eCommerce Evolution | 315: From Hope to Reality: P&L Design That Drive E-commerce Profitability
In this episode, Brett sits down with Andrew Faris, CEO of AJF Growth and host of the Andrew Faris Podcast, to break down the critical elements of P&L design that separate ecomm brands that are dead on arrival vs. those who thrive. Andrew shares his hard-won insights from holding nearly every seat in the e-commerce ecosystem, including his experience running an aggregator “into the ground” and the valuable lessons learned along the way.
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Sponsored by OMG Commerce – go to (https://www.omgcommerce.com/contact) and request your FREE strategy session today!
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Chapters:
(00:00) Join Us in NYC at Our Exclusive YouTube Event!
(01:08) Introducing Andrew Faris & His eCommerce Journey
(07:06) The Current State of eCommerce
(13:16) The Influence of Moneyball by Michael Lewis in Marketing
(19:29) Understanding P&L in eCommerce Success
(23:34) Understanding Your Profit Goals & OMG Commerce’s Case
(29:35) How to Structure Your P&L as an eCommerce Brand
(34:48) Optimizing Operational Expenses
(34:56) CAC and Cost of Delivery
(39:33) Channel Strategy and Product Margin Fit
(42:51) Forecasting and Adjusting Business Strategy
(49:50) Resources & Closing Thoughts
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Connect With Brett:
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thebrettcurry/
- YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@omgcommerce
- Website: https://www.omgcommerce.com/
Relevant Links:
- Andrew’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrew-faris-980b84108
- AJF Growth: https://ajfgrowth.com/
- Andrew’s Podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/7ssrhISeeGHgCLpzZgrxuJ
- Moneyball by Michael Lewis: https://www.amazon.com/Moneyball-Art-Winning-Unfair-Game/dp/0393324818
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Well, hello and welcome to another edition
of the E-Commerce Evolution podcast.
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I’m your host, Brett Curry, CEO
of OMG Commerce. And today, man,
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am I pumped about my
guest. I have the one,
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the only Andrew j Faris
host of the Andrew Faris
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podcast, CEO, founder of AJF Growth,
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and just had the privilege of being on
his podcast a couple of weeks ago talking
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about YouTube. We hit it off.
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I wanted to have him on the podcast
to talk about p and l design and
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forecasting,
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and also why e-commerce brand owners
should back off from the ledge if you find
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yourself there because of
all the craziness going on
with tariffs and whatnot,
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and so pumped to get
into your story, Andrew,
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but then also deliver some value for
our guests. So welcome to the show, man,
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and thanks for taking the time.
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Yeah, thanks, Brett. You asked
me how I like to be introduced,
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and I think the one the
only is good. That’s all I.
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Need. Just the one, the
only, that’s all we need.
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Yeah, yeah, that’s right.
So that was good. Thanks.
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It’s so funny, one time I was traveling
with my team, three team members,
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and I was not in first class, but it
was just sitting in front of the plane.
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They were in the back of the plane and
they all separately walked by and they
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touched me on the shoulder and
they’re like, are you the Brett Curry?
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And the people sitting around
were like, who is this guy?
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Should we know this guy? The name
doesn’t ring a bell, but who is this guy?
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And I’m like, it’s my team. It’s just
being nuts. So anyway, huge deal.
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Fun times. Yeah, yeah, yeah, right,
exactly. So dude pumped about this,
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but for those that don’t know
you give us a little background.
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I believe you told me you’ve
held every seat in e-comm,
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just about. And so talk us through
that and then what are you doing now?
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Yeah, well, what I just try to tell people
is that in the e-commerce ecosystem,
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at least on the marketing side,
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I have been in just about every kind
of organization in most of the seats.
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So I started off working at klo,
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selling silicone wedding rings on the
internet as a media buyer. I was trained,
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working directly, closely.
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I was Taylor Holiday who had been
a friend for a while at that point.
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And so Taylor and I became
good friends and crossed,
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crossed paths over that time.
Well, we were already friends,
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but crossed paths or continued to work
together in a bunch of different ways.
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So I was working with Common Thread
collective from there as a growth
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strategist,
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and then eventually the head of growth
there led strategy at CTC for a while.
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At some point, CTC spun off its own brands
into an aggregator called Four Rifle,
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400,
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and I led growth there and then
became the CEO promptly ran that
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into the ground. I always
try to clarify this.
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It sounds like when you tell a
story like this, it’s like, wow,
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look at my great career advancement where
I’m only ever successful and it’s just
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not true.
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I learned a lot. Never happens that way.
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Never happens that way. We
did some good things, 4, 400,
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1 of those brands still is going
Bamboo Earth and Bamboo Earth. Yeah,
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it’s profitable, but sold off all of
’em, but won. And I ended up leaving.
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And I would just add, I learned,
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especially the longer I’ve
reflected on the experience,
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I’ve learned a lot from my
mistakes there. From there, now,
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I’ve been running AJF Growth,
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which is a boutique agency
where we service right
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now four brands,
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and I’ve got a team of a few of us in
the US and seven or eight more in the
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Philippines and work together to
do a great job as good of a job as
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we can do servicing brands,
really meta adss focused,
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but we end up functioning sort of
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almost like an outsourced
mix of CMO CFO kind of
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deal. CFO is too strong of a word. We’re
not forecasting somebody’s cashflow,
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but we do actually take on the forecasting
of the full business in terms of DTC
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cohort forecasting, that kind of stuff.
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And then we ladder our media plan to
that and then end up being in a lot of
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conversations around marketing
efforts and stuff like that.
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Which is super, super
interesting. Yeah, I love that.
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And I’ve always been a
believer, I’ve always,
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always been a fan of infomercials
and marketing that drives results,
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and I’ve always believed that marketing
should build your bottom line in
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addition to your top line.
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But now the trend is you’re
putting real legs behind
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that where as a marketer,
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you’re helping run the forecast and
you’re helping manage the p and l,
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not from a gap accounting perspective,
but from a practical, helpful,
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let’s hit these profit targets lens
and you’re doing it and doing it well.
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And so it’s super, super
exciting. And also, man,
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I really appreciate you sharing, hey,
not everything in business goes well,
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right?
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And there’s one of these things I heard
Alex Hormoz say recently where it’s
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like, Hey, you expect for entrepreneurship
running a business to be hard,
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but then you’re discouraged because it’s
even way harder than you think, right?
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You go in thinking this is hard
is, but it’s really, really hard.
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And so you have to be ready for
that. Yeah, yeah, that’s right.
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Yeah, I think some people,
sometimes when I hear people,
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you talk about people
being talked off the ledge.
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I actually think one of the things that
happens in conversations about the ledge
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in e-commerce is that sometimes people’s
expectation is just that it’s going to
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be easy the whole time or that.
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Or.
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That you should always grow
prospect lifestyle each.
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Stage up to the right.
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Yeah.
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I think if you thought that somebody was
going to hand you millions of dollars
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on the bottom line, that’s
not an e-commerce problem.
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Just so anyway,
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I think there is a real thing there
where people need to expect that there’s
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going to be challenges along the way,
and not every outcome is what you expect.
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Dude, totally. I know you’re
a family man, I’m as well.
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But it’s almost one of
those things where pre-kids,
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you see a family from a distance and you
see a kid acting out and you’re like,
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my kid will never do that. My
family’s never going to be like that.
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And then you’re like, you have no
idea what you’re talking about,
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everything you want to
avoid or not have happen.
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It’ll humble you for sure, but
business is the same way. It’s really,
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really hard, but it’s also rewarding
and fun and exciting at the same time.
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So let’s talk about that a little bit.
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You hosted a podcast or delivered a
podcast recently where you said, Hey,
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I’m still bullish on e-comm, and so we
don’t want to fully unpack that, right?
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People just need to go listen that
episode. But why did you say that?
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And I agree with you by the way,
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I’ve got a couple of things
I want to add to this,
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but why are you still bullish on?
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Well, there’s a lot of reasons,
but at the end of the day,
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I think there’s more intelligence about
how to operate an e-commerce business
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now for a larger market of customers
than there have ever been for e-commerce.
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And I think most of the
headwinds are more short term.
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Most of the tailwinds are more long term.
So tariffs being the biggest headwind.
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And I just should clarify really quickly,
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if your brand is existentially threatened
by Chinese tariffs, I understand.
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I’m not trying to make light, that
sucks. I’m not trying to say it’s.
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A big, big.
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Deal and no, obviously.
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Even taring are currently they were
super high and now they’re low,
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and who knows what they’ll be with when
this is recorded, but still volatile.
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Exactly. Yeah, and I just think
so anyway, so having said that,
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there’s a carve out there, but yeah,
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I just think that the tools
are also getting amazing.
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This is something people will
sit here and talk about how AI is
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producing all of this value to make it
so that the ad platforms are performing
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better and delivering
business results better.
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And they’re doing that
in all kinds of ways,
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and also creative is getting cheap to
make at endless scale and all this stuff.
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And then they won’t take
the next step and say, oh,
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who does that accrue value to?
It accrues values to meta it,
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accrues values to Google it
accrues values to chat GPT,
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who’s going to charge you
to do it and all that stuff.
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But it also cruises values to brands,
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values to brands who reduce
their opex meaningfully.
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So if that’s the future you believe
in to where the distribution of your
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ad creative is getting much, much cheaper,
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the labor involved with things like
customer service and all these things is
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getting much, much cheaper.
And then at the same time,
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the production of your ad creative
and of other creative assets in your
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business, including copy on your website
and social media and all those things,
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that’s all getting cheaper as
well, drastically, phenomenally,
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ridiculously cheaper.
If that’s all happening,
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then that means you can run your business
more efficiently at every level, And
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that means it accrues
value to you. So you can’t,
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it’s just really hard to say both those
things at the same time that now the
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counter argument to that is
that the barrier to entry
is getting so low that all
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of these people will do it, and
there will be very few winners,
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and I don’t know quite
what to make of that.
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I think if there’s still
more winners ultimately,
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and if it’s very cheap to
test the idea, then yeah,
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there are going to be some
losers, but, but anyway,
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so the combination of all those things
makes me still bullish and I just try
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to tell people as far as putting
my money where my mouth is here,
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I’m starting a brand right now. I just
got another sample, the sample yesterday.
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Love it. So just like.
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When will this brand be
released? Will it be launched.
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T by October? Hopefully.
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That.
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Would be,
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but that means for sure later than that
because that’s how this kind of thing
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goes. So.
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Yeah, I fully agree with you.
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I’ve invested in some retail and
DTC brands even over the last
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year. Yes, there headwinds.
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We have an Amazon practice at
OMG. Amazon is challenging.
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There are always challenges there.
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The game is always shifting
a little bit there,
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but people are going to buy in the
future more online, not less online.
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I’m very, very confident in that.
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I do believe we’re in a world where
great products and great marketers will
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win. And so it’s difficult.
It’s challenging, yes,
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if you’re getting hammered
by tariffs, sympathy to you,
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empathy, all of those things.
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But there are still big
opportunities in this space.
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And I was listening to the operators
podcast recently, Mike Beckham,
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co-founder of Simple Modern, and
he imports everything from China,
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or maybe he’s actively working
to not do that, but Currently’s.
