We learn how an international speaker and author John Lawson got his start in
Transcript
Jesse: Whatâs going on, Richard, are you ready for another show?
Richard: Oh, yeah, always, actually, Iâm excited about this one.
Jesse: Yeah. Yeah, actually, youâve known this guest for a while now, I think whatâs interesting is, we talk a lot about social media. We talk about Shoppable posts and things like that, but I wouldnât say either one of us are experts in social media. We can talk about it a lot but I think every now and then we need to bring on an expert level to really give our guests something beyond oh, post this tweet. We want to add more to our merchants and give you guys something to think about.
Richard: Definitely, and John, youâll be introduced properly here in a second. Heâs been doing it for a while, I was one of some of the original sellers on eBay and I think Johnâs one of the few people that actually can say wasbefore me and back when PayPal was actually called X. I think weâll ask him when he comes on here. But I think he was even using it back then too. But yeah, a pioneer in the space. Heâs been doing
Jesse: Thatâs the better intro than I was going to do. But we will bring on international keynote speaker and author John Lawson. Howâs it going, John?
John:
Richard: All right, we donât have the big conference lights and everything going on with the clickers and timers and all that.
John: Beyonce music, I get it. (laughing) Whatâs up, guys?
Jesse: Oh, itâs a good day. We gave you a pretty good intro there. I mean, letâs hope you can live up to that now. Youâve been around a long time in
John: Yeah, please do. All right.
Richard: Weâll be stealing some of the link juice though.
John: The link juice! Go for it.
Richard: How about if you start with a brief history of what got you started and then where youâre at today and what you think people in the
John: Yeah, I donât tell the story all the time, it gets boring if you tell the same story year after year on stage. But the way I got started is I had a friend that came to me and said: Hey, you should flip a house with me. And long story short, this is like 2001, and I ended up upside down with a second property that I couldnât afford and we couldnât get anybody to rent it. I couldnât sell it. And I was about to go bankrupt and I was trying to find a way out of the bankruptcy. Somebody told me: Well, you should sell your stuff on eBay. And I was like Really? Even I can sell stuff? I mean, I knew you could do like used socks or something but to sell stuff⊠So I had a bunch of used books that I was hoarding in my basement. Iâd already read them. I was in IT, so I had those big thick
Richard: Oh, thatâs awesome. I did the same things early on with Beanie Babies and baseball cards and same type thing. You kind of wished: Man, I wish it was December every month.
John: And I wish I knew that it wasnât going to last forever. Thatâs what I wish I did.
Richard: Yeah, I lucked out, I donât have a garage full of Beanie Babies still. Iâve switched product, I saw that coming quick. Every fad runs out and you want to do something sustainable. So what got you out of
John: Well, you know what we were like, you said I was looking for repeatable. In fact, I was doing the arbitrage thing which is going around and trying to find a product that I could sell online and make some money. But I really wanted to and I recognized that we needed to do our own products. We needed to do some kind of branding and I tell people, theyâre like: Well, whatâs a brand? Itâs just your name. Iâm like: No, but a brand is not your name. A brand is what people say about you when youâre not in a room. Thatâs your brand. We wanted to build a brand and I started selling a lot of urban
Well, not really, I digress the actual beginning of social media was really AOL, but your audience is probably too young to remember that. But it was the same concept where you would literally join these chat boards and groups and you talk back and forth. And the first platform for social commerce was actually eBay because when you were waiting for the auction to end, people would have these chat boards and you would be talking about the products like they would talk about Beanie Babies. And you remember that was a very hot place to either find new Beanie Babies or to pick up some
Richard: Yeah, thatâs awesome and the beauty to that when you created that video, it lives on and I donât know if people really get that all the time, certain socials the life of that platform is a little different. I mean pitching the choir on this one, but the lifespan of a tweet is the shortest. But itâs very interesting because itâs the real whatâs going on right now, live platform. I still when they debate with people back and forth like Twitter going away. Itâs like I donât think itâs going away. And when you compare it to the Behemoth of Facebook, it doesnât look that big, but would you like to have 50 million active users, Iâd take it any day. But YouTube for sure lives on and Iâm sure, I donât know to the same extent, but you still probably get sales because of that video.
John: Well, I probably would but I donât sell them anymore. But yes, I probably would, itâs still out there to help people. We still get residual money from watches and ads on.
