The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast - The Branding Whisperer Shaun Neff On How To Build Brand, Avoid Branding Mistakes, & Launch A New Brand
Episode Date: March 31, 2020#257: On this episode we sit down with Shaun Neff. Shaun is known as The Branding Whisperer. He’s worked with everyone from: Snoop Dogg, 2chainz, Wiz khalifa, Kendall Jenner, Shay Mitchell, and Mill...ie Bobby Brown to launch many well known brands. Some of those brands include Neff, Sunbum, Florence by Mills, Moon, Beis, & Pattern. So when it comes to branding and how to build brands, Shaun knows his stuff. On this episode we cover all things branding and what it takes to build successful brands. To connect with Shaun Neff click HERE To connect with Lauryn Evarts click HERE To connect with Michael Bosstick click HERE Read More on The Skinny Confidential HERE For Detailed Show Notes visit TSCPODCAST.COM To Call the Him & Her Hotline call: 1-833-SKINNYS (754-6697) This episode is brought to you by Versed. Versed is the non-toxic, cruelty-free, and vegan skincare brand that’s hyper-focused on bringing you real results at prices your bank account appreciates. Their products are made with proven ingredients at skin-changing levels, without the fussy packaging and conventional markups. You only pay for what matters—the goop inside the bottle Get 10% off for first time users when you shop at versedskin.com with promo code SKINNY This episode is brought to you by Skillshare. Skillshare is an online learning space offering more than 25,000 courses. Join the millions of students already learning on Skillshare today with a special offer just for our listeners: Get two months of Skillshare for free. That’s right, Skillshare is offering The Skinny Confidential listeners two months of unlimited access to over 25,000 classes for free. To sign up, go to www.skillshare.com/TSC. This episode is brought to you by BETABRAND and their Betabrand dress pant yoga pants. To try these pants go to betabrand.com/skinny and receive 20% off your order. Millions of women agree these are the most comfortable pants you’ll ever wear to work. Produced by Dear Media
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The following podcast is a Dear Media production. and get two free months of premium membership. That's two whole months of unlimited access to thousands of classes for free. Get started and join today by heading to Skillshare.com
slash TSC. That's Skillshare.com slash TSC. She's a lifestyle blogger extraordinaire.
Fantastic. And he's a serial entrepreneur. A very smart cookie. And now Lauren Everts
and Michael Bostic are
bringing you along for the ride. Get ready for some major realness. Welcome to the skinny
confidential, him and her. The branding side of it, right, that ties in your packaging,
how you look on the shelf, how, you know, how you're going to pop like you look at Sunbum,
right? And that brand, there wasn't a ton of
big celebrity support or marketing, right? It was killer packaging that stuck out on the shelf,
that wood grain with the yellow monkey, and that was iconic.
Coming in live, coming in hot from the bunker, the quarantine bunker. Welcome back to the Skinny
Confidential, him and her show. That clip was from our guest of the show today, Sean Neff. Boy, oh boy, do we have an episode for you if you are
interested in building a brand and understanding how to build brands. Guys, my name is Michael
Bostic. I am an entrepreneur and brand builder, most recently the CEO of the Dear Media Podcast
Network. And across from me, my very quarantined, very social distance wife, Lauren Everts Bostic.
Hello, hello, hello, hello. Quarantined. Things are wild. We're trying to stay positive. And I
think this episode will breathe a little positivity into your life. So whether you are just hanging
out with your dog or you're cooking in the kitchen, doing laundry, doing your makeup,
I hope we can add a little positivity to your day.
And listen, guys, I want to say thank you to everybody that listens
because during this isolation, I have not felt,
and I don't know if, like, I probably could speak for my wife,
that isolated because we still continue to produce this podcast
every single week, sometimes twice a week,
if it's, you know, one of those every other Fridays.
And, you know, we're still out here.
We're still talking. Can't shut us up.
I can't feel isolated because Zaza is just so cute and sweet, and I'm obsessed. one of those every other Fridays. And we're still out here. We're still talking. Can't shut us up.
I can't feel isolated because Zaza is just so cute and sweet and I'm obsessed.
Basically on paternity leave now. Basically a stay-at-home dad now. Not so challenging.
Doing all right. Okay. You complained about 300 times. I'm getting very efficient with my time. No, you guys. He doesn't know what to do.
He looks at me and goes, oh, well, well, well, no.
There was someone that commented the other day and said, well, just wait until he has to spend
more than five minutes with the baby.
I spend hours and hours with the baby.
He does spend hours and hours with the baby.
I'll give him that.
But then you get to a point where it's like you need me.
You look at me and you say, okay.
It's true.
After like 19 hours, I need you to step in.
You can't pull out your tit, Michael.
That's true.
And I wouldn't want to.
Guys, we got a good episode here.
If you guys are interested,
and listen, I know there's a lot of young people, a lot of people just in general that listen to
this show that are interested in building a brand. Well, we have an amazing brand builder
on the show today. His name is Sean Neff, also known as The Brand Whisperer. He's worked with
everyone from Snoop Dogg, 2 Chainz, Wiz Khalifa, Kendall Jenner, Shea Mitchell, and Millie Bobby
Brown, creating brands like Neff, Sunbum, Florence by Mills, Moonbase, Pattern. I mean, guys, this guy's created a lot
of amazing brands. And I have to hop in here for my own personal self and just tell you that if I
were a listener of this show, this would be one of my top five episodes. I am so into branding.
