eCommerce MasterPlan | 591: How Sticking to One Core Product Drove Project Repat’s $12M eCommerce Success, with Nathan Rothstein
Nathan Rothstein is co-founder of Project Repat, who turn your favourite old t-shirts into quilts. Founded in 2012 they now sell via a Shopify site and do $12million a year.
Returning to the podcast a decade after his first appearance, Nathan shares how staying focused on one core product, building trust, and adapting to challenges like COVID and iOS changes have powered their long-term growth – while continuously refining their marketing and operations.
Hit PLAY to hear:
- How they built a $12M eCommerce brand by not launching new products 🚫
- The “triple down” strategy that turned one idea into long-term success 💡
- Why trust is the #1 factor driving conversions (and how to build it fast) 🔐
- The “nice nagging” email strategy that turns procrastinators into customers 📩
- What really happened to their business after Apple’s iOS changes 📉➡️📈
- How Meta’s new algorithm helps small brands find the right customers 🎯
Key timestamps to dive straight in:
[06:00] “T-Shirts Into Memory Blankets”
[07:19] “Turning T-Shirts Into Memories”
[10:48] Remote Team Dynamics.
[15:40] “T-Shirt Prep & Deadlines”
[18:30] Women Athletes & Trust Building
[20:46] Listen to Nathan’s Top Tips!
Full episode notes here: https://ecmp.info/591
—
Download our ebook… https://ecmp.info/ebook 500 Tips to Increase Your Profits
Get all the links and resources we mention and join our email list at https://ecmp.info
Love the show? Chloe would love your feedback – leave a review here: https://ecmp.info/review or reply to the episode QandA on Spotify.
Interested in being a Sponsor? go here: https://ecmp.info/sponsor
Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands
Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
00:00.031 –> 00:07.604
[SPEAKER_02]: To stay in business, you have to find at least one thing that you do really well and then triple down on it.
00:07.865 –> 00:16.740
[SPEAKER_02]: And I think try to figure out other things that you can do, but don’t spend too much time and money trying to do something that maybe is just not the right fit for you.
00:18.982 –> 00:21.489
[SPEAKER_00]: It’s the e-commerce master plan podcast.
00:22.031 –> 00:26.102
[SPEAKER_00]: Here to help you solve your marketing problems and grow your e-commerce business.
00:26.643 –> 00:34.746
[SPEAKER_00]: Cutting through the highly to bring you inspiration and advice from the e-commerce sector and beyond, here’s your host, Chloe Thomas.
00:37.409 –> 00:38.572
[SPEAKER_01]: Hello, and welcome.
00:38.592 –> 00:39.674
[SPEAKER_01]: It’s great to have you here.
00:39.694 –> 00:43.544
[SPEAKER_01]: Thank you for hitting play and choosing to listen to one of our inspiring guests.
00:44.145 –> 00:49.157
[SPEAKER_01]: As part of our 10 years of podcasting celebrations, we’ve been catching up with some of our past guests.
00:49.658 –> 00:55.873
[SPEAKER_01]: And in this episode, we’ve gone way back to our guest of episode 43.
00:55.853 –> 01:02.547
[SPEAKER_01]: Yes, one of the first 100 guests, first 50 guests, in fact, and that’s taking us all the way back to 2016.
01:03.208 –> 01:13.609
[SPEAKER_01]: In this episode, we’ll be finding out how they’ve evolved their business over the last 10 years, how they handled COVID and post-COVID, why they’re now
01:13.589 –> 01:21.540
[SPEAKER_01]: just as focused on email marketing and Facebook ads as they always were about how they’ve been pivoting to take advantage of those Facebook ad changes.
01:21.980 –> 01:27.668
[SPEAKER_01]: We’ll also be talking about trust about systems, lots of lots of interesting nuggets in this episode.
01:28.189 –> 01:34.197
[SPEAKER_01]: Please do listen to the end so you don’t miss out on my guest’s top tips and my own take on this episode.
01:39.982 –> 01:41.884
[SPEAKER_01]: and now to introduce our special guest.
01:42.345 –> 01:48.051
[SPEAKER_01]: Nice and Rothstein is co-founder of Project Repact who turned your favorite old t-shirts into quilts.
01:48.432 –> 01:53.578
[SPEAKER_01]: Founded in 2012, they now sell via a Shopify site and do around $12 million a year.
01:54.238 –> 01:55.220
[SPEAKER_01]: Hello, Nathan.
01:55.880 –> 01:56.942
[SPEAKER_02]: Hello, thanks for having me.
01:57.442 –> 01:59.184
[SPEAKER_01]: Great to have you back on the show.