Richard: Yes, and when VR happens again and Tupacâs doing concerts all new start over again (laughing).
John: Bam, and you just gave me an idea.
Jesse: The next platform coming, thereâs probably a decent markup on a bandana.
John: Yeah, it was nice to call it God money, it could just fall out of the sky. I mean, it was just so good.
Richard: So there was something you said in the middle of that. I want to dive in a little deeper and it was about the brand and how you create a brand. How exactly to your point you get people to talk about you, what type of content would you recommend people? Letâs kind of segue that direction on what do you recommend when someoneâs just getting started and thereâs going to be various budget? Some people going to have more money. Some people going to have laughs, but just with the good
John: Yeah. I think thatâs the key. Itâs about communication with your customer. If you know what they need and you start providing it for them, they will talk about you. Thatâs really at the simplest level. The reason why Amazon is always talked about itâs not because Amazon has the greatest selection. Itâs not because Amazon has the greatest prices. People think they might because they donât search anywhere else. But the reason why people talk about Amazon and why Amazon is winning at this game is simply because of the service it provides. It is their service. That is the brand. I know if I order something on Amazon and Iâm a Prime member, right, Prime is their service, I get it in two days and thatâs why theyâre winning the game. You have to create an experience for people that canât be duplicated and add value to the product that you already give. Most of our products get made in some third world country, or China or something like that. Right? Most of us donât make handmade, our own products. So what the deal is I can find whatever it is youâre selling, that somebody else can make by doing a great Google search and putting my name on that product. And I have a product, thatâs like Kevin on Shark Tank always talks about. Itâs like what makes you any different than anybody else? Well, youâve got to figure out how to add value to your product and a lot of times that is going to be the service that you provide. There was a company called Zappos that Amazon never could beat in shoes. Zappos would be kicking Amazonâs butt so much that Amazon ended up having to buy the company just so that they could compete on shoes and Zappos brought their customer support understanding to the Amazon world. Zappos was the ones that had unlimited, you could return shoes no matter when. And everybodyâs like Well, why would you do that? Because look, I have something and I have to get it to you in 14 days. Your return policy is 14 days. Guess what for the first 13 days all Iâm going to remember is that I need to get that stuff back to these people. But when you tell me that you got six months, guess what, about a time five months goes by Iâm not even thinking about that, right? So literally when we implemented some of that stuff when we extended our return policy, we got fewer returns, believe it or not, because at some point itâs not something thatâs top of mind anymore. And then after a while, you just like I have kept it as long, Iâm just gonna keep it. But the deal is we were beating our competitors because the competitor had this strenuous We donât take any returns back or we only take it back in seven days. And weâre sitting there going, weâre laughing because now people are recognizing our brand because of the experience that we were offering to that customer. You got to figure out how can your experience be better for customers because today price comparison is not going to win you the game. All that is is a big drain and youâre going to watch your profits go down the drain because somebodyâs always going to come back and beat you on price at some point. You donât want to compete on price. A brand is something that you can slap your name on it and actually charge more for the product. Thatâs a real brain. If you canât charge more for a product because of your brand name, you donât have a brand, you have a label.
Richard: Yeah, itâs so interesting, you say that itâs almost like weâre thinking about this or talked about it ahead of time. The price game, the
John: They know thereâs something deeper. They just feel like thereâs something deeper. What is it? Youâre not telling me, John. (laughing) Yeah. I just told you, told you: you want to build a brand — do what I just said. So what has to be more?
Richard: What would you recommend? Letâs make a scenario up. It was a pretty good tip of the iceberg there with the how to fold a bandana. Do you think you should make these videos about most frequently asked questions or whatâs a good starting point for someone?
John: That is the starting point. Find 10 things that are your most frequently asked questions and make 10 videos on it. And the key is you want to name the video how the question is asked. Alright, not how you ask the question, not how you think a question would be at, but exactly how your customer keeps asking you to question. In my case, it was how to fold a bandana like Tupac. Guess what my video is called, How to fold a bandana like Tupac, right? Thatâs because thatâs what people are searching for. Especially in this new era. See we donât understand whatâs about to happen. Whatâs about to happen with voice commerce, see, because when you had the desktop, it was great. You could type in something and youâll get a hundred different results. But if I ask for toilet paper to Alexa or to Google home, I donât want a hundred results. I want one result and what that means is that the ability to do a selection of product is going away. And itâs only going to be the one product because nobody wants a whole bunch of options. They just want what they want. What is really going to be coming so important in this new voice Commerce era, youâre going to have to get the people to ask for your product by name. Because selection is really going away. Itâs amazing whatâs about to happen.