It's like if I wasn't doing what I'm doing as a creator, I would be into branding into that kind of scope of work. If you don't have a brand, sales can fall off really easily,
but brand will always protect you, which is why if you're interested in building a brand,
this is an episode that I would pay special attention to. Take your notepad out.
Sean's an expert. He's done it multiple times. There's a lot of gems here. So with that, guys,
Sean Neff, the Brand Whisperer, welcome to the Skinny Confidential Him and Her Show.
This is the Skinny Confidential Him and Her Show. This is the Skinny Confidential Him and Her.
So you're a freshman in high school, not college.
College.
Oh, college.
Freshman in college.
Okay. And how do you think of this brand? me because I grew up in Southern California and I was always into skating snowboarding surfing and
kind of loved being a consumer and like buying those brands like what it meant to rock that
t-shirt this means my vibe what I do on the weekend so in high school I just was always
had the dream like oh when I grew up I'd love to have a brand like that because I was just obsessed with like buying that stuff being a part of that brand so literally freshman in college I was like all
right I don't know anything I've never really done a business or anything but I want to start a
clothing brand so I literally tried to register a bunch of different names it didn't work so I was
like well that Bob Hurley dude
just did it on Hurley. I'll just use my last name, Neff. And it was just short four letters. And I
printed some t-shirts and ran around school hustling kids coming out of class that I thought
had like dope sneakers trying to peddle t-shirts. And that's where I started my first brand, Neff.
So you were essentially an influencer kind of before there was such thing.
Ish.
And I knew how to leverage the influencers in that town, right?
Like the dopest DJ, the best kid at the skate park.
Surfers.
The surfers, yeah.
And Neff really started with the top surfskate snow athletes in the world like the
true ghetto hustle story is i started selling a bunch of t-shirts and then i ended up meeting a
lot of these big pro snowboarders and became friends with them and i was like hey can you
rock this t-shirt and they're like no i'm on burton or i'm on nike i was like i've never
seen a contract can i see your? And read through it and it
said nothing about headwear. And true story was there was an Olympic qualifying snowboard event
up in Park City. And I was like, oh my gosh, like, do you think I can make like a beanie and put an
F on it and have them rock it? I was like, probably not because their sponsors are going to get
bummed, but whatever. That was my only angle. So I went to a 99 cent store, bought like 20 of the most ghetto beanies and headbands you've ever
seen and bought a Sharpie. And I wrote Neff on like 20 pieces, went up there, riffed with the
agents. I was already friends with a couple of the pros and there on the, right on the podium was the
dude rocking my headband after he, you after he won with my last name on it.
That is such a good story because I feel like there's so many people that are listening
that feel like they have to launch with something that's perfect.
Yes.
Can you kind of speak on that?
It sounds like you just launched fast and adjusted.
I also think people think they have to spend all this money to make this amazing brand story.
It's not always necessarily the case.
Here we go.
At home, we're learning skills with Skillshare.
Everybody, Skillshare.
Don't BS me and tell me you don't have time on your hands right now.
I know you got time on your hands.
We all got time on our hands.
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We're not going anywhere.
Yeah, it's time to explore new skills, deepen existing passions,
and get lost in creativity with Skillshare. Guys, there is time right now. Like Michael said,
no one can use that excuse. This is the perfect opportunity to use Skillshare. Like I could not
think of a better opportunity. So we've been talking about Skillshare for a long time. They've
been a partner of this show for almost as long as we can remember. As long as this show, I'd like
to think as long as this show has been in existence. But for those of you that may zone out once in a while and, you know, maybe
missed the boat on Skillshare, Skillshare is an online learning community where millions come
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love about this platform is it's people, just everyday people that have acquired
a skill, put it online, teaching. I feel like it's more relatable. It's easier to digest.
For anyone who's thinking about launching, just launch. Michael always says this,
launch fast and adjust. You can go on there. You can learn all about how to use Instagram video.
You know, those videos that we do like with our podcast and we brand it, we learned how to do
that on Skillshare.
A lot of us are sitting around right now wondering how do we stay productive in this current
quarantine environment.
And I wanted to point out one of the classes that I've referenced before is a class called
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Create a custom system that works with Thomas Frank.
This is an amazing course on productivity.
I need to revamp the whole way I thought about productivity sitting in this quarantine.
So to try Skillshare, we have an amazing offer. It's a proud sponsor of the
Skinny Confidential. Explore your creativity at Skillshare.com slash TSC and get two free months
of premium membership. That's two whole months of unlimited access to thousands of classes for free.
Get started and join today by heading to Skillshare.com slash TSC. That's Skillshare.com
slash TSC. Guys,
it's free, nothing to lose, plenty of time on your hands. Pick up a new skill and get going.
Skillshare.com slash TSC. No, and I love that. And it's weird now, right? Because
now I'm continuing to build brands and that's what I do for a living and
launched four different companies in the last 12 months. And those have just been like buttoned up, pretty dialed, right?
Big talent, Ulta, full chain rollouts, Boots UK, whatever.
But when I go back to Neff, it's like, yeah,
it was like that first like intuition that like,
yo, I think I could do this.
Like this feels like I'm supposed to do this right and i
no business plan didn't even know what a pnl was didn't know i need to have x amount of funding
and i think that's what got me in the game like if i would have known what i know now
i would have never started nef like our trade show, it was like the big trade
show. And I like hustled on a phone call. I was like, you know, young kid calling this big director
and I'm like, Hey, I've got this brand Neff, but we're just starting. But here's the athletes that
we signed. And it was like, if it was basketball, it was like, we'd have LeBron and Kobe. I did
with the biggest guys in the world, but I was like, we don't really have money, but I want to
be right next to Burton. Cause they were kind of the leaders. But I was like, we don't really have money, but I want to be right next to Burton
because they were kind of the leaders.