01:59.224 –> 02:04.711
[SPEAKER_01]: It’s actually been 10 years madly since you were last on your last on in 2016.
02:04.771 –> 02:06.833
[SPEAKER_01]: So, how’s the last decade being?
02:08.298 –> 02:11.205
[SPEAKER_02]: well we’re still in business so that feels great.
02:12.648 –> 02:27.522
[SPEAKER_02]: We survived the pandemic and then the Apple privacy collateral damage marketing war between Apple and Mark Zuckerberg and so we feel good to still be here.
02:28.328 –> 02:33.375
[SPEAKER_01]: I think that a lot of our listeners totally get to where you’re coming from at a feeling very much the same way.
02:33.936 –> 02:39.363
[SPEAKER_01]: And what has there been any highlights that we say over the last 10 years, other than pure survival?
02:41.026 –> 02:49.457
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I think we’ve just solidified what we’re doing and we’ve gotten just a lot better at everything.
02:49.477 –> 02:56.327
[SPEAKER_02]: I mean, you would hope for doing this too long that there’s some things that you learn and we’ve tried to not make
02:56.307 –> 03:00.831
[SPEAKER_02]: the same mistake twice, or at least not three times.
03:01.312 –> 03:13.663
[SPEAKER_02]: And we’ve also brought on a technology consultant that we who had built a lot of our Shopify tools and websites and operation systems.
03:13.703 –> 03:16.265
[SPEAKER_02]: And we actually brought him on full time.
03:16.425 –> 03:26.314
[SPEAKER_02]: And so that feels really nice that we can iterate and make changes really quickly to improve conversions
03:27.037 –> 03:34.125
[SPEAKER_01]: One of the interesting things I’ve found about having you back on the show is that sometimes we have people back on the show.
03:34.145 –> 03:40.893
[SPEAKER_01]: It almost looks like they’ve created a completely different business to the one they had three years ago, or four years ago, depending on how long the time spans been.
03:41.554 –> 03:49.483
[SPEAKER_01]: But it feels from my very surface level view of what you’re up to at the moment that you’re essentially doing
03:49.463 –> 03:52.866
[SPEAKER_01]: The same thing, you’ve kind of stuck to your guns and this is a model that works.
03:52.926 –> 03:55.088
[SPEAKER_01]: We’re just going to do it better and better and better.
03:55.128 –> 03:58.271
[SPEAKER_01]: We year by year, you know, there’s no crazy range expansion.
03:58.312 –> 03:59.172
[SPEAKER_01]: No rebranding.
03:59.252 –> 04:03.917
[SPEAKER_01]: No, no, oh, we’ve given up on websites and we’re now doing everything on Twitter or something.
04:04.978 –> 04:07.440
[SPEAKER_01]: It seems like you’ve really stuck to your guns.
04:07.480 –> 04:12.605
[SPEAKER_01]: Was that a conscious decision with you and the founders?
04:12.825 –> 04:15.488
[SPEAKER_01]: Or is that something that’s just kind of you realise as you look backwards?
04:15.923 –> 04:22.391
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I think we’ve always every year we’ve tried to make some significant changes.
04:22.451 –> 04:29.259
[SPEAKER_02]: And honestly, we have not found another product that really moves at scale.
04:29.899 –> 04:35.206
[SPEAKER_02]: And when we’re making these, we’re doing them in a custom manufacturing.
04:35.226 –> 04:37.608
[SPEAKER_02]: They’re actually all done in North Carolina.
04:37.649 –> 04:39.771
[SPEAKER_02]: And…
04:39.751 –> 05:00.443
[SPEAKER_02]: For us to work, we have to do things at scale, but we’ve built a very complicated custom product and drilled it down to something that can be made in a factory line, which really had not been
05:00.423 –> 05:09.239
[SPEAKER_02]: more technology to that process to help improve operations, which helps with profit as well.
05:09.339 –> 05:19.317
[SPEAKER_02]: So I think to stay in business, you have to find at least one thing that you do really well and then triple down on it.
05:19.357 –> 05:24.085
[SPEAKER_02]: And I think try to figure out other things that you can do, but
05:24.065 –> 05:30.213
[SPEAKER_02]: don’t spend too much time and money trying to do something that maybe it’s just not the right fit for you.
05:30.253 –> 05:45.634
[SPEAKER_02]: And that’s the lesson that we’ve learned and I can’t say that we’ve made every decision in a strategic thought way, but that’s running a business as you ride the roller coaster and try to figure things out.
05:46.154 –> 05:46.514
[SPEAKER_01]: Definitely.