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The case. Yeah, they stood up a
manufacturing facility in Oklahoma City.
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I’ve been there and it’s
really, really cool and awesome,
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but when you hear them talk
about it, it’s a tremendous pain.
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So it’s really.
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Difficult. Exactly. But he talked about
on a recent episode, he is like, Hey,
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this is chaotic,
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but there’s more surface area right
now for me to make changes and pivots
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and shake things up.
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And I’m confident this is going
to be going to create windfalls
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for our business.
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00:11:38,670 –> 00:11:42,780
And so I think if we remind ourselves
that during every time of uncertainty,
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every economic downturn,
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fortunes are made and people
transform their business in a powerful
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way, it’s just a good mental reset.
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That’s right. Because.
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Sometimes being an entrepreneur is lonely
and we get down and discouraged and I
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got to give myself a pep talk on
occasion. And so I’m glad you did that.
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Thanks for posting that episode.
Everybody should go check that out.
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00:12:02,950 –> 00:12:04,630
Well, maybe I need to have
you back on again, Brett,
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because Taylor is one of
the biggest critics of my
e-commerce is a good business
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mentality, and he said, you need to bring
somebody on who agrees with you. Yeah,
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yeah.
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00:12:13,090 –> 00:12:15,340
Yeah, I know he is. Yeah. Well,
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00:12:15,340 –> 00:12:18,910
because you tweeted recently
with your friend fan,
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I think that 50% of e-comm
brands are worth nothing.
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And Taylor tweeted back
that it’s like 95%.
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95%.
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And that is a good clarification because
fans sample is brands that are trying
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to exit, and so.
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That.
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Skews disproportionately
towards brands that have some.
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Value, a little bit, little
bit of cherry pick there.
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And I didn’t mean,
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I just didn’t think about that when I
proposed that I wasn’t trying to be click
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fatty or whatever, but it’s
a fair point. But yeah,
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anyway, it’s.
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Still money to be made still
success to be had. Road’s not easy,
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but still there. So I want to talk about
this. We’re going to get to p and Ls.
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I want to talk about how
to design it, and again,
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not from an accounting perspective,
but how to look at it as a marketer,
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as a business owner to drive profits,
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drive real business and finance outcomes.
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00:13:04,120 –> 00:13:07,420
But we were talking about something really
interesting prior to hitting record.
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You’re a big baseball guy. I’m
more of a basketball football guy,
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but I love baseball too.
We love the same movie,
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and you were inspired more by the book,
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but tell us about the book that
maybe shaped you as a marketer
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that will, I think, surprise
people, but talk about it and why.
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Yeah, Moneyball.
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00:13:25,570 –> 00:13:27,850
Moneyball I think shaped a lot of
people in a lot of ways actually.
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I think it did. It did. Reach
was well beyond baseball fans.
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For sure.
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Because in my experience,
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so I grew up playing baseball
as a huge baseball fan,
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and when I heard about analytics
in baseball and the early stage,
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I had the same reaction as a
lot of people, which is like,
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this is soulless and these nerds are,
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00:13:48,040 –> 00:13:49,780
they don’t understand how
baseball really works.
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And then I read the book and was totally
convinced that I was wrong about that.
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A hundred percent.
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Percent.
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But what ended up happening
is that that book exposed to
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me, not so much just a
statistical paradigm for baseball,
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but it taught me how smart,
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analytically minded people think
about everything about the world.
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So I’m a big Dodgers fan of
wearing my Dodgers hat right now.
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The guy who runs the Dodgers, the
president of baseball operations,
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00:14:17,830 –> 00:14:21,550
his name is Andrew Friedman, he came
from Wall Street. He was a traitor.
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And so he had an ability to think about
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statistical probabilities and some of
those things and how you use data to
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inform better quality decision making,
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00:14:31,930 –> 00:14:35,470
and to think about the world as a matter
of bets that you place and things like
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00:14:35,470 –> 00:14:38,260
that. Working with him for a long time,
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00:14:38,260 –> 00:14:41,020
a guy who eventually ran the Giants
eventually got fired and is now back as a
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00:14:41,020 –> 00:14:44,710
specialist of the Dodgers. His name is Dr.
Farhan Idi, who has a PhD from MIT
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and has never played serious baseball.
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And there’s teams that have various
levels of those kinds of guys.
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Some former players now are
those kinds of guys or whatever.
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So it’s not only that,
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but the point is those guys were not
thinking about baseball first when they
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developed those muscles,
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they just took a set of muscles
and applied them to baseball.
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And what I did was the opposite direction.
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00:15:05,450 –> 00:15:10,250
Moneyball for me was the
way that I learned how to
think about how to look at a
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00:15:10,250 –> 00:15:13,040
set of numbers and think about what they
mean and how to interpret them and what
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00:15:13,040 –> 00:15:15,770
they don’t mean, which crucially,
and I mean Brett, I’ll just tell you,
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00:15:15,920 –> 00:15:18,350
I think I actually just
tweeted about this today.
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00:15:18,350 –> 00:15:22,520
I think that people’s
inability to have a baseline
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understanding of then the concept of
probabilistic thinking about outcomes
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00:15:27,470 –> 00:15:30,260
and of the difference between signal
and noise and how to make a distinction
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between those two things
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00:15:33,110 –> 00:15:37,670
is a gigantic hole in their
thinking, especially media buyers.
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00:15:37,670 –> 00:15:40,040
Media buyers are terrible
at this hundred percent,
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and they overreact to tiny samples. And
just for the record, I am media buyer.
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I am the person that we’re talking about.
So all of my thinking about how best
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00:15:50,120 –> 00:15:52,700
to optimize a lot of media
buying approaches is like,
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00:15:53,030 –> 00:15:57,290
how do I get the machine to
make the decisions for me
because I am so bias prone
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00:15:57,290 –> 00:16:00,470
in all of my thinking. So
anyway, Moneyball, for me,
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00:16:00,530 –> 00:16:05,450
the book really helped me to start
working out those muscles and those
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00:16:05,450 –> 00:16:08,210
muscles then became transferable
to other things eventually.
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00:16:08,210 –> 00:16:10,580
Also listening to the Freakonomics
podcast helped me a lot with this.
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00:16:10,940 –> 00:16:12,920
Listening to the Planet Money podcast
helped me a lot with this. Really,
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00:16:12,920 –> 00:16:16,040
Freakonomics I think was
especially helpful as well
because very similar thing,
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00:16:16,040 –> 00:16:16,190
right?
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00:16:16,190 –> 00:16:20,090
You’ve got guys who are sort of exploring
the world through the lens of data and
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00:16:20,090 –> 00:16:23,480
what data can and can’t tell you,
and sort looking under the surface,
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00:16:23,840 –> 00:16:25,790
little taglines, exploring
the hidden side of everything.
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00:16:25,790 –> 00:16:29,420
And the hidden side is how data creates
incentives and some of that. So they
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have all kinds of really fun things,
outcomes of like, oh, look at that.
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00:16:33,320 –> 00:16:35,000
If you look at the
numbers underneath this,
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00:16:35,000 –> 00:16:38,420
you see patterns and
behaviors emerging. Yeah,
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00:16:38,450 –> 00:16:43,310
I just think a lot of people would do
really well to, if you like baseball,
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00:16:43,310 –> 00:16:47,750
you have the best world for this because
it’s the place where a lot of this
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00:16:47,750 –> 00:16:52,190
stuff is the most publicly digestible.
But if you’re a basketball fan, Brett,
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00:16:52,550 –> 00:16:54,020
surely over the last bunch of years,
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00:16:54,020 –> 00:16:56,390
the thing you’ve noticed the most
is the rise of the three pointer.
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00:16:56,690 –> 00:16:58,010
It is a simple calculation,
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00:16:58,190 –> 00:17:02,570
which is a three pointer is worth more
than 50% of a two point. It’s worth 50%.
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00:17:02,570 –> 00:17:03,230
It’s worth 50%, right? More.
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00:17:03,740 –> 00:17:04,490
Yeah.
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00:17:04,490 –> 00:17:08,270
Sorry. It was worth more, which
is 50% more than a two pointer,
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00:17:09,140 –> 00:17:12,650
and therefore there’s a massive
incentive unless you make it
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00:17:14,090 –> 00:17:16,130
essentially your shot doesn’t have,
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00:17:16,250 –> 00:17:21,140
you can be a fairly amount less
efficient at the level of the shot and
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00:17:21,140 –> 00:17:24,980
still be a more efficient use
of your shot in that case. And.
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00:17:24,980 –> 00:17:25,550
So.
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00:17:25,550 –> 00:17:27,860
That kind of little tradeoff, it’s like,
oh, once you see that, that’s good.
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00:17:27,860 –> 00:17:28,693
And by the way,
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00:17:28,760 –> 00:17:31,430
if anybody ever goes and plays pickup
basketball and you’re playing with ones
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00:17:31,430 –> 00:17:33,800
and twos as instead of twos and threes.
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00:17:34,100 –> 00:17:37,790
That’s even crazier. It’s not twice as
much. You should shoot a two every time,
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00:17:38,180 –> 00:17:42,170
every time. If you’re a drive
to the bucket type of player.
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00:17:42,230 –> 00:17:42,530
You’re doing.
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00:17:42,530 –> 00:17:44,420
It wrong. You can’t play in a
game, that’s one versus two.
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00:17:44,420 –> 00:17:47,150
It’s like you’ve got to develop that
three point shot, which I don’t have.
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00:17:47,330 –> 00:17:49,190
I grew up in an era where
I was a post player,
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00:17:49,500 –> 00:17:53,220
we just pounded down low to take
a close shot. That’s all we did.
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00:17:53,220 –> 00:17:56,520
But I’m so glad you brought this
up and we will talk p and l,
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00:17:56,520 –> 00:17:57,570
we will talk about e-commerce.
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00:17:57,570 –> 00:17:58,403
Yeah, whatever. We can
talk whatever you want.
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00:17:59,280 –> 00:18:04,170
But I love that we got into this because
people are not failing right now in
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00:18:04,170 –> 00:18:08,820
e-commerce or in any business for lack
of data. That’s not an issue right now.
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00:18:08,820 –> 00:18:11,850
It’s not lack of data. It’s
understanding what does the data mean,
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00:18:11,850 –> 00:18:13,920
but more importantly, what
does the data not mean?
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00:18:14,220 –> 00:18:18,540
And then based on what it means, where
am I going to place bets and why?
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00:18:18,720 –> 00:18:20,070
And can I confidently say this,
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00:18:20,070 –> 00:18:24,420
why I’m going to place bets in this
place and not in that place? And yeah,
352
00:18:25,260 –> 00:18:27,690
dude, it is just so good.
I love the movie Moneyball,
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00:18:27,690 –> 00:18:30,420
so many quotable things
in that movie. And.
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00:18:30,420 –> 00:18:32,640
As it happens, I’m also
a big Aaron Sorkin fan.
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00:18:32,640 –> 00:18:36,750
So once Moneyball became both Moneyball
book and also written by Aaron Sorkin.
356
00:18:38,280 –> 00:18:39,113
Was in.
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00:18:39,450 –> 00:18:39,540
He’s.
