay to get help
with this consumer-generated content.
And it checks off a lot of boxes anyway right but
you know i'd love to see what ace like the marketing no offense i'm a marketing director
ace is never gonna hire us but uh the uh you know what they would naturally think to do on tiktok
you know yeah it wouldn't be pretty i have no i know but i like i think for me i like the honesty
of ace like when i was reading this article it was like look we know this is not our target audience and it never has been like that's honest like so we're gonna use our in like the influencers that are making these really cool DIY things or whatever and you know transforming their houses or whatever they're doing into these really cool projects. We're going to use them to
identify, you know, this is how you can make that happen with ACE, even though historically we might
not have been able to get you before. Like we want you to know we're here for you. And I just
love that narrative. Like I just, I really like the honesty of that versus what you're, and it's
true. I mean, if they would have done this themselves you know respectfully it wouldn't have been done well the execution would have been
terrible yeah and so you know and look you have all the like if you come into our house
nicole and i don't get to sit down and watch much television but when we do hgtv is on and
you know chip and joanne have kind of sailed into the sunset to their own channel now.
But it's either fixer upper, flip or flop.
My hometown, whatever it is, don't really care for that one.
But I like how you have your opinions.
I do.
I like flip or flop.
I like Torek.
You know, we had him actually on a home builder that we're working with and had him doing some influencer stuff.
So he's cool.
I like Torek.
But, yeah, the guy, the big dude on, I'm going to be real personal, but Nicole and I joked about this.
The big dude on our home, he is a sweaty beast.
Every episode, he is a sweaty man.
He is like sweating through like every and i know they're
like in down home arkansas or alabama or something is hot as hell yeah i was gonna say but he's a
big dude like big i'm a big dude but he's like i don't know six five like 350 pounds no he's not
even like totally overweight he's just a big human being he's a little overweight but nice guy super talented
like not knocking him man he's a sweaty beast though he was watching him he's like he was just
walking around he wasn't even doing work he was just showing a home with someone and they i'm
like why didn't the producers change his shirt he's like bless his heart i mean i'm like oh gosh
anyway sorry that has nothing to do with it. But my point is. It all goes together. My wife follows all of these influencers and DIY stuff.
She's very thrifty and very.
Crafty.
Crafty.
Yeah.
I love the Christmas wine corks.
Oh, yeah.
You should have seen the white winter party we had.
She took sticks from our in-law,
her parents' farm,
and painted them all white and had this stuff.
I don't know. I was like,
anyway.
But she follows all these guys,
and they're
influential on her.
And so thus,
and we may be out of the
Gen Z, but neither one of us are gen z i guess she's gen x i'm
gen x i don't know what she is but she's a little younger than me yeah and mariam young she's like
five years younger but uh yeah but she she watches all these shows if ace is doing something with one
of these we're gonna it's gonna be in her feed i'll
tell you that well no 100 and i think that's the other thing too i mean i think i think there's a
lot of when you're in the diy space no matter what age it is if you like the diy aspect of it this is
gonna hit home for you in some way or another and i think you know for me like i really wanted i
took this initiative on last year and i had some help back in West Virginia before I moved down here actually, but I built my couch. Um, and cause I wanted, I'm looking at you. I
remember you telling me that. Yeah. I wanted a more functional couch. I wanted a couch that has
a table on the back and you know, it's just this nice little, I, you know, had help with, um,
you know, amazing guy back in West Virginia. He's like, basically, you know, they're like family to me, but Tony helped me build this couch. And, um, essentially I just
wanted it to feel more, more spacious. I'm a long person. I'm a very, I mean, I'm six foot.
Yeah. I'm very, you know, and I'm lanky and it's like, I wanted my space to have like this table
behind it where I have, so I have four chairs and essentially this one piece of furniture
in my apartment can sit eight people.
And like, that's like, that's, you know, that's nice, you know, but I wonder if our combined
height is like the tallest duo in podcasting.
Ooh, I bet.
I bet.
Yeah.
Especially when we get, unless like Shaquille O'Neal's doing one or something. Yeah, I know. I bet. Hopefully. Yeah, especially when we get... Unless like Shaquille O'Neal's doing one or something.
Yeah, I know, I know.
And when we have Noah Sims come on,
which, you know, plug for that event as well.
We've got to throw that in there too.
GVL Hustle event, which is coming up in two weeks.
April 29th.
Yes, but Noah Sims will be here for that,
and that's going to be so awesome.
So we're going to try to do another podcast with him too.
But yeah, I'd say the three of us,
I definitely think we...
He's 6'7". We definitely have it. Yeah, 6'7". We're going to have him in the studio i'd say the three of us i definitely think he's six seven we're
gonna have we'll have him in the studio we'll get three chairs we'll definitely we're gonna
we need to call guinness what is the tallest combined height of three hosts on a podcast at
once i think that would take it six seven six five six foot and one of them being a woman so
you have to have like some yeah at least one woman in there.
I know, I know.
Yeah, we have got a good spread.
Yeah, exactly.
All the generations and everything's good.
Yeah.
But props to Ace.
I'm excited about it and see where it goes.
Yeah.
Hey, I love it.
Influencer.
It should be part of your marketing mix, people.
Influencers.
I don't care how big or small you are.
Even if you're a small insurance guy,
get you like some influencers. Like, you know, you if you're a small insurance guy, get you some influencers.
You're trying to hit that 20 to 30-year-old crowd?
Go pay some of these micro-influencer TikToks a few hundred bucks to do a cool video for you.
Come on.
Get with it.
Untap market.
Well, I think that's all for this week.
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