05:46.534 –> 05:52.141
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, let’s do it some, I should not assume that everyone’s heard every episode of this podcast and can remember what you actually do.
05:52.161 –> 05:55.405
[SPEAKER_01]: So let’s expand on my tiny, terrible intro.
05:56.286 –> 05:58.649
[SPEAKER_01]: Where in the world, actually, let’s just talk about the product first.
05:58.850 –> 05:59.891
[SPEAKER_01]: Tell us about the product.
06:00.512 –> 06:00.832
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
06:00.852 –> 06:09.923
[SPEAKER_02]: So at least in the United States, most people believe their house, they get a t-shirt for every single thing that they do.
06:10.163 –> 06:13.107
[SPEAKER_02]: So whether it sports or feed or
06:13.272 –> 06:16.196
[SPEAKER_02]: whatever you’re into, there’s a shirt for it.
06:16.777 –> 06:36.546
[SPEAKER_02]: And people hold on to them for a reason that, I think a lot of people can relate to, which is you just have memories attached to clothing and t-shirt, you wear t-shirts all the time, and but then they end up sitting in a drawer and you can’t wear 10 t-shirts at the same time.
06:36.526 –> 06:48.400
[SPEAKER_02]: And what’s interesting is that the donation model in the United States of Goodwill or Salvation Army, for the most part, they can’t resell your T-shirts.
06:48.981 –> 07:01.656
[SPEAKER_02]: The resell market of T-shirts is very specific for like a unique 40 years ago,
07:01.636 –> 07:04.461
[SPEAKER_02]: really has no value other than to yourself.
07:05.202 –> 07:15.881
[SPEAKER_02]: So we’ve tried to create a very accessible way to turn your t-shirts into something and turn them into a patchwork blanket is what we’re doing.
07:16.002 –> 07:18.987
[SPEAKER_02]: And what we found product market fit for.
07:19.658 –> 07:23.222
[SPEAKER_01]: I still find it’s such a fascinating model, because it works on so many levels.
07:23.283 –> 07:31.092
[SPEAKER_01]: You’ve got like the recycling element of these t-shirts rather than sitting in a drawer they’re given a new life as a useful item.
07:31.533 –> 07:44.569
[SPEAKER_01]: But you’ve also got that memory part, and I still find it amazing that people would, and we don’t have that same t-shirt culture here in the UK, but I totally get the few t-shirts and jumpers I have from uni.
07:44.549 –> 07:52.602
[SPEAKER_01]: I’m not separating myself from those, they’re not going anywhere, they are staying in the cupboard in the box, they might occasionally get warm but they’re very precious.
07:52.622 –> 08:04.380
[SPEAKER_01]: So I find it, find it brilliant you build up that trust with the customer that they’re willing to send those memories to you to be turned into something because I could see that that would be a big barrier in the sales process.
08:04.715 –> 08:13.284
[SPEAKER_02]: That’s a lot of the work that we’re doing from a marketing perspective is how do we convey trust?
08:13.304 –> 08:14.006
[SPEAKER_02]: Is this real?
08:14.087 –> 08:17.779
[SPEAKER_02]: I think there’s just more scams.
08:18.012 –> 08:21.858
[SPEAKER_02]: things that are nefarious out on the internet.
08:21.958 –> 08:31.954
[SPEAKER_02]: And so how do we get people comfortable with buying and then how do we get people comfortable with sending and receiving?
08:31.974 –> 08:37.223
[SPEAKER_02]: And that’s really what we’re spending most of our marketing brain on.
08:38.745 –> 08:43.733
[SPEAKER_01]: And is it mainly self purchase or is it a lot of
08:43.865 –> 08:52.018
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, so I would say it’s about 70% gifting and they’re buying it for somebody in their family.
08:52.038 –> 09:02.734
[SPEAKER_02]: So the typical customer is a mom buying it for their kid as a birthday gift, a holiday gift or a graduation gift.
09:03.052 –> 09:05.216
[SPEAKER_01]: with the added benefit of clearing out that rule.
09:05.857 –> 09:22.866
[SPEAKER_02]: It’s been annoying to them doing less, maybe doing less laundry, getting more space, and having something meaningful that they can show off, instead of just like, oh, I take this one t-shirt out and tell you about it at a time.
09:23.673 –> 09:33.952
[SPEAKER_01]: And you mentioned that you’ve now hired the technical expertise to be part of the team, which I guess makes so much sense because you’ve got inbound and outbound.
09:33.973 –> 09:36.718
[SPEAKER_01]: You’ve got a lot of unique technical challenges going on.
09:37.579 –> 09:38.301
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, exactly.
09:38.361 –> 09:40.585
[SPEAKER_02]: It’s a Shopify.