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00:18:39,540 –> 00:18:42,000
One of the best, wait, what are some
of the other Aaron Sorkin movies?
359
00:18:42,030 –> 00:18:44,190
Well, there’s a lot. I mean,
360
00:18:44,460 –> 00:18:48,600
he wrote Charlie Chicago Seven
is one that people liked a lot.
361
00:18:48,600 –> 00:18:49,440
I think that won some.
362
00:18:49,440 –> 00:18:53,250
Did he write Molly’s game? The
poker? He did, yeah. Just so good.
363
00:18:53,550 –> 00:18:56,460
But the West Wing is maybe his still most
famous thing in some ways because the
364
00:18:56,460 –> 00:18:59,650
West Wings a lot of people and
West Wing I love too. Yeah. So.
365
00:18:59,650 –> 00:19:03,450
You’ll be a better media buyer,
better business operator,
366
00:19:03,450 –> 00:19:07,620
better Econ Pro. If you watch or
read Moneyball, go check it out.
367
00:19:08,820 –> 00:19:13,740
That’s awesome, man. So let’s break
down. P and Ls mentioned to you,
368
00:19:13,740 –> 00:19:17,970
I actually love math. I excelled at
math in schools. It was just fun for me.
369
00:19:18,330 –> 00:19:21,240
I hated accounting class in
college, slept through it, hated it.
370
00:19:21,240 –> 00:19:22,530
I’ve never taken one, so that’s fine.
371
00:19:22,960 –> 00:19:25,470
Okay, I regretted it once I started
a business. I was like, oh shoot,
372
00:19:25,470 –> 00:19:29,040
I should have paid closer attention.
So I’ve had to get better there.
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00:19:29,490 –> 00:19:30,840
There’s some differences.
374
00:19:30,960 –> 00:19:33,930
There’s gap accounting principles which
are useful and there’s a reason for that
375
00:19:33,930 –> 00:19:34,860
and there’s a world for that.
376
00:19:35,220 –> 00:19:38,970
But then there’s p and ls that are
useful for marketers and business owners.
377
00:19:38,970 –> 00:19:43,020
And so talk to me about how
you think about p and ls,
378
00:19:43,740 –> 00:19:47,910
why it’s important, and what function
does that serve for you as a marketer?
379
00:19:48,990 –> 00:19:50,310
So at the baseline level,
380
00:19:51,180 –> 00:19:55,890
what I really think here is
that many brands are dead on
381
00:19:55,890 –> 00:19:57,570
arrival and don’t realize it.
382
00:19:57,660 –> 00:20:00,930
And the reason they don’t realize it is
that they have never done the work of
383
00:20:00,930 –> 00:20:01,950
forecasting
384
00:20:03,750 –> 00:20:06,840
every part of their p
and l, the whole thing,
385
00:20:07,560 –> 00:20:08,970
at least in large chunks.
386
00:20:08,970 –> 00:20:13,110
So I am not saying you have to forecast
your Shopify bill six months out or your
387
00:20:13,140 –> 00:20:15,480
Klaviyo bill six months out or
whatever, down to those details,
388
00:20:16,170 –> 00:20:20,280
but maybe you should, but
389
00:20:21,900 –> 00:20:22,733
I’ll tell you this,
390
00:20:22,740 –> 00:20:25,170
there are worse things to do with your
time in e-commerce than to get that
391
00:20:25,170 –> 00:20:26,003
detail in your forecast.
392
00:20:26,430 –> 00:20:27,263
For sure.
393
00:20:30,420 –> 00:20:34,950
But I think a lot of
brands just don’t have a
394
00:20:34,950 –> 00:20:39,090
viable business or it’s going to be
really hard or they have filed business,
395
00:20:39,090 –> 00:20:44,010
but they are strategically
so turned around and don’t
396
00:20:44,010 –> 00:20:48,280
know it because they just
haven’t done the work of having a
397
00:20:48,640 –> 00:20:52,540
goal. And then forecasting to
that goal in a way that says,
398
00:20:53,440 –> 00:20:57,670
here is what is actually likely or if
they do the forecast is rooted in hope.
399
00:20:57,820 –> 00:21:00,580
And that’s not a forecast. Hope is
not a forecast, it’s not a plan,
400
00:21:02,650 –> 00:21:06,910
but to have some reason for why they
believe the future will be a certain way
401
00:21:06,910 –> 00:21:09,670
and then to forecast their whole
business through that lens.
402
00:21:09,670 –> 00:21:13,870
And I think that basically the tool to
do that with is a cohort-based forecast
403
00:21:13,870 –> 00:21:16,270
for e-commerce brands where you’re
actually forecasting new and returning
404
00:21:16,270 –> 00:21:19,360
customer revenue differently. And then
depending on if you’re omnichannel,
405
00:21:19,600 –> 00:21:21,850
how you work those channels in as
well, this gets more complex. But
406
00:21:23,350 –> 00:21:25,330
basically having that kind of thing,
407
00:21:25,660 –> 00:21:28,420
it sounds like ridiculous
advice to say to people,
408
00:21:28,840 –> 00:21:31,390
you need to forecast your business.
Like duh, everybody knows that.
409
00:21:31,420 –> 00:21:35,470
But I am telling you, I just see over
and over that people do this again,
410
00:21:35,470 –> 00:21:40,390
either they don’t do it with any
seriousness or they do it or they
411
00:21:40,390 –> 00:21:44,080
do it with no or no connection to
reality in terms of what’s happened,
412
00:21:44,080 –> 00:21:45,100
or they do it, like I said,
413
00:21:45,460 –> 00:21:48,130
the Hope vibes forecast kind
of thing where it’s like, here,
414
00:21:48,160 –> 00:21:50,230
we’re just going to increase
spend for forever every month,
415
00:21:50,230 –> 00:21:52,720
and it’s always going to be at the same
roas and it’s going to just be great,
416
00:21:53,590 –> 00:21:56,140
or we’re going to have all this revenue
and there’s no separation with no
417
00:21:56,140 –> 00:21:58,660
understanding. It says return
customers, new customers, whatever.
418
00:21:58,810 –> 00:22:00,520
So that’s the basic principle,
419
00:22:00,700 –> 00:22:04,510
because if you can do this exercise
well and disciplined and clearly,
420
00:22:04,690 –> 00:22:05,740
and if you need help,
421
00:22:05,740 –> 00:22:07,390
there are a lot of people who
help you with this by the way.
422
00:22:07,690 –> 00:22:08,560
But if you could do it well,
423
00:22:13,090 –> 00:22:17,080
then what you end up with is a map
and compass to the outcome that to the
424
00:22:17,080 –> 00:22:17,920
treasure that you want.
425
00:22:20,630 –> 00:22:25,270
And that is the key step
for so many brands to do
426
00:22:25,270 –> 00:22:28,990
because if you do the exercise and you
get really realistic about it and the
427
00:22:28,990 –> 00:22:33,880
outcome of that exercise is not some
profit number and some growth number
428
00:22:33,880 –> 00:22:35,110
that is satisfying to you,
429
00:22:35,380 –> 00:22:38,830
then that gets shoved back in your
face and you now have to deal with the
430
00:22:38,830 –> 00:22:42,760
reality of, oh, this is
not going to actually,
431
00:22:43,030 –> 00:22:44,440
I actually don’t have
a business that works.
432
00:22:44,440 –> 00:22:46,030
And then you could start
trying to solve the problem.
433
00:22:46,030 –> 00:22:48,850
And maybe I can break down at some
point, I’ll pause here in a second,
434
00:22:48,850 –> 00:22:52,960
but break down what kinds of problem
surfaces and what makes a good and bad
435
00:22:53,290 –> 00:22:55,750
E-commerce p and l. But that basic thing,
436
00:22:56,110 –> 00:22:58,990
I think a lot of people have not done
the hard work of just doing that in a
437
00:22:58,990 –> 00:22:59,980
disciplined and careful way.
438
00:23:01,090 –> 00:23:01,450
Yeah,
439
00:23:01,450 –> 00:23:04,900
it’s so good because I think there’s a
lot of businesses that are in a scenario
440
00:23:04,900 –> 00:23:08,650
where you can’t get there
from here where it’s not just,
441
00:23:08,650 –> 00:23:11,590
I’m going to work harder,
I’m going to do more of this,
442
00:23:12,160 –> 00:23:16,690
but you are doing the wrong
things and the basis of your
443
00:23:16,690 –> 00:23:19,840
business is flawed. The ratios
in your business are flawed.
444
00:23:20,080 –> 00:23:24,940
You are never going to get to those profit
numbers that you want to hit based on
445
00:23:24,940 –> 00:23:29,290
the way you’re operating right now. And
yeah, no amount of wishful thinking,
446
00:23:29,290 –> 00:23:30,190
positivity,
447
00:23:30,190 –> 00:23:33,880
new creatives on meta are going to get
you there because it’s fundamentally
448
00:23:33,880 –> 00:23:36,760
broken. And I remember as
an agency several years ago,
449
00:23:36,760 –> 00:23:39,760
and we’ve always been profit actually
every year we’ve been profitable.
450
00:23:39,760 –> 00:23:42,580
We’ve had some struggles and we’ve
gone through some issues and had to do
451
00:23:42,580 –> 00:23:46,250
layoffs a little over a year ago and
some other things. But I remember when we
452
00:23:46,250 –> 00:23:49,250
started talking to some PE groups and
they started talking to others and they
453
00:23:49,250 –> 00:23:52,310
explained the way they look at agencies,
the way they look at businesses,
454
00:23:52,730 –> 00:23:57,560
I was like, oh wait, we’ve been kind of
lazy in a couple of areas financially.
455
00:23:58,130 –> 00:24:01,010
And it just forced me to think about
the business in a totally different way.
456
00:24:01,010 –> 00:24:04,130
And even though we never sold to PE
and actually we’re looking at acquiring
457
00:24:04,130 –> 00:24:05,120
agencies right now,
458
00:24:05,660 –> 00:24:10,250
that function of thinking about
how would an outside finance
459
00:24:10,250 –> 00:24:14,930
person look at my business,
change the way I ran the business,
460
00:24:15,140 –> 00:24:17,300
not in terms of personality, the way I
care for people or anything like that,
461
00:24:17,300 –> 00:24:20,810
but just the way I look at the numbers
and the way I look at the ratios shifted
462
00:24:20,810 –> 00:24:24,380
when I took that perspective. And
I think really every business,
463
00:24:24,380 –> 00:24:28,100
every e-comm business needs to look at
that. How am I looking at my p and l?
464
00:24:28,280 –> 00:24:32,240
How am I looking at my forecast and can
I get there from here doing what I’m
465
00:24:32,240 –> 00:24:33,140
doing now? So.
466
00:24:34,190 –> 00:24:36,410
Really good stuff when you do
that, Brett, for the agency,
467
00:24:36,650 –> 00:24:39,650
the same exercise for an agency as
it is for an e-commerce business.
468
00:24:39,650 –> 00:24:43,100
It’s just a question of the
ratios are different, right?
469
00:24:44,180 –> 00:24:44,810
Service business,
470
00:24:44,810 –> 00:24:48,440
it’s about marked up time and the cost
of goods is people basically, right?