So they gave me a little spot,
but then I was like, oh my gosh,
you have to have a booth.
I didn't know.
I thought they might provide walls.
So I was like driving past a haunted house
that was closing down
and I hustled the dude for 50 bucks
to cut me like, you know,
a square of a haunted house booth
that was 10 by 10 that fit the regulations.
I literally gave it to him and I printed it out. That was my booth. But like today I would never
go show up at a big trade show with the most ghetto thing in the world. But the fact that I
was there and we had culture and I used to look at Burton like, oh, they're whack. They spent $5
million on a booth. That's lame. So like that gritty first hustle, I think, yeah, people are
jaded on the idea that you need to go raise a ton of money and you have to have this buttoned up thing.
It's like go do something that no one else is doing.
And sure, down the road, that stuff will fall in place.
But like I always talk about dream, believe and hustle.
You look at most people's first businesses and it's mad ghetto how they start and it's just gritty and you blow it up because i think
if you like you said if you hear all the things as the person now i'm building all these brands
you know you have there's a huge checklist of things when you launch a new brand right but
you also have the resources the people the money the time to do it different game but if you told
all those people that are starting up for the first time that they needed all the things you
have now they would be like there's no way yeah there's no way they could do it. No. So how did you scale Neff? And
when did you know it was time to scale Neff? Yeah. So, you know, the world it's different now
with social media, you can go zero to a hundred quick, right. Which is good and bad. Good that
you can blow something up overnight. Like I look at the businesses we're doing at Beach House and
like how big these things are getting in like four or five months, right? You could never really do that back in the day. Back in the day, it was nice because you had
to like start small. You had to test the concept. Like for Neff, it was in like, we started in
snowboarding. So it was all over like the best shops in Park City and Utah and Colorado. So we
like were very limited and we were like the first year in like you know 15 stores so it's super tiny
and you know we were buying beanies from i found a website that made beanies and i was literally
paying retail buying those taking it to my wife's aunt who lived not far away she would take off
their labels and sew mine on like just the mad get i was like i don't know freaking make a beanie
so like the crazy hustle,
but that allowed me to kind of figure out some stuff. And then we created, you know,
buzz and we were in a niche of headwear. So I was able to call the Burton sales rep for,
you know, Southern California and be like, yo, we're non-competitive. We're a beanie company.
We have these athletes. So there was a lot of unique little ways that we got in and it just
started, you know, catching on, but pretty slow.
Right. And we did, I mean, slow, but I was stoked the whole time.
It's like you get in one store and you're like, oh my gosh.
Like I would like sit in front of that. Milo was our first snowboard shop we in.
And I'd like park outside and be like, whoa, my hat's in that store.
Like, whoa, that someone just walked in and like, whoa, I wonder if they buy my hat.
And then like the first time we got in a magazine, it was like the checkout at like a Vons. I like chilled at the
Vons. And I was like, whoa, like 10 people just like bought something and they just walked past
the Neff thing. Right. So I was like super stoked on the journey. And that thing scaled from just,
we put together the right snowboard athletes and it went into skate surf. We had good distribution.
And then I started working with like Snoop and Wiz and Deadmau5 and Mac Miller. And we did a ton of collabs,
Scarlett Johansson, and just kind of over a good, you know, 10 years kind of scaled that brand. We
were in like 70 countries. We were a top brand in like the Zoomies, Tillys, Nordstrom of the world.
When you say scaled, it's not a small scale. It's like half a billion dollars in like the zoomies tillies nordstrom of the world when you say scale it's not a small
scale it's like yeah half a billion dollars yeah yeah as of now yeah we've done over a half a
billion in revenue and i sold that company about four and a half years ago so hard to sell a
company with your name on it yeah it was interesting i mean it was my first hurrah
meaning hard like not yeah because it's my last name yes yeah you know it was strange it was two
things it was one it was like whoa this is going to be weird because it is my last name i've always
been like sean neff of neff everyone calls me neff so like that's going to be weird that like
the brand's going to do its thing because it was so a part of me like every collaboration every
store was kind of like my hustle so that was challenging but I think for me it was like
I had to separate and be like look this is a business we've created this unique opportunity
it's growing tremendously fast and for me I always you know being very opportunistic I'm like if
there's never an opportunity to get an exit that can change your life and provide for your family
and do that kind of thing.
To me, that was always a part of an eventual goal because I always felt like some of the best companies in the world, there's other people trying to buy them. That really means you created
value. So it was tough and it is still a little funky not being involved, but I look at it as,
hey, that's where I cut my teeth in business and i'm forever grateful for that brand and what i learned and and back to what you said you nailed it like so many people are so scared
it seems so daunting to like start your own business and you hear all about these fundraisers
and but like the people that get it are like this it always usually starts ghetto yeah i mean we
started this podcast out of our kitchen living room with the shittiest
equipment.
Like now this and 30 shows under management.
It's just like,
there was no funding.
It was just literally her and I having margaritas one day be like,
Hey,
we could do this.
And like,
it'd be fun.
And a lot of fucking.
It sounded like fucking shit.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
That's terrible.
But that's,
but people can relate to that,
right?
Like you built credible audience.
People are like, yo, they're in their kitchen.
Like if you would have went from, it's our first podcast, you're in this dope big studio
and you know, these crazy lights, people are like, what happened?
Like, who's behind them?
Is it real?
Like who funded?
Like, you know, I think you've got to start a hustle.
It was like this awkward grainy video.