09:41.088 –> 09:53.147
[SPEAKER_02]: is really set up for drop shipping where you see a pair of pants that you like and you press shop and then you just sit back and wait for something to arrive.
09:53.207 –> 09:57.854
[SPEAKER_02]: I mean, the whole internet e-commerce world is set up like that.
09:58.195 –> 10:07.990
[SPEAKER_02]: I think we’re so different in the way that once you click buy, the customer has to do work for us to start the process.
10:08.442 –> 10:14.150
[SPEAKER_02]: And so we built out our own operations admin system.
10:14.210 –> 10:20.138
[SPEAKER_02]: So customers can tailor the quilt and by shipping through our system.
10:21.240 –> 10:26.827
[SPEAKER_02]: And so it makes it easier to track everything and they can see everything in their own portal.
10:27.588 –> 10:32.114
[SPEAKER_02]: And that’s been an awesome feature for us, but it is a lot of technology.
10:32.835 –> 10:37.622
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, so they can track their parcel into you on the same system they’ll use to track it coming back.
10:37.855 –> 10:38.416
[SPEAKER_02]: Exactly.
10:38.717 –> 10:38.938
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
10:39.699 –> 10:40.361
[SPEAKER_01]: Very cool.
10:40.461 –> 10:43.128
[SPEAKER_01]: And I can definitely see how that would build the trust side of it.
10:43.208 –> 10:46.516
[SPEAKER_01]: So the rest of the team, are you in-house outsourced?
10:46.576 –> 10:47.358
[SPEAKER_01]: How many of you are there?
10:47.378 –> 10:48.019
[SPEAKER_01]: What are they up to?
10:48.741 –> 10:49.002
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
10:49.022 –> 10:52.570
[SPEAKER_02]: So we have customer service person.
10:53.493 –> 10:54.936
[SPEAKER_02]: We have
10:55.051 –> 10:57.674
[SPEAKER_02]: a marketing social media person.
10:57.714 –> 11:07.165
[SPEAKER_02]: And then we’ve worked for many years with a person who does Facebook and Google and email marketing.
11:07.486 –> 11:14.034
[SPEAKER_02]: And she’s not an employee of ours, but she works very closely with us.
11:14.835 –> 11:19.320
[SPEAKER_02]: But what’s interesting is we have a small little office in Cambridge,
11:19.300 –> 11:33.630
[SPEAKER_02]: We’re in North Carolina and then we have five or six people that we’re talking to on a weekly basis and they’re all over the United States different time zones and and that’s the way it was before 2020.
11:34.285 –> 11:44.270
[SPEAKER_02]: but it allowed us to stay relevant when everyone went home and did things virtual is that we kind of understood that process before that.
11:44.451 –> 11:50.185
[SPEAKER_02]: And we’ve been able to keep the team pretty, pretty much the same for a long period of time.
11:50.688 –> 12:01.060
[SPEAKER_01]: which is great when your, who’s great for stability generally, but it’s great when you’re on, you know, trying to ever improve those marketing messages to build that trust and to get those results.
12:01.660 –> 12:07.927
[SPEAKER_01]: The, you mentioned about, you know, they’re not being able to move around in 2020, so much in 2021.
12:08.668 –> 12:10.530
[SPEAKER_01]: Did that lead to a spike for you?
12:10.550 –> 12:16.797
[SPEAKER_01]: I would assume people were at home staring at their teachers going, all right, I’ll get around to,
12:16.777 –> 12:17.919
[SPEAKER_01]: turning that into a blanket.
12:17.959 –> 12:19.261
[SPEAKER_01]: Did that have a positive effect?
12:19.281 –> 12:22.406
[SPEAKER_01]: If you were you kind of neutral from the COVID impact?
12:22.867 –> 12:25.812
[SPEAKER_02]: We did see a bump those first few months.
12:25.932 –> 12:33.945
[SPEAKER_02]: I mean, exactly people were just in their house board trying to knock off projects that made them feel productive.
12:33.985 –> 12:35.788
[SPEAKER_02]: And so we definitely did a spike.
12:36.670 –> 12:41.097
[SPEAKER_02]: Our team actually started making mass as well.
12:41.077 –> 12:48.626
[SPEAKER_02]: And so we stayed open and we tried to create a safe of a working environment as possible.
12:48.686 –> 12:51.849
[SPEAKER_02]: Yes, so we added mass.
12:51.930 –> 12:57.476
[SPEAKER_02]: We sold about a million mass within the first three weeks of April, which was kind of wild.
12:58.077 –> 13:00.580
[SPEAKER_02]: And then we kept making, making quilt.