471
00:24:48,440 –> 00:24:52,520
So do you have a framework through
which you’re trying to view
472
00:24:53,480 –> 00:24:57,710
how at MG Commerce how much
473
00:24:59,210 –> 00:25:03,590
margin you have per client or per head
or something like that, as a percentage?
474
00:25:05,030 –> 00:25:05,863
I’m just curious.
475
00:25:06,020 –> 00:25:09,050
I think you do this if you talk
through how you think about the agency,
476
00:25:09,050 –> 00:25:13,670
then the same principle
applies across to e-commerce.
477
00:25:14,150 –> 00:25:15,500
Yeah, I think it’s going
to be really similar.
478
00:25:16,160 –> 00:25:20,900
So the way we look at a good
agency should be in the 20 to
479
00:25:20,900 –> 00:25:24,200
25% EBITDA margin range,
maybe a little bit higher.
480
00:25:24,200 –> 00:25:26,480
And I think as AI becomes more prevalent,
481
00:25:26,480 –> 00:25:29,120
there are other ways you could
look at making that margin higher,
482
00:25:29,120 –> 00:25:32,900
but that’s a pretty good range. So
to get there, what does that mean?
483
00:25:32,900 –> 00:25:35,960
And I think if you look at
the big buckets in an agency,
484
00:25:36,470 –> 00:25:37,610
delivery is the biggest, right?
485
00:25:37,610 –> 00:25:40,250
So these are the team members
that deliver the service.
486
00:25:40,250 –> 00:25:43,640
So what should that
ratio be? You’ve got ops,
487
00:25:43,640 –> 00:25:47,300
so that’s SG and a basically.
Actually not S, but anyways,
488
00:25:47,300 –> 00:25:50,630
like the general operating opex and stuff
like that. And then you’ve got growth.
489
00:25:50,630 –> 00:25:52,460
And so growth, we put
marketing and sales together.
490
00:25:52,460 –> 00:25:54,110
That’s just the way we
do it to look at growth.
491
00:25:54,530 –> 00:25:59,480
And so those ratios have to
line up in a way that then gets
492
00:25:59,480 –> 00:26:03,410
you to that 20 to 25%, or
maybe it is aggressive,
493
00:26:03,410 –> 00:26:08,300
you’re looking at 30% EBITDA
margins or whatever. So how are
494
00:26:08,300 –> 00:26:11,450
you getting there? And so then
you start forecasting, okay,
495
00:26:11,450 –> 00:26:14,630
these are my team members
in these departments and
this is what we’re investing
496
00:26:15,080 –> 00:26:19,730
and I’m projected to get 8% margin.
So then you begin to look at, okay,
497
00:26:19,730 –> 00:26:22,430
where am I out of whack?
How do we fix this?
498
00:26:22,430 –> 00:26:26,390
Do we grow our way out of this because
maybe we have a lot of bandwidth and we
499
00:26:26,420 –> 00:26:29,720
can grow into it. Do we make
cuts? Do we get more efficient?
500
00:26:30,080 –> 00:26:33,440
There’s a number of things to look
at. So those are the areas we look at.
501
00:26:33,590 –> 00:26:36,530
And then we break it. So we break
it down in big buckets like that.
502
00:26:36,530 –> 00:26:39,650
We look at a p and L on
of course a monthly basis.
503
00:26:39,650 –> 00:26:42,350
We update it all the time,
multiple times a week,
504
00:26:42,650 –> 00:26:47,040
but then we also break down into each
department kind of p and l and look at how
505
00:26:47,040 –> 00:26:47,880
that rolls up,
506
00:26:47,880 –> 00:26:52,350
and then what does each department need
to contribute to then get us to the
507
00:26:52,350 –> 00:26:55,380
overall ratios that we need. And so yeah,
508
00:26:55,380 –> 00:27:00,000
we’re planning things out annually based
on that. We also factor in things like,
509
00:27:00,510 –> 00:27:03,690
okay, what is our pipeline?
What percentage of deals
are we’re going to close?
510
00:27:03,690 –> 00:27:06,150
What’s our average deal
value? So that’s layered in.
511
00:27:06,510 –> 00:27:08,880
We also factor in churn because
even though we think we’re great,
512
00:27:08,880 –> 00:27:11,640
we’ve won awards and people love us
and things like that, churn still.
513
00:27:11,640 –> 00:27:12,473
Happens.
514
00:27:13,320 –> 00:27:18,000
It happens more when tariffs are going
on, stuff like that. So then how do we
515
00:27:19,680 –> 00:27:22,050
factor in churn and look at that because
you’re never going to keep all your
516
00:27:22,050 –> 00:27:26,910
clients. And so we spilled that model and
it’s like you’re constantly adjusting,
517
00:27:26,910 –> 00:27:28,890
you’re constantly tweaking.
We do a weekly flash,
518
00:27:28,890 –> 00:27:32,430
the finance report that looks
at, okay, what changed this week?
519
00:27:32,430 –> 00:27:33,810
How are we looking at
the rest of this month?
520
00:27:35,310 –> 00:27:36,570
So that’s kind of the base of breakdown.
521
00:27:37,140 –> 00:27:41,490
And I think that exercise reflects
there’s a target profit number that you’re
522
00:27:41,490 –> 00:27:43,740
trying to get to. You just said 20 to 25%.
523
00:27:44,310 –> 00:27:45,930
That could change depending
on all kinds of things.
524
00:27:45,930 –> 00:27:48,450
It could have changed depending on the
way that businesses in your sector are
525
00:27:48,450 –> 00:27:50,190
valued. It could change
depending on your goals,
526
00:27:50,520 –> 00:27:54,510
depending on the cash intensivity of
the business, the cost of capital,
527
00:27:54,510 –> 00:27:56,370
there’s all kinds of things
that could affect that.
528
00:27:56,430 –> 00:28:00,090
It could change just because of what you
want in life. And that’s fine. Totally.
529
00:28:01,470 –> 00:28:02,760
When I talk about this, to me,
530
00:28:02,760 –> 00:28:06,870
it’s not about me saying necessarily
what I think good is in this case because
531
00:28:06,870 –> 00:28:08,850
it’s just going to change for
different people depending on goals.
532
00:28:09,510 –> 00:28:13,410
I could tell you what I think how these
brands are valued in the m and a market.
533
00:28:13,410 –> 00:28:14,370
I have thoughts about that,
534
00:28:14,370 –> 00:28:17,640
but then even how much you care about
that is your own question and when you
535
00:28:17,640 –> 00:28:20,640
want to sell and all those things. So
there’s all of these other factors that do
536
00:28:20,640 –> 00:28:22,260
that, but then you just kind
of work back from there.
537
00:28:22,260 –> 00:28:23,940
Here’s the profit number
we’re trying to hit to.
538
00:28:24,300 –> 00:28:27,690
Maybe you have for yourself some kind
of a revenue goal that ladders down to a
539
00:28:27,690 –> 00:28:31,020
profit goal that ladders down to your
take home that you want or a valuation
540
00:28:31,020 –> 00:28:32,880
that you want or something
like that. So you say, okay,
541
00:28:32,880 –> 00:28:34,710
I need to hit this profit number,
542
00:28:34,980 –> 00:28:37,410
which means I need to get to this
revenue number. And then from there,
543
00:28:37,650 –> 00:28:41,190
you just add in your costs. And this
is the thing for e-commerce brands,
544
00:28:42,600 –> 00:28:46,590
you have to play that exact same
game. And I’ll say for most of them,
545
00:28:46,650 –> 00:28:49,980
that EBITDA number probably
ought to be at least 10 to 20%.
546
00:28:52,380 –> 00:28:54,930
Now, again, with the caveat
of everything I just said,
547
00:28:54,930 –> 00:28:58,920
which is in some ways it’s up to
you, but for it to be valued highly,
548
00:28:59,250 –> 00:29:01,410
if that’s what you’re aiming at,
if enterprise value is your goal,
549
00:29:01,710 –> 00:29:03,660
probably somewhere around there
while the business is growing,
550
00:29:05,740 –> 00:29:09,270
and then now you’ve got to think
about how you break down your costs,
551
00:29:09,270 –> 00:29:11,730
very similar to what you just
did, Brett, for the agency.
552
00:29:12,390 –> 00:29:15,270
So I don’t know if you want me to go
sort of section by section and talk about
553
00:29:15,270 –> 00:29:16,980
what I think the costs ought to
be, then we could talk about it.
554
00:29:16,980 –> 00:29:18,600
But this is where it varies a lot in.
555
00:29:18,600 –> 00:29:22,110
Categories. I love that, and I did skip
a very important step. It’s like, okay,
556
00:29:22,380 –> 00:29:25,800
we have very specific goals about what
do we want our total profits to be for
557
00:29:25,800 –> 00:29:28,170
this year, and as we grow and
as we do some acquisitions,
558
00:29:28,170 –> 00:29:31,290
what do we want the overall
OMG platform to look at?
559
00:29:31,290 –> 00:29:32,970
So you do start there and top line goals,
560
00:29:32,970 –> 00:29:36,030
and then you back into all those
get all percentages. But yeah,
561
00:29:36,180 –> 00:29:40,410
let’s break it down. So what should
this look like for an e-commerce brand?
562
00:29:40,530 –> 00:29:41,830
How am I structuring my p and l?
563
00:29:42,520 –> 00:29:47,500
Yeah, so the starting point
for this conversation is if you
564
00:29:47,500 –> 00:29:49,300
think about the notion,
565
00:29:49,360 –> 00:29:52,300
Taylor Holiday four quarter accounting
is a helpful way of framing this.
566
00:29:53,050 –> 00:29:56,830
There are four sections after
revenue on your p and l.
567
00:29:57,010 –> 00:30:01,840
So it’s cost of delivery, CAC and opex,
568
00:30:01,840 –> 00:30:04,150
and then profit. Those are the four
sections of your p and l, okay?
569
00:30:04,300 –> 00:30:06,730
Cost of delivery includes every variable
cost associated with getting your
570
00:30:06,730 –> 00:30:07,660
product to a customer.
571
00:30:07,990 –> 00:30:11,470
CAC is every ad dollar or marketing
dollar that gets deployed.
572
00:30:11,710 –> 00:30:13,450
OPEX is every fixed cost in your business,
573
00:30:13,450 –> 00:30:16,180
which is mostly people and
an e-commerce business.
574
00:30:16,480 –> 00:30:19,990
And then profit is left leftover.
So let’s work backwards. Okay,
575
00:30:19,990 –> 00:30:21,820
so profit obviously the number
you’re trying to aim at.
576
00:30:22,600 –> 00:30:25,810
So one of the things that should be
happening in e-commerce business,
577
00:30:25,810 –> 00:30:27,310
basically no matter your sector,
578
00:30:27,310 –> 00:30:31,540
and I think this is the thing that is
the most true across every category,
579
00:30:32,740 –> 00:30:36,880
is that your opex is a percentage of
your revenue should be pretty low.
580
00:30:36,880 –> 00:30:39,550
And it is amazing to me how
high this number still is.
581
00:30:39,550 –> 00:30:43,960
But one of the fundamental advantages
of e-commerce is that it scales really
582
00:30:43,960 –> 00:30:47,050
well relative the number of heads you
have and even cost of those heads.