My sister was asking us questions, but she was like half in, half off the camera.
That's amazing.
It wasn't great.
So how did you start to dip your toe into working with other brands?
Yeah.
So during while I had Neff, I did a bunch of different advising and consulting.
So I was Sony Electronics kind of youth culture advisor for a couple years.
Like, you know, what are the trends pop in?
What are the colorways that are relevant?
Like what does certain talent mean at certain places? So that was cool. And then shortly after
that target hired me, they were in the process of redoing their kids apparel business used to be
Sean White Moss, Mo and Cherokee. And then they reflipped the whole thing and kind of did two
brands art class and cat Jack. And so they hired me to kind of help with that process. And I worked heavily
on art class, which was like their cooler brand, you know, better unique products, and they worked
with influencers. So I dabbled there. And then the next hurrah I got onto was about seven years ago,
I got a phone call. At the time, it was a small little company that was running out of capital and needed funding and some expertise.
And I ended up funding that company about seven years ago,
kind of at that time became the second largest shareholder.
And we ended up just selling that like seven months ago.
And that was sun bum.
So that was an amazing,
we sold that company sold to SC Johnson.
So I just got a huge box from them for the baby.
Isn't there?
There's a baby one.
Baby bum.
I was going to list some of your brands here.
Because, I mean, outside of Neff, Sunbum, Florence by Mills, but Millie Bobby Brown.
Millie Bobby Brown, yeah.
Yeah, I will mess that one up.
Moon with Kendall Jenner.
Yeah.
How many brands at this point have you worked on?
Yeah, a bunch.
A lot of big brands.
Yeah, a lot of big brands.
So, like, yeah, now, I mean, as of a couple of years, I've been pretty focused at
Beach House. That's kind of been the new company and it's going incredibly well. Like you said,
we launched those four businesses in the last 12 months and it's been insane. We met with like
over a hundred different talent, like some biggest talent in the world, you know, and I've been lucky
enough. And then my partner, PJ PJ at Beach House we have really good
relationships with all the CMOs CEOs of the biggest you know retailers in the world so back to where
like when you start you got to hustle now you know I wouldn't say it's easier because for a brand to
stick for a consumer to think they need it they're going to put money on their wallet is it better
than what they're used to buying it's still very challenging but at this stage it's nice to be able to you know like moon
it was like what i love doing is walking around aisles at stores and i just go like yo what aisle
looks bad or what aisle needs something new or unique right fucking genius yeah and like oral
care was like that aisle i'm like oh there's those
same big blue and green bottles i've seen forever that are ugly here's the red white and blue
toothpaste i've seen forever so i was like there was nothing that looked good oral care was always
something that someone wants to hide or put away and i'm like yo let's look something dope right
next to like your chanel perfume or like let make it look good. And then we had this concept of oral beauty. And then we created this whitening pen and I had known
Kendall for a while. So I went over to Kendall's house and said, yo, here's moon, like let's go
disrupt oral care. So she became a partner. So yeah, now Beach House, we're just incubating
primarily beauty brands. I mean, we have base right with Shane Mitchell, which is on the travel
side, but primarily everything now is beauty. And it's a fun crazy year to i just look for amazing you know it starts with
killer product like if you don't have good product you're done right like if your podcast wasn't rad
and people didn't want to listen to it you wouldn't have a podcast next week right so like
whatever your product is it's got to be great. And then from there, it comes down to how are you going to let the world know?
So that's why we've been very focused on killer products,
something that we feel is not already on the shelf
where we can tell a different story and then go find a storyteller
that can tell the world that you exist.
So that's been kind of the Beach House model.
And how do you guys at Beach House work with an influencer or celebrity?
Like how do you structure it?
Is it like they're in charge of going out, marketing it and distributing it, and you're
in charge of the brand?
Or is it collaborative?
How does that work?
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All right, let's get back into the show. Yeah. So in the beginning, it's very important we find
someone that wants to work. Like they understand it's a business. That's the key.
Yeah.
That's not always the easiest thing to find.
No.
So that's critically important.
And then they're incentivized like we are, right?
To build a business. So we don't write big upfront checks and we don't say, hey, you're a big talent.
Let's pay you money to do this.
It's like, no, let's create a business.
They're incentivized.
They all have a nice chunk of equity in the company, right? So they're incentivized like us to go build a brand
that's valuable that maybe potentially one day can have an exit or is kicking off a ton of cash,
right? That they can along the journey. So that's kind of the big piece of our model.
So we find people that they want to work and they know what they do, right?
Like, you know, and everyone's a little bit different. And I think we find people that want to be very into these business. I mean, like Shay Mitchell drives base, the design,
the look and feel the product development, the marketing, like she's all in, right?
Same with all of our partners, but we want to find people that want to work and they know that
their big value is going to be
pushing it through their social channels, doing events, getting friends to post it.
That's kind of their main hurrah, but tapping into their secret success, like Shay's authentic
to travel. Like she's done Shaycations for years. So it wasn't out of the blue that
Shay Mitchell has her own travel brand. It's like, makes sense to people like anything. You have to have like 50 things aligned for it to work. So we try to, there's a lot of
digital talent that does the opposite of that, which is like, they, you know, they have a platform
and they've been talking about travel for all these years. And then all of a sudden they go
and do like, you're like, what the hell is that? It's a huge mistake. One of my questions here for
you, because you're such an expert is what do you think makes a solid brand? Like there's a couple
key elements. I think people get marketing and branding confused. I
know they're like, they share, they're in the same world, but I think when you can see a
distinguishable brand, it is so clear. And I think so many people, if they focus a little bit more
on brand and less on marketing, it would be so much further along. Yeah, no, that's a great point.