Jesse: Yeah, thatâs it. I love that advice there because, of course, a brand is important but how does it really relate to whatâs going to happen in the next couple years? Voice is the perfect explanation for that, because yeah, I get it if you say I want a bandana, youâre going to get the top option from Amazon. If youâre on Alexa from Google, itâs going to be probably something to Walmart or Target. But if you say I want a bandana made by such and such brand. Now theyâre going to lead you to that particular website. But otherwise, youâre going to be buried, number two is nowhere. Thereâs no number two.
John: Realistically, even on Google or Amazon right now the number one result gets more than 60% of all the buys. Just think about that, the number two gets 25%. And all the rest of them are fighting for what is that, eight?
Richard: So do you recommend people start on one platform or start on a platform where their customers are or how do you feel about that?
John: You want to start where your customers are. Absolutely, and the thing is and where theyâre buying. I mean our customers, yes, are on Facebook, but are they buying on Facebook? Maybe not? Probably not, but maybe theyâre buying on Pinterest. I donât know. So should we talk about just social platforms right there, right? So you want to find out where theyâre hanging out in social. The other place you want to go to of course or possibly marketplaces if thatâs something youâre into trying. Then go for it, be on Amazon or Ebay or an Etsy. Those places are pretty good for getting started, definitely good for brand building, right? I think if youâre just getting started, what you really want to do is focus in on one or two platforms because multiplication by zero will get you zero. So many people are like: Look, if I could just put it onto more channels. No, figure out how to sell it on the channel youâre on first. Like what did you say,
Jesse: I think thatâs great. Of course, weâre in the business, we know all sorts of stuff. We actually give our customers all sorts of advice on this podcast. But I think the better advice is yeah, thereâs a lot of things you can do, but pick one or two that you really like, that your customers are really on. If you think all your customers are on Pinterest because maybe itâs a little crafty or itâs a food thing. And youâre not on Pinterest, maybe thatâs the one you want to focus in and learn. But if youâre selling to younger people, you might have to learn Instagram. I mean Instagram is probably a good stock answer.
John: It is a good stock answer for younger people. They are like
Jesse: Yeah, the
John: I know. Iâm quitting Facebook. Iâm going to Instagram. Thatâs not working.
Jesse: Yeah, you really showed Mark Zuckerberg there. (laughing)
John: Thereâs Sally, and Iâm gonna date May, even though sheâs Sally. (laughing)
Jesse: Yeah. I always get a kick out of that one too. People are gonna switch to another platform. Iâm on Facebook, Twitter, now Instagram. So they start out, they get any brand. We get a lot of beginners that are listening to the show and maybe they havenât made that many sales. Maybe theyâve made 50 sales, a hundred sales total and so. They might not really know the platform where people are hanging out. They popped up a site, got some sales doing some ads, maybe testing the waters with a bunch of social media. How can they hone in? Whatâs the hot tip here? We can give them to pick that platform. I mean, I know itâs not easyâŠ
John: They want to start looking for groups. You want to start looking for groups like on Facebook. Even if you go back to the old school forums, and find out where people are talking about that vertical of products you sell. So letâs say, you sell womenâs apparel. Iâm sure thereâs a lot of places where people talk about womenâs apparel, letâs say blouses. All right. Well, thatâs fine what theyâre saying about the frustration of purchasing blouses. And find out what they are talking about, how theyâre talking about it, what they like, what they donât like. The first thing you want to do is start listening to the conversation because thereâs gold in listening to the conversation. Another place that I kind of like doing some detailed research is actually on Amazon. So if youâve got a product that is similar to the Amazon product, you go out and look and see what people are saying in the comments and you donât really want⊠I mean the good comments are great, everybodyâs loving it. Find out the one star, start reading the
Jesse: Got it. No, thatâs great advice. I think you created this, you had this idea. Maybe you didnât think it was your best idea but it took off like wildfire and now just by listening to other people, listening to the comments coming in, youâre able to create other content That was a few years ago, you were creating YouTube videos at that time. Is that what you would still do? If youâre in that business would be doing YouTube videos first or would you be thinking elsewhere?