583
00:30:47,260 –> 00:30:49,630
Opposite of agencies. But yes,
it’s very true for e-commerce.
584
00:30:49,630 –> 00:30:53,920
Opposite of agencies. So
as a simple heuristic here,
585
00:30:54,100 –> 00:30:57,130
your total fixed costs is the percentage
of your revenue as you grow in
586
00:30:57,130 –> 00:30:59,260
particular ought to be less than 15%.
587
00:31:00,820 –> 00:31:03,790
So essentially that means if you
have a million dollars in revenue,
588
00:31:03,880 –> 00:31:07,510
your total cost of all opex including
salaries ought to be $150,000 or less.
589
00:31:07,510 –> 00:31:08,650
Now at a million dollars,
590
00:31:08,650 –> 00:31:11,170
it’s pretty hard to hit that number
because you have not actually scaled yet.
591
00:31:11,470 –> 00:31:12,520
But the more you scale,
592
00:31:12,520 –> 00:31:14,860
the more you obviously that
percentage come down because,
593
00:31:14,860 –> 00:31:17,950
and the simple reality that happens in
every part of an e-commerce business,
594
00:31:17,980 –> 00:31:21,310
the illustration I use all the time
is that it costs basically, well,
595
00:31:21,310 –> 00:31:25,060
it costs the exact same amount of money
to design an email that you send to a
596
00:31:25,060 –> 00:31:27,520
thousand people versus that
you send to a million people.
597
00:31:27,550 –> 00:31:30,370
The design costs are literally
dollar for dollar the same.
598
00:31:30,550 –> 00:31:33,790
You got to pay Klaviyo a little more
money between those two, but otherwise,
599
00:31:33,790 –> 00:31:35,500
all of the other costs are
pretty much exactly the same.
600
00:31:36,280 –> 00:31:40,600
And so that means that the percentage
of your cost of people goes down a whole
601
00:31:40,600 –> 00:31:45,010
bunch. If you add in the ability
with AI now and with offshoring,
602
00:31:45,010 –> 00:31:47,650
which I’m a huge believer
and proponent in my team,
603
00:31:47,650 –> 00:31:49,420
I mentioned there’s seven or
eight of us in the Philippines,
604
00:31:49,900 –> 00:31:51,490
they’re incredible
contributors to my team.
605
00:31:51,490 –> 00:31:53,410
I don’t think of them as
separate or something like that.
606
00:31:53,740 –> 00:31:55,720
Totally. They’re pure team members.
607
00:31:57,430 –> 00:32:01,300
And they are killers,
608
00:32:01,300 –> 00:32:05,650
and I can get access very high
quality talent in the Philippines
609
00:32:06,190 –> 00:32:09,490
for much less money than I can access
that talent in the US equivalent talent
610
00:32:10,180 –> 00:32:12,520
because of the differences in the
economies and some of those things.
611
00:32:12,790 –> 00:32:16,420
It’s a win-win. So if you add
those two things together,
612
00:32:16,450 –> 00:32:19,000
now you have talked about
shrinking your opex even more,
613
00:32:19,000 –> 00:32:22,570
and you can be really best in class here
and get that number under 10% and maybe
614
00:32:22,570 –> 00:32:23,860
even lower. I’ve heard about,
615
00:32:23,860 –> 00:32:26,110
I think Zach Stocks has talked
about publicly somewhere that,
616
00:32:27,160 –> 00:32:28,240
or maybe that maybe I heard Marketing.
617
00:32:28,240 –> 00:32:29,470
Operators, what brand does he run?
618
00:32:29,560 –> 00:32:34,300
Hollo socks, Zach, some people know him
and he had started Homestead agency,
619
00:32:34,660 –> 00:32:34,930
some other.
620
00:32:34,930 –> 00:32:36,100
Brands as well. Great agency. Yeah.
621
00:32:36,970 –> 00:32:38,980
So Zach was talking,
622
00:32:38,990 –> 00:32:41,720
I think on marketing operators that
his brand is like five or 6 million in
623
00:32:41,720 –> 00:32:46,460
revenue per head, which is crazy.
That’s wild. That is a very,
624
00:32:46,460 –> 00:32:49,430
very lean opex. So that
is the number one thing.
625
00:32:49,430 –> 00:32:51,680
And I think a lot of brands
actually are still sucking.
626
00:32:51,680 –> 00:32:53,750
They’re just paying too
much money for people.
627
00:32:54,530 –> 00:32:57,230
I recently had Ben Perkins on
from Ann Call on my podcast.
628
00:32:57,230 –> 00:33:01,430
He was at $15 million in revenue
and was drowning in debt.
629
00:33:01,430 –> 00:33:03,290
He had taken some inventory based loans,
630
00:33:03,620 –> 00:33:08,600
was paying $65,000 a week in loan
repayments and trying to figure out how
631
00:33:08,600 –> 00:33:09,170
to stay afloat.
632
00:33:09,170 –> 00:33:11,930
He had $3 million in debt against
10 million in revenue at one point,
633
00:33:12,590 –> 00:33:15,380
which is not really workable
in a lot of e-commerce brands.
634
00:33:15,950 –> 00:33:20,810
So he started smashing all of the
costs that he could in his business.
635
00:33:20,810 –> 00:33:24,500
He ended up cutting half of his labor
and discovered something which was that
636
00:33:25,520 –> 00:33:26,720
the business did not change.
637
00:33:27,350 –> 00:33:28,183
Nothing happened, right?
638
00:33:28,940 –> 00:33:30,170
If anything, it got smoother.
639
00:33:30,170 –> 00:33:34,010
And Ben is clear and gracious
to say that’s not necessarily
because those people
640
00:33:34,010 –> 00:33:35,360
were either bad or not working hard.
641
00:33:35,600 –> 00:33:38,660
Part of it’s because managing
people is very hard and he.
642
00:33:38,660 –> 00:33:38,990
Wasn’t.
643
00:33:38,990 –> 00:33:42,620
Great at managing them hundred
percent. And so he had made bad hires,
644
00:33:42,620 –> 00:33:44,360
he had not managed them
well, all those things.
645
00:33:45,890 –> 00:33:46,940
But he found that by being leaner,
646
00:33:46,940 –> 00:33:50,570
and I just think so many brands can be
leaner. So that’s number’s number one’s.
647
00:33:50,930 –> 00:33:54,200
Also software of analogy on
this that I think it hits.
648
00:33:54,200 –> 00:33:58,850
It’s like is meta or YouTube incremental
for your business? Well, it should be,
649
00:33:58,880 –> 00:34:00,950
but you could be screwing it up
and if you’re screwing it up,
650
00:34:00,950 –> 00:34:02,450
it might not be incremental at all.
651
00:34:02,460 –> 00:34:02,720
That’s right. That’s.
652
00:34:02,720 –> 00:34:05,750
Right. I think it’s the same with
people. They’re not bad people.
653
00:34:05,750 –> 00:34:08,330
Maybe they’re working really hard,
maybe they care, maybe all those things,
654
00:34:08,330 –> 00:34:11,060
but maybe you’ve just got the structure
incorrect or you’re managing ’em
655
00:34:11,060 –> 00:34:14,840
incorrectly or you just don’t need ’em.
And so they’re busting their tails,
656
00:34:14,840 –> 00:34:18,860
but actually it’s not writing
incremental value to you. And so yeah,
657
00:34:18,860 –> 00:34:19,693
Ben talked about that.
658
00:34:20,030 –> 00:34:24,770
His solution to the problem was to create
a personal p and l for every one of
659
00:34:24,770 –> 00:34:25,520
his.
660
00:34:25,520 –> 00:34:26,270
Employees.
661
00:34:26,270 –> 00:34:28,100
So basically to answer this question,
662
00:34:28,190 –> 00:34:30,530
is this person generating incremental
value in the business and here’s how we’re
663
00:34:30,530 –> 00:34:31,363
going to measure it.
664
00:34:31,910 –> 00:34:33,980
And he said some of them did not
want to partake in the exercise,
665
00:34:33,980 –> 00:34:37,400
so he offered them a gracious
severance and they left.
666
00:34:38,270 –> 00:34:40,520
And then the other ones who
were willing to participate,
667
00:34:40,520 –> 00:34:42,800
it turns out they were driving a whole
bunch of value as measured on a p and l,
668
00:34:42,800 –> 00:34:44,270
so he did the exact thing he.
669
00:34:44,480 –> 00:34:45,500
Just said. Interesting.
670
00:34:45,560 –> 00:34:47,420
Yeah, I thought it was brilliant.
671
00:34:48,890 –> 00:34:50,990
So we’re driving down our opex.
Can’t underscore that enough,
672
00:34:50,990 –> 00:34:53,600
especially in e-commerce. Drive
down that opex, okay, what’s.
673
00:34:53,600 –> 00:34:53,960
Next?
674
00:34:53,960 –> 00:34:57,470
It’s so fundamental to what makes make
an e-commerce business work and people
675
00:34:57,470 –> 00:34:58,820
need to be really clear about that.
676
00:34:58,820 –> 00:35:00,770
Software bloat is the other
thing to watch out for. There.
677
00:35:01,070 –> 00:35:01,400
Typically.
678
00:35:01,400 –> 00:35:03,200
Not as expensive as people,
but it can get expensive.
679
00:35:03,740 –> 00:35:06,320
People just have too many things to
the chasing shiny object syndrome.
680
00:35:06,710 –> 00:35:08,330
You don’t need to do that for a while.
681
00:35:08,330 –> 00:35:11,360
So opex should be shrinking as
a percentage of revenue. Again,
682
00:35:11,390 –> 00:35:14,930
in a forecast you should
see as my revenue now.
683
00:35:15,140 –> 00:35:19,340
So if you forecast up 1 million to
5 million to 10 million in revenue,
684
00:35:19,340 –> 00:35:20,750
whatever that growth rate is,
685
00:35:21,230 –> 00:35:24,440
you should be seeing that you’re
hiring is not going linearly with that,
686
00:35:24,620 –> 00:35:28,280
but that people are now
able to create, again,
687
00:35:28,460 –> 00:35:30,050
have operating leverage in their people,
688
00:35:30,230 –> 00:35:32,990
which is to say they
generate additional value,
689
00:35:33,020 –> 00:35:35,660
not just the same amount of
value as before. And so you
got to keep hiring them.
690
00:35:36,290 –> 00:35:38,760
Again, very different than an
agency to service the revenue.
691
00:35:38,760 –> 00:35:41,460
You have to keep hiring. Okay, exactly.
692
00:35:43,380 –> 00:35:48,300
So that’s the starting point. Okay. Then
you get into CAC and cost of delivery.
693
00:35:48,300 –> 00:35:51,660
Now this is where you’re going to
have more variation across different
694
00:35:51,660 –> 00:35:52,493
industries.
695
00:35:52,560 –> 00:35:56,370
So apparel businesses are going to
function in both of these regards really
696
00:35:56,370 –> 00:35:58,530
differently than supplement
businesses, than beauty businesses,
697
00:35:58,830 –> 00:36:01,170
than food and Bev.
698
00:36:01,440 –> 00:36:04,890
All of these things are going to
have just home goods, whatever.