13:00.660 –> 13:04.384
[SPEAKER_02]: So that did, that did help us.
13:05.157 –> 13:09.581
[SPEAKER_02]: for a few years because of the iPhone changes.
13:09.682 –> 13:12.825
[SPEAKER_02]: I mean, that really took a Jack Hammer to our business.
13:13.545 –> 13:19.672
[SPEAKER_01]: Because when we first recorded it was, your funnel was very much Facebook ads site purchase.
13:20.693 –> 13:26.839
[SPEAKER_01]: And with the war between Apple and Facebook, has that led you to diversify?
13:26.859 –> 13:29.882
[SPEAKER_01]: Has that led you to become even cleverer at Meterads?
13:30.588 –> 13:36.574
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I think we’ve tried to diversify, but it just didn’t really work.
13:36.814 –> 13:45.322
[SPEAKER_02]: I think we’ve gotten better and the indromeda changes in Meta’s algorithm have actually helped us, I think.
13:45.742 –> 13:50.847
[SPEAKER_02]: But we always had a lead-based focus on our ad spend.
13:50.867 –> 13:59.835
[SPEAKER_02]: And I think we’re trying to become more like other businesses where you try to get them to convert quickly.
14:00.473 –> 14:18.594
[SPEAKER_02]: And so that’s been a transformation for us as had to add a lot more content quickly, had to iterate, had to use the algorithm and the data to make changes quickly and to create a workflow for all of this, which were constantly figuring out and making changes too.
14:19.394 –> 14:30.447
[SPEAKER_01]: Because it’s a lot easier to build that trust if you’re sending someone a welcome series, post email sign-up than it is in that quick passage from the deal on Facebook to website homepage.
14:30.781 –> 14:47.845
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I, Claybio has been a huge part of our business since the beginning, and yeah, we’re doing a lot of flows, and then we’re doing a lot of campaigns and we’re, I say we’re in a nice way nagging people.
14:49.597 –> 14:56.909
[SPEAKER_02]: it’s just a kind of product where a lot of people are into it, they think about it, but it takes work.
14:57.209 –> 15:03.559
[SPEAKER_02]: And so I get, you know, you’re busy with your life and with all the things that people have gone on.
15:03.640 –> 15:08.207
[SPEAKER_02]: And so we like to remind people about it frequently.
15:09.489 –> 15:15.739
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I can imagine it’s one of those things that the customer guys, I want to do this, but not this week.
15:15.803 –> 15:16.143
[SPEAKER_02]: Yes.
15:16.224 –> 15:25.034
[SPEAKER_01]: And so it has to be, because they’ve got to have the mental bandwidth to find the cheat t-shirts, select the right ones, package them up, take them to the store to post them.
15:25.595 –> 15:28.138
[SPEAKER_01]: So you could kind of keep putting it off.
15:28.158 –> 15:37.409
[SPEAKER_01]: Do you find that having a message like, there’s no delay, there’s no time limit on how long it needs to take you to get us the t-shirts.
15:37.429 –> 15:39.972
[SPEAKER_01]: Is that a positive message to get the purchase?
15:40.576 –> 15:49.104
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, we try to incentivize people to do it right away with urgency and discounting.
15:49.364 –> 16:03.178
[SPEAKER_02]: And you are, if you want to done by a specific date, the Christmas holiday industrial complex helps us in the sense that there’s a specific date that they need it by.
16:04.659 –> 16:08.963
[SPEAKER_02]: And that is helpful to us, same with graduation.
16:09.061 –> 16:27.324
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I think some people think that, well, when I buy, I have to like, immediately go to the mail carrier that same day and do this and we try to educate people that they can buy and they can spend time with their shirts and organize and they don’t have to go right away.
16:27.384 –> 16:32.470
[SPEAKER_02]: But it’s a marketing message and no matter how many times you say something,
16:32.450 –> 16:59.048
[SPEAKER_02]: people are going to miss it and that’s the other thing that we’ve really worked on over a decade is how do you give instructions to people so that they prepare their shirts in a way that make it easiest for our operations team to create the greatest product they can and for the customer more to be really happy with what they get because T-shirts were not created to cut them into squares.
17:00.327 –> 17:11.282
[SPEAKER_02]: And so we’ve tried to create an organized system for this, but there’s still a lot of variations, but our production team is really talented.
17:11.735 –> 17:19.647
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I was going to ask you about UGC, maybe I’ll ask you about UGC in a bit, but it looking at the UGC content on the home page.
17:20.409 –> 17:23.553
[SPEAKER_01]: You know, there’s some, the blanket’s all different sizes.