I mean, you know, the branding side of it, right? That ties in your packaging, how you look on the shelf, how, you know, how you're going to pop, like you look at
Sunbum, right? And that brand, there wasn't a ton of big celebrity support or marketing, right? It
was killer packaging that stuck out on the shelf, that wood grain with the yellow monkey. And that
was iconic, right? So I think if people can focus
on the presentation, how it looks on a shelf, how it can pop, I mean, that's a massive, distinct
ability, right? Because marketing, yeah, sure, you can have a big personality say, hey, go buy this.
But the people walking through a target, one in 10,000 of them have ever heard that that celebrity talked that Kendall Jenner is a part of Moon.
But if they walk by and see a dope end cap that's all black, that's sleek, that the packaging looks amazing and it's toothpaste, people walk by and they're like, whoa, I've never seen toothpaste that looks like that, right?
And you get a ton of customers.
So the actual branding piece, which is the packaging, it's what you say.
It's like for us, oral beauty.
Like that's branding.
The tone of voice.
We could have just made dope packaging and put Kendall a part of it and go.
But the fact that its position is oral beauty.
We went to Ulta and we're like, you don't have oral care.
Like, yeah, we're not in the business of oral care. Like we don't buy toothpaste. And I'm like, cool. Well, have you ever bought oral beauty?
And they were like, oh, well, what do you mean oral beauty? In essence, we're selling toothpaste,
but we changed, you know, we branded it and put it in a light that was different where they were
like, that makes sense. And now, I mean, like Kendall's
whitening pen has been like a top 20 skew at Ulta ever since we launched, which is crazy.
That doesn't surprise me, but that is true. What you just said, he created his own category.
I feel like the best brands are also things that the general consumer, it says something about them,
right? But they, when they buy a brand, it's, it's also an expression of self.
A hundred percent. Yeah. Community buildings, massive. I mean, we're seeing that with right but they when they buy a brand it's it's also an expression of self 100 yeah community
buildings massive i mean we're seeing that with millie bobby brown right now in florence i mean
she's i've never seen an anomaly oh unicorn right like her audience the stickiness i mean we
we just did something a couple weeks ago we're like all she did was one swipe up and it was like hey Florence family you know what should
we make next within 24 hours 97,000 people send in comments and and product ideas we're like
holy shit and even when we launched we collected almost I don't know 130,000 emails 24 hours
we launched the brand I mean I think community too like you talked about it
earlier is so important how do you think that you can leverage your community in 2020 i mean
social media obviously but say you're just starting out like how important is community
yeah it's massive right because in the end right a brand builder, you're only as good as what the customer thinks you are, right? So like so many brands like sit in this nice office and be like, Oh, we're so rad. And like, look at this cool thing we just created. And look at our product. It tastes so good. But then it's like, if the person walking the shelf that doesn't think it looks looks good or when they taste it doesn't think it tastes good, right?
The brand's dead.
So I think it's important that, A, you're making product that's fit for a community, right?
Like you need to be very particular.
Like Pattern's a good example.
Like Tracee Ellis Ross, the curly coily hair market. She's an absolute figurehead in that
market and has been for several years. And she used to, as a young kid, call a phone number,
check the humidity level and literally go, how am I going to wear my hair today? Right? So like,
take someone like that, that is already a leader in that community that's already dealt with that problem and now
she goes out to her friends in that whole community and she represents them for what
she has never found in product and then you bring the whole community with you on the brand journey
right you never i think it's important to never like act like like tracy's does in a great job
saying hey this is where we started here's some key products that have worked for me and my friends. And now we're continuing to talk to that community about what works,
what doesn't. Do you want more of this and more of that? So I think people sometimes sit there and
go, yeah, we're so good and our brand's so dope and we're killing it. But yet they lack the
collaboration with their actual customers. Yeah yeah and i think as an influencer too
like if you're you're gonna launch product you touched on this later like it's so important to
content market like you just said and tell a story so when you do launch product it makes so much
fucking sense that the consumer has been on this journey with them that they have to buy it from
them i think you have to be really careful right now as an influencer not to sell everyone else's brand and really refine how your content marketing to launch your own product eventually like i think
that there's so many influencers out there right now that are just hawking everyone else's brand
and it's saturating their own brand and their ability to content market to eventually launch
what that should be totally so shay mitch Mitchell's brand, you've brought this person, the purse is gorgeous. It's like the office tote. It's so cute, you guys. It's like
black snake skin. It's huge. It's the first thing I noticed when you walked in. How did you guys
work together to build that? Hot break to talk about skincare. One of my favorite subjects,
especially now that I'm quarantined. You guys have seen that I have really upped my skincare
game since being in the house. Like every day I give myself a mini facial so there's this brand you've
seen it on my Instagram stories and on my Instagram actually and it's called Versed. Versed is this
non-toxic cruelty-free and vegan skincare brand we are really really careful with the brands that
we vet for the show and this one is legit the reason I like it is
because you get results but it doesn't break your bank account so the products are just really
effective but they're inexpensive too so all their products are affordable and they're backed by
experts my absolute favorite verse product is the conditioning lip oil I feel like it stays on your
lips for a long time especially in this weather I feel like you know like when
you get like little fine lines on your lips this fills it in and I like the fact that it's non-toxic
and effective and I'm putting that on my lips and I just know that there's no like nasty chemicals
in it another thing you should know about this brand is that they banned over 1300 toxins and
questionable ingredients if you're on their site and you're looking for other products to add to
your cart since it is so inexpensive definitely definitely check out their Dewpoint Moisturizing Gel Cream.