699
00:36:05,700 –> 00:36:08,310
And so this is where you get to
all kinds of different setups.
700
00:36:09,300 –> 00:36:13,080
What I will say about this is more that,
so if you want to say best in class,
701
00:36:13,080 –> 00:36:14,730
let you just want a heuristic here.
702
00:36:15,360 –> 00:36:19,350
If you say 15% opex or lower,
703
00:36:19,620 –> 00:36:23,700
30% CAC or lower in your business,
so your total spend is 30%.
704
00:36:23,700 –> 00:36:28,680
So I’m spending a third of my revenue
basically on marketing or on customer
705
00:36:28,770 –> 00:36:29,370
acquisition.
706
00:36:29,370 –> 00:36:29,790
Correct? On.
707
00:36:29,790 –> 00:36:30,270
Marketing.
708
00:36:30,270 –> 00:36:33,810
30% In cost of goods,
okay, cost of delivery,
709
00:36:33,810 –> 00:36:36,900
totally delivered to the
customer. Right? Now you’ve got.
710
00:36:36,900 –> 00:36:39,210
That’s cogs, that’s shipping,
that’s cost of fulfillment.
711
00:36:39,210 –> 00:36:41,370
Costs, merchant account fees.
712
00:36:41,550 –> 00:36:42,510
Refunds, all.
713
00:36:42,510 –> 00:36:45,420
Those things. The 3% you have to pay
Shopify and credit card companies,
714
00:36:46,110 –> 00:36:46,950
everything in there.
715
00:36:48,390 –> 00:36:52,200
The dollar 50 or three PL is going to
charge you for fulfillment costs per
716
00:36:52,200 –> 00:36:56,280
order, plus any pick and pack. There’s
all of these little things that come up.
717
00:36:56,460 –> 00:36:57,900
The cost of ordering the product,
718
00:36:58,260 –> 00:37:01,560
getting it from essentially from
your manufacturer to the customer.
719
00:37:01,590 –> 00:37:05,070
That whole journey
represents all these costs.
720
00:37:05,610 –> 00:37:09,960
If you can get that to 30% as
well, now you’ve got 30% COD,
721
00:37:10,170 –> 00:37:13,920
cost of delivery, 30% cac, that’s
60% of our money is going out there,
722
00:37:14,190 –> 00:37:17,640
15% opex, and now you have 15%
leftover. Did I do that right now?
723
00:37:17,650 –> 00:37:20,670
Now you have 25% leftover,
you did 5% leftover.
724
00:37:20,910 –> 00:37:23,490
That would be super best in
class, be amazing, 25% left.
725
00:37:24,300 –> 00:37:28,560
The reality is most businesses
do not have that much margin at
726
00:37:28,560 –> 00:37:32,520
30% total, and they’re not
running their CAC at 30%,
727
00:37:32,700 –> 00:37:37,080
but if you want to know why there are
so many supplement businesses in because
728
00:37:37,080 –> 00:37:38,340
they can do both of those things,
729
00:37:39,570 –> 00:37:43,410
they uniquely are able to do this.
Their CAC shrinks as a percentage of their
730
00:37:43,410 –> 00:37:46,500
revenue over time because customers come
back so much that returning customers
731
00:37:46,650 –> 00:37:49,890
make up a larger and larger percentage
of their revenue pool. By the way,
732
00:37:49,890 –> 00:37:53,690
there’s some similar dynamics
in skincare. The product beauty,
733
00:37:54,130 –> 00:37:56,040
the cost of creating the
product is very cheap.
734
00:37:56,340 –> 00:37:58,860
The cost of shipping the product is cheap.
735
00:37:59,070 –> 00:38:01,230
All of those things come together and
you can charge a good amount of money and
736
00:38:01,230 –> 00:38:03,120
get AOVs to 70 or a hundred
dollars or whatever it is,
737
00:38:03,120 –> 00:38:04,290
which can be helpful as well.
738
00:38:04,620 –> 00:38:06,750
You put all that together and you can
run a really high margin business.
739
00:38:06,750 –> 00:38:08,040
The truth is for most brands,
740
00:38:08,040 –> 00:38:10,980
they’re going to actually be spending
more somewhere. And the question is where,
741
00:38:12,570 –> 00:38:15,930
so for a lot of brands, if you
can get even two 60 points,
742
00:38:15,960 –> 00:38:20,760
or if you add 10 more points
of cost to your cost of
743
00:38:20,760 –> 00:38:23,340
delivery, 30% to 40%,
744
00:38:23,670 –> 00:38:27,420
that’s probably more realistic for
where a lot of brands end up in a lot of
745
00:38:27,420 –> 00:38:27,810
cases.
746
00:38:27,810 –> 00:38:31,080
And now you’ve got 15% profit margin and
that’s still a really healthy business,
747
00:38:31,300 –> 00:38:31,570
something like that.
748
00:38:31,570 –> 00:38:32,403
Still a great business.
749
00:38:32,430 –> 00:38:36,220
Or you have someone like Sean from the
Ridge who I think he said he spends about
750
00:38:36,220 –> 00:38:38,360
40% on cac, right? So then this.
751
00:38:38,360 –> 00:38:38,930
I going to points.
752
00:38:38,930 –> 00:38:39,010
To.
753
00:38:39,010 –> 00:38:40,240
That side. This is another way to do it,
754
00:38:40,240 –> 00:38:42,400
which is I have a brand that
does something very similar,
755
00:38:42,400 –> 00:38:45,310
which is they have extremely high
margin and they want to grow.
756
00:38:45,310 –> 00:38:45,880
So what do they do?
757
00:38:45,880 –> 00:38:49,870
They turn around and they plow money
into ads and they’re like, We are just
758
00:38:49,870 –> 00:38:54,310
going to push our growth really
hard on ads, and by doing that,
759
00:38:54,310 –> 00:38:56,950
we’re going to be really profitable and
by staying lean at the same time with
760
00:38:56,950 –> 00:38:59,920
our team, we’re going to be really,
really profitable. So now, yeah,
761
00:38:59,980 –> 00:39:04,300
they run like 40% cac, 30% or
less cost of delivery and yeah,
762
00:39:04,300 –> 00:39:07,900
15% or less opex, and they’re
running it like a 15% margin as well.
763
00:39:07,900 –> 00:39:11,860
If everything goes awesome, still a
great business. If everything is awesome,
764
00:39:12,130 –> 00:39:14,680
then there’s some places where they
can find some help on all of those.
765
00:39:14,680 –> 00:39:16,630
They’re hammering away out their
cost of delivery all the time.
766
00:39:17,260 –> 00:39:19,450
In any of those cases, you
can have a strategy. Now,
767
00:39:19,450 –> 00:39:23,320
there’s exceptions to those
rules too. We mentioned simple,
768
00:39:23,320 –> 00:39:27,700
modern earlier as an
example of this, and simple,
769
00:39:27,700 –> 00:39:29,710
modern did not start off
first of all to DTC brand.
770
00:39:29,710 –> 00:39:30,970
They started off as an Amazon brand.
771
00:39:30,970 –> 00:39:34,180
Amazon brand, and that’s important.
We’ve seen so many of those, by the way,
772
00:39:34,180 –> 00:39:38,920
so many born on Amazon brands, and when
they try to make that transition to DTC,
773
00:39:39,220 –> 00:39:42,040
it’s so hard because the
math is all different.
774
00:39:42,700 –> 00:39:47,170
Amazon is a demand capture platform
and it’s razor thin margins,
775
00:39:47,170 –> 00:39:49,930
but all the traffic is there and that
sets what you’re capitalizing on.
776
00:39:50,350 –> 00:39:53,830
It’s not really demand gen proposition
there. And so it makes it very.
777
00:39:53,830 –> 00:39:56,410
Difficult and in competitive
categories on Amazon,
778
00:39:56,410 –> 00:40:00,490
being able to be priced cheaper
is a really big advantage.
779
00:40:01,360 –> 00:40:03,250
That’s basically a marketing
play, right? There is usually.
780
00:40:03,250 –> 00:40:03,970
Price.
781
00:40:03,970 –> 00:40:06,670
So the simple modern guys tested five
different products when they launched on
782
00:40:06,670 –> 00:40:09,100
Amazon, all within trends that
they thought were taking off.
783
00:40:09,310 –> 00:40:11,770
It is super genius when you
listen to what they started with.
784
00:40:12,490 –> 00:40:17,020
They’re brilliant dudes. Brian Porter
alongside Mike Beckham. Brian is there.
785
00:40:17,920 –> 00:40:20,140
I know Brian well, and you
admire Mike. Yeah, he’s great.
786
00:40:20,200 –> 00:40:20,830
Yeah,
787
00:40:20,830 –> 00:40:25,750
both fantastic people and
just killers and the softest,
788
00:40:26,770 –> 00:40:31,240
gentlest, kindest killers met.
Yes, gentle killers. But Brian,
789
00:40:31,510 –> 00:40:34,090
he talks about the early days and it’s
really helpful to think about this
790
00:40:34,090 –> 00:40:37,060
through a p and l lens because what
they did was they said like, okay,
791
00:40:37,060 –> 00:40:39,280
we’re going to price
cheaper with drinkware,
792
00:40:39,580 –> 00:40:42,190
with stainless insulated
drinkware than other people are,
793
00:40:42,340 –> 00:40:45,400
and we’re going to create more variant
options than what is currently available.
794
00:40:45,400 –> 00:40:48,100
Because if you think about the
legacy players in that space,
795
00:40:48,100 –> 00:40:50,770
the Yeti Hydro flask, they
built for mass retail,
796
00:40:51,070 –> 00:40:54,160
and so their business was
tuned for mass retail first,
797
00:40:54,250 –> 00:40:58,480
and that meant pricing
strategy, product skew strategy.
798
00:40:58,480 –> 00:40:59,650
All these things were built for that.
799
00:40:59,710 –> 00:41:02,920
Black, white and blue and maybe
red. That’s all I can afford to do.
800
00:41:03,040 –> 00:41:04,660
I got to send that everywhere in retail.
801
00:41:05,020 –> 00:41:07,750
Right? And so they said,
we can create more options.
802
00:41:10,670 –> 00:41:12,880
People like to accessorize
with their water bottles,
803
00:41:12,880 –> 00:41:15,250
and so I can create more options at a
lower price and a really great product.
804
00:41:15,460 –> 00:41:16,360
The net result of that,
805
00:41:16,360 –> 00:41:19,690
and this is the p and l implication that
I think is helpful to think about is
806
00:41:19,690 –> 00:41:21,730
that they have, and they’ve
been public about this,
807
00:41:21,730 –> 00:41:26,200
but I don’t mind saying it like
30% margin. So at a DTC level,
808
00:41:26,200 –> 00:41:27,970
it’s like 60 to 70%,
809
00:41:28,120 –> 00:41:32,380
I think closer to 70% of their
revenue immediately goes out the door.
810
00:41:32,380 –> 00:41:36,290
Maybe 65% of their revenue immediately
goes out the door to product costs and
811
00:41:36,290 –> 00:41:37,730
cost of delivery, getting
it to the customer.
812
00:41:37,940 –> 00:41:39,890
So they only have 35
points of margin leftover,
813
00:41:39,890 –> 00:41:42,570
which blows up the entire paradigm
I just told you about, right?