John: You know what, I probably would not necessarily be doing YouTube videos, but if I found out that yes, this is the issue and it needs to be demonstrated. Thereâs nothing better to demonstrating something than using a YouTube video, right? Okay, or a Facebook video. And I do say thereâs a difference. Itâs the same video, you just upload it to the native platform these days. Create a YouTube video and then put a link on to something — that just doesnât work anymore. Those guys are competing with each other for traffic and they will deprecate how many people see your link based on that. So yes, I think videos fantastic for doing what you do. I donât think I even said that those 10 videos that I told you, make ten separate videos, not the top ten questions. You make ten separate videos nice and short, three to five minutes at best. You should be able to explain something. I do still like video, I think videos still on the rise and itâs growing. Now letâs say you have some other stuff once you do the video. What I like about videos you can repurpose. I can extract the audio and now Iâve got an MP3 file. I can take that MP3 file upload it to Rev, and thatâs Rev.com. Iâm not doing a commercial here, but thatâs where you can take audio and it turns it into text. And now youâve got a blog post that you can put out there. So when people do the search, theyâll see your video. They might see you talking through the audio parts and now youâve got an actual blog post to go with it. I take that blog post. I put it on my site. I take that blog post. I put it on Mention. Iâve given all of these is credible links that go back to your store. Right. Now when Google looks at your store, theyâre seeing you got links coming from all of these social channels, which they ranked highly and the more of those you have, the greater your chance you have of being found.
Jesse: Thatâs great.
John: Just itâs a game. Itâs a game. You just got to play the game.
Richard: Yeah, and itâs to your point where, yes, you want to make 10 different videos but itâs more important to actually make sure youâre putting those in the right places and youâre playing the game. Because to your point earlier about brand, youâre seeing even in Google search results theyâre heavily favoring brands. Because probably that same reason. Everyoneâs fighting for that same customer experience and they will no matter what platform theyâre on, theyâre trying to protect their customers. Some do it better than others, some donât do it so well. But thatâs what theyâre really trying to do. They want toâŠwhy you say upload it natively, they want you to stay on their playground. If youâre Google, they want you to stay on their playground. If youâre Facebook, they want to stay on that playground. So you really listen to John there, in that you want to find out first and foremost what the questions are being asked. Use our mouth and our ears in proportion to what weâve been blessed with two to one at least. Mostly Iâd probably say itâs even a little higher than that. But listen and then create content the way your customers are searching for it. Name it the way theyâre searching for it and then put that in the places where theyâre at. But it all starts with what do you stand for, what are you making and then finding those groups and listening to what theyâre saying.
John: I love that. I love the what do you stand for. People love that store. You got to stand for something. And thatâs part of a brand like Patagonia. Thatâs part of their brand. Itâs what they stand for and people use that stuff because they are outdoor enthusiast as well that loves to protect nature. Bam. Now you get it. I see these two guys on TV right now right that are cleaning up the ocean. Youâve seen this commercial?
Richard: No, not yet.
John: You havenât seen this commercial. It is these two surfer guys that were just in Bali and stuff was washing up on the beach, just because where Bali is located a lot of plastics were just on the beach. And they just started a charitable organization where they were going to just start cleaning up the beaches literally in the last I think maybe three years. This company has taken off right even though itâs a
Jesse: Yeah, thatâs great. And I think something youâve mentioned several times now is video, itâs kind of coming back to video here several different places. That is the new medium.
John: Whatâs the old saying? A picture is worth a thousand words. A thousand. I think today itâs worth ten thousand. Yeah. So videoâs not going anywhere. Our kids are not getting smaller people. Theyâre not. And our video is in our hand now. When youâre seeing people theyâre watching something. The amount of time people consume just watching crap is amazing to me.
Jesse: Yeah. Why not be part of that crap? (laughing)
John: We might be part of that crap on these. But the other thing is too, I canât remember, I saw a study there and they say how much time actually gets wasted from watching videos in stream. Because if you just think about it, you go and youâre going through your stream and then a video starts playing and you give it 30 seconds. Well, you know you do that
Jesse: Yeah, itâs crazy. I was listening to a podcast on the way in today and they were talking specifically about Instagram Stories. Instagram Stories didnât even exist two years ago and now thatâs the dominant way that people are consuming video on their phone and itâs just short little videos.