Fashion Lush Erica is a huge fan of this, talks about it all the time.
And their Baby Cheeks Hydrating Milk.
You can expect all their products to be pastel vibes.
And what I like, too, about their Instagram feed, if you go and look at it, it's at first.
They educate you on each product and they
tell you how to use it they tell you how to layer your skincare they just give you like all the
specifics so definitely check them out i think you guys are going to be very very obsessed with
this brand it's definitely one that i think is very much on the pulse all skinny confidential
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with promo code skinny. All right, let's get back to the show. Yeah, so I had known Shay through a
mutual friend for several years, and we'd always riffed on business ideas. Like,
you know, she, what I loved about Shay is even when the first times we met,
she was all about building a company, right? She wasn't like, Hey, like my goal. I mean,
she still has obviously an amazing acting career and she's going to do her thing, but she was
just as thrilled, if not more thrilled to start her
own company and do something in business. So I really latched onto that and was excited about
that passion she had. So for her, it was like natural that she said she wanted to do a travel
brand. Right. So we obviously like all of our businesses, right? Like who am I? I mean, now I'm,
you know, I've run around, I'm connected
with some amazing people. And I'm kind of a good ideator brand positioning, put everything together,
hey, you know, and in the end, it's our individual teams that crush, right? So like in any business,
it's all about execution. And it's all about your team, right? So I think at base, which we do with
all of our brands,
we had to make sure that we got higher people
that have worked in the luggage space,
that have credibility, that know the business in and out,
that a good product designer
that's built amazing bags for the last 20 years
and then Shay can go in there and say,
I like this, I like that.
I bought this bag in Italy.
Here's what I liked about the handle.
And it's been a really cool process because Shay is so involved and she's got such good style. And
even down to all of our product, like she created this little flap that, you know, she's always on
planes. So she created this little flap that kind of sits in kind of little pocket on the back of
the seat. And it kind of blocks out a little space where you can put your phone and your stuff in your books you're not getting all the you
know gross you know stuff of the guy that was on the flight before you right
so she's really smart not only does she have good style she's super smart about
the product so practical stuff practical so we just try to put the right team
together that can go and operate and execute this business and let
Shay do her thing. There's a lot of young people that listen to a lot of aspiring brand builders
here. Awesome. And I think maybe you're the best person to ask this. What are some pitfalls or
mistakes aspiring brand builders make when they're setting out and they're starting to build that
brand? Like if there was a few things that you give them to say, Hey, stay away from these.
These are big mistakes when you're building a brand. Like what would those elements be?
Yeah. I mean, one is maybe don't worry about trying to blow up overnight. Like I think
nowadays people just see these big influencers or, Hey, I've got 13 million followers and overnight
I make this T-shirt,
and now I have a $5 million clothing company, right?
The gratification is so quick.
So I think to everyone out there that's going, you see these success stories,
but what you don't see is, like, by the time they blow up, it was like there was five years before that of, like,
I think this is going to go out of business, or this is horrible,
and you've got to pivot the idea.
So I think that's one thing like have patience and patience is critical because very few things
pop overnight. And if something pops really quick, it's kind of scary because it could die really
quick. Right. So you want to build with momentum. I would say just have patience and then just know
what you're great at. At Neff, I was the CEO and, you know,
we had, I don't know, 150 plus employees and running this big business. And I'm like,
wrapped in everything, right? I was reading like a book of like Jack Welch, who's like this CEO guy.
And I'm like, I want to be a CEO guy one day, right? I'm like young. And I'm like,
I'll never have that title again in my life. Like, it's just not me. So I think it's important to figure out what you're great at. Like, I know what I'm good.
I always talk about like in any business, you're going to sit around a table. There'll be, you
know, four or five chairs. Like what chair are you sitting in? We're like, no one, like I know what I
do. And like, I do me me no one else is worried about trying
to do this but then I look across whether it's a strong financial head
right a CFO type person or a good operating person or a killer product
developer you just got I think that's the biggest mistake that everyone makes
is they think they can do everything like even me at a point I was like oh
I'm CEO and like I'm working through these documents to see how we can import into Rotterdam.
You know, I think it's because that's what people tell people they need to do.
Right.
Yeah.
That's my biggest thing.
Know what you're great at and as quick as you can find other people that are great at
what you're not good at.
And that's the only way you're going to win.
Let's talk about branding on social media.
How did you transition from being a freshman in college where there was no social media and you
had a brand to now the importance of branding on social media do you like that switch because the
brand that you built when you were building nef was a completely different way to build brand
back yeah and it's still there's probably similarities but it's different way different
i like for me i'm like it's been perfect right because like
the one that i started when i was super young and like was the mad hustle for you know not making
money for a lot of years i was able to do when i was young right and kind of learn and kind of
build a brand in my opinion the right way starting out small small, testing, slowly growing. You know, that was fun and I learned a lot.
But now I'm like at this stage in my life, I'm like,
I just want to swing for the fences and get there quick, right?
So I love the dynamic on how my life rolled out.
It was like I learned a lot when it was slow.
And now that I might know a little and have access to good people, we can go fast.
But from the social media side, yeah, it's so different.
I love it now.
And it's so important, right?
It's the touch point.
And we were looking at one of our brands yesterday
and from our digital sales,
89% of them came from a phone, right?
Like legit, right?