814
00:41:42,830 –> 00:41:43,220
Right.
815
00:41:43,220 –> 00:41:46,280
Yeah. But it’s because it
was a channel strategy,
816
00:41:47,610 –> 00:41:51,020
which was to start Amazon first
and then DTC came in after that.
817
00:41:51,020 –> 00:41:53,810
And this is why, like you
said, some brands really
struggle to go the other way,
818
00:41:53,960 –> 00:41:58,460
and this is where sometimes there is
an issue here with product channel or
819
00:41:58,460 –> 00:42:01,940
product business model fit,
Where you have the right idea,
820
00:42:01,940 –> 00:42:04,520
but you’re just in the
wrong channel for it,
821
00:42:04,520 –> 00:42:08,270
and you need to change the whole business
model to match the channel that you
822
00:42:08,270 –> 00:42:09,770
are in. And I think this
is actually a problem.
823
00:42:09,770 –> 00:42:13,940
I operated a business like the SE four
400 where we just needed to be a mass
824
00:42:13,940 –> 00:42:17,420
retail business because the math didn’t
work very well for us. We had low LTV,
825
00:42:17,900 –> 00:42:19,070
it was very expensive to ship,
826
00:42:19,400 –> 00:42:22,940
and it was just really hard for us to
make the math work as a DTC brand. Now,
827
00:42:22,970 –> 00:42:23,803
eventually,
828
00:42:23,840 –> 00:42:26,420
simple modern of course now has a
really good DTC business as well because
829
00:42:26,420 –> 00:42:27,080
they’re really big.
830
00:42:27,080 –> 00:42:29,660
And so they’ve been able to generate so
much awareness and all those things that
831
00:42:29,660 –> 00:42:31,550
they can make it work, but
it wasn’t their lead channel.
832
00:42:32,090 –> 00:42:36,470
And I just think it’s
helpful to understand that
there’s reasons for that. And
833
00:42:36,470 –> 00:42:39,290
when they went and launched
a hydration pack brand,
834
00:42:39,890 –> 00:42:44,540
they’re doing that DTC first with a
potential mass retail output eventually
835
00:42:44,780 –> 00:42:49,760
because that product makes way
more sense on the channel in
836
00:42:49,760 –> 00:42:51,500
all of the things that
I just laid out before.
837
00:42:51,740 –> 00:42:53,990
And so brands need to get really
serious about, wait a minute,
838
00:42:53,990 –> 00:42:55,340
if I have low margin,
839
00:42:56,000 –> 00:43:00,950
let’s say I end up with 50%
margin leftover after my cost
840
00:43:00,950 –> 00:43:04,250
of delivery or 45% my
cost of delivery, gosh,
841
00:43:04,250 –> 00:43:06,320
DTC is going to be an uphill slog.
842
00:43:06,380 –> 00:43:10,670
There better be a reason that I
think I can do it. And there may be,
843
00:43:10,880 –> 00:43:14,510
may be because you have some pricing
strategy that gives you some unique
844
00:43:14,510 –> 00:43:18,170
advantage of, I don’t know. But there
would be ways to do it. But yeah,
845
00:43:18,170 –> 00:43:22,130
I think that’s the thing that people
need to get really clear about is how is
846
00:43:22,130 –> 00:43:26,900
their approach to their margin profile
fitting with the channel? And if so,
847
00:43:27,500 –> 00:43:30,260
because my friend Kelsey Lyric
and I have debated about this,
848
00:43:30,260 –> 00:43:33,470
but I think it changes the whole model
of the business. The business model,
849
00:43:33,650 –> 00:43:37,580
if you don’t have product channel fit in
quite that way and you have to think it
850
00:43:37,580 –> 00:43:40,160
very differently about nearly all of
it. The moment you go to mass retail,
851
00:43:40,730 –> 00:43:43,190
the amount of heads you have and
the amount your shipping works,
852
00:43:43,190 –> 00:43:44,090
all that stuff changes.
853
00:43:44,390 –> 00:43:46,520
So sales commissions and all
these different kinds of things.
854
00:43:47,240 –> 00:43:51,020
Your margin profile has to fit
your core channel or channels.
855
00:43:51,200 –> 00:43:52,400
That’s really important.
856
00:43:52,400 –> 00:43:56,270
I think that’s something that not a lot
of people think about in the early days
857
00:43:56,900 –> 00:43:58,910
especially, but it’s something you
need to think about as you’re grown,
858
00:43:58,910 –> 00:44:01,280
as you scale. So let’s do this, Andrew.
859
00:44:01,700 –> 00:44:05,540
Let’s talk about how are we projecting,
860
00:44:05,540 –> 00:44:08,570
how are we predicting, how are we
pivoting along the way as we go?
861
00:44:08,570 –> 00:44:12,650
So we’ve kind of talked about these
numbers. Obviously if we’re out of whack,
862
00:44:12,950 –> 00:44:14,090
there better be a reason for it.
863
00:44:14,330 –> 00:44:16,640
We’ll be able to make that
work on our channels. If not,
864
00:44:16,640 –> 00:44:18,440
we’re going to need to start
making some adjustments, some cuts,
865
00:44:18,440 –> 00:44:19,100
things like that.
866
00:44:19,100 –> 00:44:23,300
And you may have another note there
before we talk about projections. Yeah.
867
00:44:23,300 –> 00:44:28,010
Okay, cool. So then how are
we looking at projections?
868
00:44:28,250 –> 00:44:31,920
And again, to use the Moneyball
example, how are we taking data,
869
00:44:31,920 –> 00:44:36,480
this p and l that we’re looking at
and using it to make decisions and
870
00:44:36,540 –> 00:44:40,050
operate our business so that we
actually hit those profit targets?
871
00:44:40,560 –> 00:44:42,480
So what ends up happening,
if you do this exercise,
872
00:44:42,480 –> 00:44:46,080
if you forecast all of the parts of the
p and l that I just said over a period
873
00:44:46,080 –> 00:44:49,350
of months or years or whatever
it is, something will happen,
874
00:44:49,350 –> 00:44:52,860
which is that the numbers will be thrown
in your face in a way that will tell
875
00:44:52,860 –> 00:44:54,120
you if you are somewhere or not.
876
00:44:54,780 –> 00:44:58,500
And then their question is if you
are close or if you’re somewhere,
877
00:44:58,500 –> 00:45:00,570
let’s say you get that and
you’re like, Ooh, we’re at 5%,
878
00:45:00,720 –> 00:45:03,660
and if things go wrong, 5%
profit, and if that goes wrong,
879
00:45:03,930 –> 00:45:05,670
that takes us down to zero,
that takes us down to whatever.
880
00:45:08,550 –> 00:45:11,220
Then you have to start thinking about
what is the solution to this problem?
881
00:45:12,120 –> 00:45:15,480
Do I need to just grow faster so that
my opex becomes lower as percentage of
882
00:45:15,480 –> 00:45:19,680
revenue? Do I need to fire people? Do I
need to go negotiate my manufacturing?
883
00:45:19,680 –> 00:45:20,850
I have a little theory right now,
884
00:45:21,000 –> 00:45:23,940
which is the supply chains are the
most underoptimized part of e-commerce
885
00:45:23,940 –> 00:45:24,210
businesses.
886
00:45:24,210 –> 00:45:26,520
Totally agree. Nobody got to
in the past, didn’t need to,
887
00:45:27,540 –> 00:45:28,470
didn’t feel like we needed.
888
00:45:28,470 –> 00:45:31,500
To. And it’s a lot to do. It’s hard.
889
00:45:31,770 –> 00:45:32,603
There’s a lot to do.
890
00:45:32,670 –> 00:45:33,503
Exactly.
891
00:45:33,660 –> 00:45:36,360
Somebody like me gets on a podcast like
this and tells you another thing to
892
00:45:36,360 –> 00:45:40,260
think about and listen, there’s 70
podcasts like this that are new.
893
00:45:40,320 –> 00:45:42,690
There’s probably way more than that.
There’s probably 500 podcasts like this,
894
00:45:42,690 –> 00:45:43,980
all of ’em with people
telling you what to do,
895
00:45:44,820 –> 00:45:47,400
it becomes really challenging
to stay on top of all of it.
896
00:45:48,360 –> 00:45:50,280
And so anyway,
897
00:45:50,880 –> 00:45:54,060
we went through I think the marketing
revolution in e-commerce where people got
898
00:45:54,060 –> 00:45:56,400
really early on, that was
a big part of the thing.
899
00:45:56,670 –> 00:45:58,230
Finance revolution has been happening.
900
00:45:58,230 –> 00:46:00,150
More and more brands recognize
they need to be profitable.
901
00:46:00,150 –> 00:46:02,370
They can’t just try to blitz scale. They
recognize their business is worthless,
902
00:46:02,460 –> 00:46:03,390
it’s not profitable.
903
00:46:03,660 –> 00:46:06,990
They’re listening to the finance operators
and following mates have and Drew and
904
00:46:06,990 –> 00:46:08,310
Taylor Holiday and people like that on X,
905
00:46:08,310 –> 00:46:11,520
and they’re getting their feet wet with
how to think about forecasting their
906
00:46:11,520 –> 00:46:13,740
business and some of the things I’m
talking about. But there’s another step
907
00:46:13,740 –> 00:46:15,690
next, which is like now, okay,
908
00:46:15,690 –> 00:46:18,540
how do you actually go negotiate a supply
chain and build your supply chain out
909
00:46:19,440 –> 00:46:21,870
and do those things in a way that
is actually good for the business?
910
00:46:21,870 –> 00:46:26,040
And I do think there’s a lot of bigger
wins there than people realize just by
911
00:46:26,040 –> 00:46:29,910
talking to more manufacturers,
negotiating with your three pl,
912
00:46:31,530 –> 00:46:34,950
there’s just a lot there. I
have brands who’ve done this,
913
00:46:35,460 –> 00:46:37,920
shout out to my friends at Move
Supply Chain, who they’ve worked with
914
00:46:39,420 –> 00:46:41,430
on this where it was like, wait a minute.
915
00:46:41,430 –> 00:46:44,490
We had this product that was
costing us $5 per unit to make.
916
00:46:44,550 –> 00:46:46,020
Now we got it down to two.
917
00:46:46,320 –> 00:46:48,810
And no customer has ever said a
word about it being different.
918
00:46:51,150 –> 00:46:52,350
It’s still good product.
919
00:46:52,350 –> 00:46:55,350
They just did a bunch of stuff to go
work somewhere else in the world and.
920
00:46:55,350 –> 00:46:58,080
Make 60% reduction in cogs. Huge.
921
00:46:58,500 –> 00:47:00,750
Gigantic impact on the business. Massive.
922
00:47:02,250 –> 00:47:04,350
And so there’s a bunch
of stories like that.
923
00:47:06,810 –> 00:47:10,470
So yeah, I just think that could be
where it is, where you go like, oh,
924
00:47:10,470 –> 00:47:12,660
we have to go manufacture something
different. I’ll tell you from my brand,
925
00:47:13,620 –> 00:47:18,000
my brand is in a category where the
926
00:47:18,390 –> 00:47:21,270
packaging is more expensive than
the product, than the actual.