17:23.634 –> 17:28.501
[SPEAKER_01]: There’s somewhat you’ve almost got like a pink stripe and a blue stripe of different t-shirts.
17:28.601 –> 17:32.748
[SPEAKER_01]: Is that something the customers informing you that they want?
17:32.868 –> 17:38.637
[SPEAKER_01]: Or is that something your team are going, oh, actually, if we look at what we’ve been sent, we could do a stripey blanket.
17:38.870 –> 17:46.783
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, it’s mostly what they, what they say, and we’re, we’re cutting the same size square out of every shirt in 90% of cases.
17:46.863 –> 17:47.968
[SPEAKER_02]: And so,
17:48.235 –> 17:51.338
[SPEAKER_02]: we try to make do with what they send us.
17:51.499 –> 17:55.643
[SPEAKER_02]: And we try to give instructions of, here’s what we can work with, here’s what we cannot.
17:55.663 –> 18:04.533
[SPEAKER_02]: Like if you want your grandmother’s quilt that could be used in a museum, we’re not the right fit.
18:04.693 –> 18:16.065
[SPEAKER_02]: If you want a durable patchwork blanket quilt that you can easily throw on the wash and feels like a sweatshirt, that’s where the right fit for that.
18:16.484 –> 18:17.747
[SPEAKER_01]: That makes so much sense.
18:17.788 –> 18:21.598
[SPEAKER_01]: So let’s come back to the UGC thing then, because you’ve got quite a lot of it on the homepage.
18:22.200 –> 18:30.342
[SPEAKER_01]: Have you bought that into your meta ads creative, as well that UGC feel to up the trust element that early in the buying process?
18:30.490 –> 18:38.379
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, we’ve tried to have as many people go through this process and record it as possible.
18:39.199 –> 18:41.402
[SPEAKER_02]: We’ve worked with a lot of athletes.
18:41.442 –> 18:45.366
[SPEAKER_02]: We’ve really focused on women athletes.
18:45.867 –> 18:56.278
[SPEAKER_02]: We had done Instagram deals with US women’s soccer players back in 2016, 17, 18 before.
18:56.258 –> 19:01.206
[SPEAKER_02]: the women’s sports really took off on a financial scale.
19:01.266 –> 19:17.231
[SPEAKER_02]: And so we’ve continued to do a lot of marketing partnerships with college athletes and women’s pro sports leagues, which just helps us to create trust and that’s been an awesome part of our business.
19:17.612 –> 19:24.122
[SPEAKER_02]: And then just finding moms and UGC people and our audience gears,
19:24.895 –> 19:31.868
[SPEAKER_02]: a little bit older than a lot of other Shopify stores.
19:32.789 –> 19:43.349
[SPEAKER_02]: So we’ve tried to think about what makes people want to do this, get a good reaction from the person they’re gifting it to and make sure that they can trust something.
19:43.829 –> 19:48.017
[SPEAKER_02]: And we’re constantly thinking about that from a content perspective.
19:48.689 –> 19:53.437
[SPEAKER_01]: And what’s got you excited about 2026 in the year ahead?
19:53.457 –> 19:57.102
[SPEAKER_01]: Does there anything you’re particularly excited about testing or that’s coming up in the business?
19:58.144 –> 20:11.305
[SPEAKER_02]: I like the creative using creative as the way to find your audience, the mentality of meta now, where it used to be like tinkering with,
20:11.858 –> 20:16.890
[SPEAKER_02]: lists and audiences and trying to find the right, look like ad.
20:16.930 –> 20:26.492
[SPEAKER_02]: And now we can say, all right, I’m going to say in this video, I’m looking for moms of class of 2026.
20:27.248 –> 20:32.636
[SPEAKER_02]: and Meta will go out and find those parents, which is pretty amazing.
20:33.557 –> 20:46.836
[SPEAKER_02]: And so as that algorithm gets better and as the robots get more efficient, that actually helps a small business like us a lot.
20:46.856 –> 20:51.743
[SPEAKER_00]: E-commerce most of the land is supporting by some of the greatest companies in the E-commerce sector.
20:51.763 –> 20:53.425
[SPEAKER_00]: Here’s a reminder of who they are.
20:59.598 –> 21:01.881
[SPEAKER_00]: It’s time for the top tips you’re out.
21:04.505 –> 21:09.432
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, I love this section because it gives me an I’ll list us some really quick ideas for taking our businesses to the next level.
21:09.512 –> 21:11.214
[SPEAKER_01]: Nathan are you ready for the top tips?
21:11.735 –> 21:11.955
[SPEAKER_02]: Yes.