And it's crucially important. I love it because you can,
within a second, you know, reach out to your fan base. You can control your story. You can
give them the imagery you want because I'm a big fan of retail, right? I love, like everyone's been
all caught on this, like, oh, D2C is the golden era. Like the last 10 years was all this hype of like raise a ton of money,
figure out your algorithm and try to get customers.
And 95% of those businesses are all dying.
And even though they have been big companies,
they've never made a dollar, right?
It's just a tough model.
They're not paying so much to acquire customers.
Yeah, they're just paying so much to acquire customers.
It's not even, to me, it was always jaded
because I was like,
why try to have some smart tech people figure out how to convince someone through like a code and a discount to buy
your crap. Why not just make something that looks dope and people want to buy it again.
But let me ask you this though, with D2C, I think a smart strategy, and tell me if you think that
if you agree or disagree, is launching D2C to build a fan base and build a moment and then go
retail as opposed to launching in retail where you don't, before you have any leverage with a
customer base.
I've seen both sides where people,
they rely so heavily on the retailers in the beginning before they've built.
Give your honest opinion.
I want to know which one you think is better.
No, I want only honest opinion.
So I believe there's a combination of both.
But I think people dive into heavy retail deals
before they've actually built a loyal consumer base
and then they get screwed because they're at the mercy
of whatever that large retailer wants to do.
Yeah, 100%.
And I agree.
If you look at all four brands that we launched this year, we launched all of them on D2C first.
So we data captured.
We took in emails.
We took in phone numbers.
We can control the message.
It's the first time anyone's seen the brand, the product, the look and feel right.
Cause if you're on,
you're on a shelf or you're on a retailer's website,
you can't tell a story.
It's not how your brand wants to look,
right.
It's just,
it's,
it's tough.
So I agree with you.
I mean,
that's all the brands that I'm launching now.
It's literally launched DTC own that,
but not rely solely on it.
Yeah.
So like, you know, every brand's different.
Like, you know, base, we might've been six months online.
Then we went to Nordstrom.
Moon, a little bit different.
We were like six weeks on our website and then Ulta.
And then three months later, Target, right?
So to me, it's great to have revenue
and drive a big business on your website and create exclusivity and drops and excitement and brand building.
I think that's how I look at websites.
It's like tell your story, release unique things, keep people excited.
If people, your core fans want to get it there, they get it there they get it there but the flex of 2500 stores at a retailer sitting next
to brands that have been around for 30 years is also just as important what's a brand that you
look at that's not your own that you're like oh my god this brand just gets it oh that's a good
question it's bad like because i just think of like heritage i'm like yo heinz ketchup's dope
no that's that i mean that is a brand i mean that's
got to be over 100 years at this oh yeah i mean it's just like for me i'm jealous of like a heinz
ketchup bottle it's like sense i get that it's like it's iconic it's red it's everybody in the
world knows what it is it's in everyone's fridge that's all you think of yeah so it's like i mean
obviously there's new brands that have
come out that i think have done you know great jobs you know on marketing and positioning and
done some cool stuff but i love those like brands that like like heinz ketchup next year they're not
worried about like a cool marketing campaign or a cool thing and i think those are the brands that
i always like obsess on like the coca-colas
right i mean obviously they've been around they've done a lot of marketing to get there
but just those commodity like simple like no one needs another ketchup brand any new brands
yeah geez so new brands over the last maybe more digital yeah more digital like i think ones that stick out right now
i think that hymns brand's done some rad stuff with how they kind of what i like about what they
did is you know the packaging's okay whatever but i think it's just smart like they looked at a male
demographic and look at pain points of like you you know, you're the losing your hair.
You're not good in bed or whatever it is.
Like those are real like problems.
And like if someone buys that once and it actually works somehow, they're freaking buying it for the next 50 years.
Right. And I think how they use Snoop was like easy.
It was like the cartoon head.
It was simple and they did a good you know when people
think tv's dead it's kind of like they buck the trend and got rid of digital but then you know
digital brands i mean i don't know it's easy for me to go to like skims right but then it's like
kim kardashian is just a crusher right or like what kylie's done with kylie cosmetics so i think
that's what i love about business. There's not one
way to build it. I look at like Neff that was like worst product ever the first three years,
like legit. And we built it on surfskate, snow peeps and personalities and being relevant,
right? So like that was that model. And then like, I was lucky, you know, from a heavy key
investor role at Sunbomb.
It was rad to be a part of that journey and go, okay, it's not about the hype.
It's not about marketing.
It's not about digital assets.
It's about efficacy because moms want to know that if they're going to put this sunscreen on their kids that it works, right?
And it's got a good smell, which is the second most important thing is sunscreen.
And then the packaging looks dope.
So, you know, I don't know.
There's there's so many good brands out there, to be honest.
I see a ton all the time.
So say someone in our audience is going to launch a brand tomorrow.
Where would you tell them to start?
Like what should they pick their colors, their tone, their smell?
Like what are you telling them
to sort of look at if they're going to launch a brand tomorrow yeah so if you're an influencer
like what are you known for right like what's the one thing like and a lot of them can be known for
a handful of things but what is the most off like kylie worked because it was kylie and then
it was her like people like her lips and she's good, right?
So she was already known for kind of that vibe to build color on it, right?
If she would have done clothing, it wouldn't have worked.
So I think it's important to know like who are you at your core, right?
Like if you're all about fitness and being active, right?
Like that would trigger you a place to go.
If you're about being funny, like, cause I've seen it.
We had, I started a merch company and you know, we do Liza Koshy, Lily Singh, Sisters
for James Charles, a ton of other people.
And I've seen, right?
Like everyone has their own different lane, right?