927
00:47:21,270 –> 00:47:22,500
Product. Interesting, interesting.
928
00:47:22,500 –> 00:47:26,520
And so we are going to launch with prices
that we think are pretty decent at the
929
00:47:26,520 –> 00:47:30,520
level of cost of delivery, but right
away, I’m right away thinking, shopping.
930
00:47:30,520 –> 00:47:33,460
Additional manufacturers that actually
worked with that same company might move
931
00:47:33,460 –> 00:47:35,080
supply chain. They started with 60, so
932
00:47:36,910 –> 00:47:39,520
a 60 on product and 20 on packaging. So
933
00:47:41,530 –> 00:47:46,060
we already are somewhere on that.
We looked at a lot of manufacturers.
934
00:47:46,390 –> 00:47:48,040
But immediately I’m thinking about, okay,
935
00:47:50,500 –> 00:47:53,320
at what level do I get a price
break by ordering more of these?
936
00:47:53,320 –> 00:47:56,800
Do I need to go actually redesign the
packaging, the most expensive part of it?
937
00:47:56,800 –> 00:47:59,980
If I could shave two bucks off of
this, it’s probably worth doing.
938
00:48:00,430 –> 00:48:04,450
There’s a lot of questions like that that
come in because I know that everything
939
00:48:05,350 –> 00:48:07,450
in the business will get
smoother if I have more Martian.
940
00:48:08,050 –> 00:48:09,880
It’s just a superpower.
Totally. And so anyway,
941
00:48:09,910 –> 00:48:13,810
so you can play that out in your business
wherever it is. What are those giant
942
00:48:13,810 –> 00:48:17,710
costs that are just killing you? They’re
somewhere in your business probably.
943
00:48:17,980 –> 00:48:22,750
And you just start by saying, okay, what
is the place that I try to go to next?
944
00:48:22,750 –> 00:48:25,720
Look at it with somebody smart, got
a coach. If you need some input,
945
00:48:26,080 –> 00:48:28,120
somebody can probably look
at that with you and say,
946
00:48:29,110 –> 00:48:30,910
if you’ve been in your business
for four years and you’re like,
947
00:48:30,970 –> 00:48:34,660
I have had ideas, then
you can do those things.
948
00:48:34,660 –> 00:48:37,990
But people will have ways to go and
say, Hey, have you looked into this?
949
00:48:37,990 –> 00:48:40,690
Have you considered that?
Have you thought about, Hey,
950
00:48:40,690 –> 00:48:42,040
your air shipping stuff all the time?
951
00:48:42,040 –> 00:48:44,860
Stop doing that because your
forecasting is bad. You’re behind.
952
00:48:44,860 –> 00:48:47,860
You need to get back to ocean freight.
That’s a big whatever, whatever.
953
00:48:47,860 –> 00:48:50,920
There’s all kinds of things like that
in every business because it’s hard.
954
00:48:51,040 –> 00:48:55,210
And so you could start kind of hammering
away doing that forecasting exercise.
955
00:48:55,450 –> 00:48:57,130
We’ll start to surface
those things for you.
956
00:48:58,090 –> 00:48:58,480
I love it.
957
00:48:58,480 –> 00:49:00,880
And it’s one of those things too that
with all the tariff madness that’s going
958
00:49:00,880 –> 00:49:02,560
on right now at the time of recording,
959
00:49:02,890 –> 00:49:06,130
it’s forcing people to look at
different locations for manufacturing,
960
00:49:06,130 –> 00:49:08,860
different factories, different
ways of getting the product here.
961
00:49:09,190 –> 00:49:10,540
And I think in that process,
962
00:49:10,540 –> 00:49:13,690
even though that’s painful and not
something any of us want to be doing,
963
00:49:14,110 –> 00:49:16,720
you’re going to find opportunities in
there and you maybe going to shave off,
964
00:49:16,720 –> 00:49:19,210
you’re going to find five or 10 points
or 20 points or something like that.
965
00:49:19,240 –> 00:49:19,480
That would.
966
00:49:19,480 –> 00:49:22,000
Be, it could be a game changer for
your business or maybe you’re not.
967
00:49:22,000 –> 00:49:23,410
Maybe it’s going to be
a terrible experience,
968
00:49:23,410 –> 00:49:26,290
but you work towards that for sure.
969
00:49:27,310 –> 00:49:28,510
I have a theory really fast, Brett,
970
00:49:28,510 –> 00:49:32,020
that the upside of this whole thing is
that tariffs will be a forcing function
971
00:49:32,020 –> 00:49:34,690
for better supply chain creation for
people because they’re just going to have
972
00:49:34,690 –> 00:49:38,010
to, and that it’ll be, and that win for
some brands, not all brands. Totally.
973
00:49:38,150 –> 00:49:38,983
For some way.
974
00:49:39,700 –> 00:49:41,590
Yeah, it sort of relates.
975
00:49:41,590 –> 00:49:44,920
But if you look at the iOS 14 and just
all the madness that happened there,
976
00:49:44,920 –> 00:49:47,560
it forced us to be better
markers. We had to.
977
00:49:47,560 –> 00:49:50,200
And so I think it’s going to do
something similar here with supply chain.
978
00:49:51,820 –> 00:49:54,040
And I want to be mindful of time, so
you lemme know if we need to wrap up,
979
00:49:54,040 –> 00:49:58,870
but I want to look at cohorts and LTV and
980
00:49:59,230 –> 00:50:03,160
composition of new customers and returning
customers and how you forecast that
981
00:50:03,490 –> 00:50:07,180
and how that informs this process. So do
I have time to get into that or do we.
982
00:50:07,180 –> 00:50:11,500
Wrap up? Yeah, this is good. This’s
going to be the last question.
983
00:50:13,270 –> 00:50:18,130
So that’s, there’s a lot there. Best,
best, yeah. I’ll tell you what to do,
984
00:50:18,580 –> 00:50:21,340
honestly, go to my website,
985
00:50:21,580 –> 00:50:24,970
put your email address in the
email popup or in the footer.
986
00:50:25,000 –> 00:50:28,790
Either one will work. You get my four
free essential e-commerce resources.
987
00:50:28,790 –> 00:50:31,010
It’s going to sign you up for my
newsletter as well. I don’t spam you,
988
00:50:31,010 –> 00:50:35,000
I promise. AJF growth.com. Go
there, sign up for my newsletter.
989
00:50:35,030 –> 00:50:39,320
One of the things I will send you is
from some lovely venture capitalists at
990
00:50:39,590 –> 00:50:44,300
Lightspeed Venture Partners put
together a whole prebuilt like
991
00:50:44,360 –> 00:50:49,190
custom spreadsheet that helps
you and walks you through how to
992
00:50:49,970 –> 00:50:54,740
forecast returning customer cohorts
off customer data. It’s hard work.
993
00:50:54,770 –> 00:50:58,490
Another recommendation I say to
people is Dave Ook, CXL class.
994
00:50:59,180 –> 00:51:00,170
So the CXL course,
995
00:51:00,170 –> 00:51:02,420
he talks you through how heat forecast
businesses. He’s a really smart guy.
996
00:51:02,420 –> 00:51:04,550
I worked with him really closely
for a long time. At four 400,
997
00:51:05,120 –> 00:51:08,600
he still runs Bamboo
Earth, but if you do that,
998
00:51:08,600 –> 00:51:12,200
it will give you a whole prebuilt
spreadsheet for how to do it.
999
00:51:12,770 –> 00:51:17,120
And I basically had at one point
common thread collective took the
1000
00:51:18,140 –> 00:51:20,660
Lightspeed model and built it
a little bit for themselves.
1001
00:51:20,660 –> 00:51:23,900
I’ve since tweaked it a little bit for
myself and I will send you mine for free
1002
00:51:23,990 –> 00:51:27,950
so you can do that. And that’s
probably I think the way to do it.
1003
00:51:27,950 –> 00:51:31,910
But if you can just see
historical returning customer
behavior over months after
1004
00:51:31,910 –> 00:51:34,910
purchasing and then put that into a
spreadsheet that will tell you, okay,
1005
00:51:34,910 –> 00:51:37,340
what does that mean for the customers
that acquired today in six months?
1006
00:51:37,910 –> 00:51:40,700
How much are they worth? You can pile
all those cores on top of each other.
1007
00:51:40,730 –> 00:51:43,700
You can get a really good revenue
forecast. That’s surprisingly reliable.
1008
00:51:44,420 –> 00:51:45,620
They’re more reliable than people think.
1009
00:51:46,430 –> 00:51:47,750
And then you can look at, okay,
1010
00:51:47,750 –> 00:51:51,020
my new customer acquisition activities
are underperforming or overperforming,
1011
00:51:51,020 –> 00:51:53,300
and what does that do to my
projections? That’s right.
1012
00:51:53,960 –> 00:51:55,280
And then you can understand, okay,
1013
00:51:55,550 –> 00:51:58,970
I need to make some pivots now because
this is going to have a real material
1014
00:51:58,970 –> 00:52:02,180
impact to my business in 2, 3,
4, 5 months, things like that.
1015
00:52:02,180 –> 00:52:03,410
So awesome resource, a big job.
1016
00:52:03,950 –> 00:52:08,750
But if you commit to it, it’s a
big job. You can do it in a day.
1017
00:52:08,840 –> 00:52:11,600
It’s not that of a job, but
if you commit to it, then
1018
00:52:13,190 –> 00:52:15,710
I always say my best clients
live and die by that spreadsheet.
1019
00:52:16,490 –> 00:52:20,900
Yep. And it’s one of those things
that once you start down this path,
1020
00:52:21,230 –> 00:52:23,660
it will transform the way you run your
business and things will never be the
1021
00:52:23,660 –> 00:52:24,020
same.
1022
00:52:24,020 –> 00:52:27,230
And you can unlock a different level of
performance and profitability that will
1023
00:52:27,230 –> 00:52:30,350
never happen for you if you’re not
looking at your business this way.
1024
00:52:30,350 –> 00:52:33,650
So I agree. Andrew, this is
fantastic. I know you got a jet.
1025
00:52:34,940 –> 00:52:37,010
What’s your website one more
time? So we want to check.
1026
00:52:37,010 –> 00:52:40,370
Out that resource. Yeah, AJF,
like my initials, AJF growth.com.
1027
00:52:41,300 –> 00:52:42,560
And if people can find you on.
1028
00:52:42,560 –> 00:52:45,800
Everything there, podcast there,
everything. Yep. X at Andrew j Faris.
1029
00:52:45,950 –> 00:52:50,240
Yep. And Andrew Faris
podcast. Check it out. Andrew,
1030
00:52:50,240 –> 00:52:52,400
this has been fantastic,
man. Super, super fun.
1031
00:52:52,400 –> 00:52:56,480
Look forward to the next go round
and thanks for taking the time, man.
1032
00:52:56,840 –> 00:52:57,500
Thanks Brett.
1033
00:52:57,500 –> 00:52:59,990
And thank you for tuning in.
So we’d love to hear from you.
1034
00:52:59,990 –> 00:53:03,950
What would you like to hear more of on
the podcast? Let us know. And with that,
1035
00:53:03,950 –> 00:53:05,780
until next time, thank you for listening.