21:12.476 –> 21:14.018
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, the book top tip.
21:14.038 –> 21:20.948
[SPEAKER_01]: If everyone listening to this podcast agreed to take Friday off and read a book to make their business better, which book would you recommend?
21:21.400 –> 21:37.350
[SPEAKER_02]: I just read Reset by Dan Heath and I’m really into operations and figuring out how to make systems work better and it just gave a lot of really interesting examples like
21:37.432 –> 21:51.646
[SPEAKER_02]: One example was how sweet green the salad maker in the US, they were, it was taking a lot of the time to mix all of their ingredients and these big balls and the transfer them to go balls.
21:51.866 –> 22:00.014
[SPEAKER_02]: And so they figured out how to create a compostable ball that you could also mix the salads in.
22:00.215 –> 22:02.697
[SPEAKER_02]: So it cut five, six minutes,
22:02.677 –> 22:03.999
[SPEAKER_02]: almost out of every order.
22:04.900 –> 22:11.189
[SPEAKER_02]: And that kind of stuff is just fascinating to me and he and Dan Heath just went through a lot of examples like that.
22:12.070 –> 22:12.511
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, nice.
22:13.212 –> 22:20.763
[SPEAKER_01]: When you’re dealing with that kind of thing, sometimes having a ton of examples is more useful than someone explaining the theory.
22:21.364 –> 22:21.764
[SPEAKER_02]: Exactly.
22:22.545 –> 22:22.926
[SPEAKER_01]: Very cool.
22:23.106 –> 22:24.348
[SPEAKER_01]: I will have to have a look at that one.
22:24.949 –> 22:30.777
[SPEAKER_01]: A traffic top tip, which
22:31.583 –> 22:44.264
[SPEAKER_02]: I always think about email marketing people, people always are looking for the new thing, but email marketing is still the greatest tool to get people to buy.
22:44.284 –> 22:49.693
[SPEAKER_02]: From I would have said this to that 2016 and I still say this now.
22:50.635 –> 22:53.159
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, remain so powerful if you actually put the effort in.
22:53.660 –> 22:53.881
[SPEAKER_02]: Yes.
22:54.361 –> 22:55.083
[SPEAKER_01]: Totally agree.
22:55.203 –> 23:05.320
[SPEAKER_01]: Are the tool-top tip, maybe a collaboration tool, a social media plug-in, a phone-up or just a way of working, is the recall little tool you use that makes you and your team more efficient from day to day.
23:06.312 –> 23:21.944
[SPEAKER_02]: I think a lot of other people were figuring out the next wave of the internet, which is AI and chatGBT has helped us just create different systems for what we’re going and to iterate.
23:22.185 –> 23:26.093
[SPEAKER_02]: And I’m constantly using it to as a brainstorming.
23:26.073 –> 23:35.287
[SPEAKER_02]: mechanism being like okay here’s what I want to do let’s talk about this and work it out and then I come up with a plan that I then share with my team.
23:35.367 –> 23:40.095
[SPEAKER_02]: So as a brainstorming ideas for managers it’s a great tool.
23:41.036 –> 23:45.303
[SPEAKER_01]: Nice and not an unpopular top tip recommendation at the moment.
23:46.444 –> 23:51.372
[SPEAKER_01]: Carbon top tip what’s your favorite way to reduce the carbon footprint of any commester?
23:51.773 –> 24:02.408
[SPEAKER_02]: Since we last talked, we figured out how to partner with an organization in North Carolina that can turn the scraps that we create into yarn that can be spun into socks.
24:03.230 –> 24:13.765
[SPEAKER_02]: So we are creating tons and tons of text out waste and then upcycling that all into yarn and we’re selling socks that are made from t-shirts scraps.
24:14.504 –> 24:21.767
[SPEAKER_01]: How cool, because as we spoke about earlier, there’s a huge part of the product, which is about recycling and keeping things out of landfill.
24:22.610 –> 24:26.944
[SPEAKER_01]: But you are left once you’ve cut that square out, you’ve got a lot of t-shirt fabric.
24:27.667 –> 24:28.288
[SPEAKER_01]: left over.
24:28.708 –> 24:29.089
[SPEAKER_02]: Exactly.
24:29.109 –> 24:41.865
[SPEAKER_02]: And we’ve since we started, we’ve always had this waste problem where when we were starting, we were literally going around the country trying to find people who could recycle this.
24:41.985 –> 24:46.271
[SPEAKER_02]: And we spent a lot of money on textile recycling.