So I think it's important to pick your your lane know your lane and how can you be
smart about it right and not so the obvious like merch is obvious for everyone but it's like it
doesn't translate like we've seen people that are like funny on instagram and have 35 million
followers and get 2 million views and you you know, 14,000 comments.
And they sell like nine t-shirts a month because it makes sense.
That's what their audience is there for.
Yeah.
It's like no one's going there.
You're there for entertainment.
You're there for entertainment.
Like no one cares how you dress.
No one cares about your style.
Such a good point.
So don't try to sell me a t-shirt.
So if you're funny, I don't't know make some freaking funny mugs it's
like me sitting in this seat when i'm vetting talent figuring out like which shows produce it's
a lot of the time it's actually not about the big following like say there's i'll use an easy
example like a fashion blogger yeah it's on the street to take a bunch of their audience is there
because they want to see how to put together outfits what clothing trends are doesn't necessarily
translate to hey i want to listen to you on a mic for an hour every single week talk about
whatever people get confused now about macro numbers on social and conversion no someone
who's done such a good job you'll have to check her out is birds of papaya um she just joined
the network and she's her niche is talking about body image issues she just lays it out on the line
and her translation is just wild this has been like the decade of like perfectionism yeah
and she's done the exact opposite and her audience is just like thousands of comments
just gnarly engagement and i don't even think she has a million followers she has like in
in a different way like than both probably both of you i i said i'm like what will this show look
like in five to ten years or what will the brand look like in five years and if it's if it's just
surface and i don't care how many,
I have to build a show
that people actually want to listen to.
Yes.
A book, podcast, or resource
that you would recommend to our audience
that has to do with branding?
Ooh, what's my favorite one there?
I know my favorite books is The Tipping Point.
Okay.
If you've ever read that, yeah.
From a branding standpoint,
it's so funny like,
because I don't have like one book
that I don't think sticks out on branding
because to me, branding is something,
it's kind of like focus groups.
You're content marketing to write your own book.
Yeah.
But it's kind of that vibe on,
what's the Pixar dude?
I know they're, what's that book?
It's Red.
Yeah.
Finding Creativity.
Yeah.
Is that what it is?
It's Red with a- That's a cool book yeah that deals with branding and how they kind of set up pixar
and but like for me it's funny it's it's that was a crazy story too i know it was wild you're
gonna say branding is innate you have like a guy yeah it's kind of like focus groups everyone's
like whoa what did you know did so when launch this business, like who did you talk to?
And did you have a bunch of focus groups?
And like, did you get a lot of feedback from people to make sure that like you nailed this?
And I'm always like, no.
Gary Vee says fuck data.
Exactly.
Oh, Creativity Inc.
That's the one.
Yes.
Creativity Inc.
You use your intuition.
Yes, I think.
But I also like
get inspiration everywhere like my kids might have like a coloring book out and like the color
palettes there they're how they're like mixing watercolors trying to paint this like weird
little book they got for christmas it's like i geek out on that stuff for like the the mexican
restaurant and the fonts or like the cool like, you know, sculpture in the corner and like the weird like colorways.
Like so for me, I kind of get branding inspiration, not necessarily from because sometimes it's like business books are cool and I'm kind of whatever.
I'll read a little bit of them. But then like when I talk to like my brothers or I talk to like other friends that are like,
you know, out there trying to build a business,
it's so boilerplate.
It's like, you know,
oh, you're going to have so many pitfalls.
Just keep going.
And it's like, you know,
and then you have like people that are,
keep going for 70 years.
And like, yo, someone needs to tell that dude,
don't keep coping, refocus,
right. And do something different. But I think what's great about life is especially now,
like everyone should feel they could literally wake up tomorrow and accomplish anything. Like
I am no more special, unique, better than anyone. I've been very fortunate and lucky to have built the brands, been around great
people to kind of accomplish what I've accomplished. And I may be in a fortunate situation because of
what I've been able to do and the great people that have been around me. I now have access to
do other things, but like the odds of me being, you know, the guy that started a youth culture brand that literally, you know, for a good four or five years, you couldn't leave your house without seeing Neff somewhere or a t-shirt.
Like if you knew me in high school, you'd be like, okay, cool.
But like you wouldn't think I would be that guy.
But it was just kind of like I just felt it and went for it.
So I think everyone, world's different.
You can do stuff quick you
can find people you can fail or go down a path and then meet someone else that changes that bad
idea into a good idea so it's like but you want to be smart too many you know i think your advice
is amazing for millennials there's a lot of young people are going to get value from this yeah i
mean i do think you need to write a book or do a podcast or do something on branding. You do.
You have to.
It can be like really sick.
I got to sell a couple more companies.
Get some more credibility.
Write a book.
Do the cover in bright orange.
I like that.
He's wearing bright orange.
Bright orange with gold stripes.
Yeah.
Yes.
Where can everyone find you and your businesses on Instagram?
Well, I guess I'm Sean Neff, which Kirsten over there
made me get back on Instagram because I didn't post for like four years. And then now I was
starting to do all these brands. And then I was lucky enough to have Forbes call me the brand
whisperer. So that kind of took on this little thing. So I'm like, all right, maybe I'll post
here and there. But so I'm not good at that. But more importantly, the brands is, yeah, they're like Florence by Mills on Insta.
Base, Pattern, Moon.
Yeah, all on Insta.
Guys, check him out.
He is the Brand Whisperer.
That's your book name, The Brand Whisperer.
Bright orange and gold.
I like that.
Sean, thanks for coming on, brother.
Thanks for coming on.
Thank you.
Have a good one.
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