John: Years ago they recall Snapchat.
Jesse: Yeah, then Instagram stole it and did it. Itâs video and itâs super short and people get it. They take it by just picking up their phone and pushing that button.
John: So itâs just telling a story. This is my day. And I mean itâs so simple. And what I was reading something where Facebook Stories are taking off to Facebook. Given that more footprint in your timeline as well. So these are all things that you could do so simply. You can tell the story of how you guys started a business. You can show how you do your packing and shipping. You can talk about how much you love your customers. You can do videos on all kind of stuff. I get it, a lot of people wonât watch it but the few that do could be the ones that you sell to.
Jesse: Yeah, thatâs perfect. I know weâve been kind of pounding the table on this one a little bit too, so Iâm glad that somebody else is telling our customers: Yeah, you have to make a video. Social media is not just sending out tweets and typing things on Facebook. Itâs a video, itâs just video.
John: Yeah. And the best videos are not the
Jesse:Itâs probably a selfie.
Richard: Itâs kind of. Iâve noticed itâs at the polar extremes. Itâs either the cell phone like to your point, or itâs the Harmon brothers with Squatty Potty or something. To your point, because I donât want to derail them, highly produced videos still can really do the trick. I mean theyâve done a bunch of really good ones as you know. Iâm sure youâve spoken at some of the conferences where theyâve talked about it. But donât let that stop you is really your point. You donât have to make it highly produced, these people are trying to run a business. You need to think back again if we kind of recap on what youâve said. Listen to the audience of who youâre trying to sell to. Theyâre going to tell you, what they want and then you create content and you literally⊠weâre seeing videos super important but you also said audio. You also talked about voice and you talked about transcribing that into a blog post. These are things you can do. One thing and get a lot of use out of that one thing. And then you get really good at that one place but then you also put it in other places. So what weâre really trying to get across to the people here that are listening is you got to start somewhere. And the best place to start is listening to what people are asking for. Then give them what a concept, give them what theyâre asking for and theyâll start to talk about you. The beauty of a brand too, that we didnât really get into but Iâm sure you would attest to, is when you get loyal fans you almost donât have to worry about the troll hate chatter on social because your customers will jump in and protect you faster than you can even get on.
John: Absolutely. Because you get brand fans and brand fans are your best defenders.
Jesse: Yeah, I know. I love it and Iâve seen it. Iâve seen it in action as well. Itâs great because the social media, you do have to be on it. You canât let people fill up these feeds with a bunch of crap. You get off to fight it but when your customers start fighting back for you. Oh man, then youâre starting to win. It takes a while but youâre starting to get there.
John: It starts with it. Letâs just say one thing about the Squatty Potty video. I get it. But more than anything it had a story. The video was actually crappy compared to a real highly polished video. It canât be. Happiness comes from the craziness of this video. But it had a great story. Can you imagine somebody sitting there is like Yeah, weâre gonna lick a lollipop or a cone full of unicorn poop. Yeah, thatâs funny as hell! But you never know if thatâs going to play out. You never know. I remember Dollar Shave Club, that one to me was like Oh my God, I love this video. But I donât think they could have thought that it was going to be that big. Nobody can really just tell you what a customer or the public is going to gravitate towards. Because at the same time Squatty Potty did what itâs doing. Youâve got the kid in the back seat thatâs just got his teeth pulled and heâs still all loopy and that thing has got ten times more than a Squatty Potty video. You just never know whatâs going to catch on. And I donât know how many people have tried to make this Squatty Potty video. Quite successful, right?
Richard: Yeah. Itâs a good point there. Itâs all in the story. Thatâs one. And then two, just back to your dollar shave club. Did you see what Dollar Beard Club did with that too? Theyâre basicallyâŠ
John: I got to go look now.
Richard: Oh, itâs hilarious. Youâll love it. They literally basically completely make fun of it. Look it up. Youâre going to love it. But itâs the same thing. And what do we do,
John: Absolutely.
Jesse: Yeah. I think for listeners here, hopefully, you guys have picked up some of those tips. If youâre you listen to us again and take some notes because there is a blueprint here inside this podcast for you to test things out and start to build your own success. John, I really appreciate you being on the show here either. Any last places where we can find out more about you?
John: JohnLawson.com, my name dot com.
Jesse: Awesome.
Richard: Thanks again, John.