24:47.072 –> 24:53.640
[SPEAKER_02]: And so this was a way to
24:54.211 –> 25:08.683
[SPEAKER_01]: and a functional product where not only are you making money and instead of spending money, but you’re also, you know 100% that that product is being recycled because you’re physically selling it and turning it into a product and everything else.
25:08.723 –> 25:09.484
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, exactly.
25:09.544 –> 25:11.305
[SPEAKER_02]: And it’s a great suck.
25:11.325 –> 25:13.067
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I saw the reviews on the website, actually.
25:13.107 –> 25:14.288
[SPEAKER_01]: There are people love it, don’t they?
25:14.608 –> 25:15.409
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
25:15.429 –> 25:15.889
[SPEAKER_01]: They love it.
25:17.591 –> 25:23.796
[SPEAKER_01]: Nathan, before we say goodbye, could you please let the listeners know where they can find you and your business
25:24.552 –> 25:36.730
[SPEAKER_02]: So we are at project repat.com and I create a discount 30% discount called Master Plan for any listeners.
25:36.790 –> 25:41.017
[SPEAKER_02]: Unfortunately, we’re only in the United States and Canada.
25:41.577 –> 25:50.070
[SPEAKER_02]: But if you’re there or have to know anyone there, hope you’ve been by for us and then we’re on our Instagram account is project repat USA.
25:50.793 –> 25:52.876
[SPEAKER_01]: Thank you very much for the discount code.
25:52.896 –> 25:59.084
[SPEAKER_01]: I’m sure our American and Canadian listeners will be all over it, digging out those t-shirts and getting their orders in.
25:59.345 –> 26:01.007
[SPEAKER_01]: Thank you very much for that.
26:01.067 –> 26:02.509
[SPEAKER_01]: Thank you so much for coming back on the show.
26:02.529 –> 26:07.556
[SPEAKER_01]: It’s been lovely getting to catch up with you again, and I wish you huge success for the next 10 years.
26:08.257 –> 26:09.038
[SPEAKER_02]: Thanks so much.
26:14.688 –> 26:20.896
[SPEAKER_01]: I find it is equally interesting with our guest we’re bringing back for this these 10 year celebrations.
26:21.437 –> 26:23.800
[SPEAKER_01]: What people haven’t changed is much of what they have changed.
26:24.881 –> 26:38.839
[SPEAKER_01]: And great chatting to Nathan about how a project repap they are continuing to improve their solutions to the same challenges and they are continuing to build that trust with the consumers as they will place the order and send in the goods.
26:38.819 –> 26:43.608
[SPEAKER_01]: They’re continuing to narrow down who their target customer is and how to get in front of them.
26:43.789 –> 26:50.021
[SPEAKER_01]: I continue to get better and better and better at the Facebook ads can undrum and at the email marketing can undrum.
26:50.041 –> 26:52.105
[SPEAKER_01]: So great to get to chat to him about all of that.
26:52.125 –> 26:59.038
[SPEAKER_01]: And I love that carbon top tip about taking your own waste product and finding a way to turn it into another product that you can sell.
26:59.018 –> 27:09.871
[SPEAKER_01]: In get your hands on our notes from this episode, including all those top tips and the links to what we mentioned by heading over to ecommercemasterplanned.com, you can also use our direct episode short links.
27:10.312 –> 27:18.262
[SPEAKER_01]: Just put ECMP.info forward slash the number of this episode into the URL bar, and you’ll be redirected straight to the right page of the site.
27:18.722 –> 27:19.844
[SPEAKER_01]: When you get there, go on.
27:20.104 –> 27:21.786
[SPEAKER_01]: I just
27:21.766 –> 27:27.818
[SPEAKER_01]: If you like this episode, then make sure you check out our first chat with Nathan.
27:27.918 –> 27:38.138
[SPEAKER_01]: Episode 43, yes, you can have to scroll almost all the way back to the beginning, but it’s well worth hearing about how they got the business up and running and how they dealt with their first growth spurts.
27:38.118 –> 27:46.871
[SPEAKER_01]: And then if you want more episodes about homewares and blankets and things like that, then head to ECMP dot info forward slash home.
27:47.472 –> 27:51.859
[SPEAKER_01]: Thank you for tuning into this and every episode that you do of the e-commerce master plan podcast.
27:52.199 –> 28:03.096
[SPEAKER_01]: I bring you a new one every week because I want to inspire and help e-commerce business owners like you to succeed and thrive with your businesses, including progressing along that path to sustainability.
28:03.076 –> 28:08.908
[SPEAKER_01]: So, if you know someone this show can help, please tell them to listen to the e-commerce master plan podcast.
28:08.928 –> 28:23.717
[SPEAKER_00]: And if you have a great week and don’t forget to keep optimizing.