491: The Future Of Ecommerce In The Face Of AI And Other Changes With Mike Jackness And Toni Herrbach
You're listening to the MyWive Quitter job podcast.
The place where I bring on successful bootstrap business owners
and Dell deeply in what strategies are working
and what strategies are not with their businesses.
Now, I just got back from Las Vegas
where I got to speak in front of 1300 people
at the Alibaba Co-Create Conference.
And it was a fun event.
And what's cool is that I got to meet up in person
with my good friend, Mike Jackness
and my business partner, Tony Urback.
And you know by now that whenever we three get together,
we always record a podcast.
So today, we are going to discuss the future of e-commerce
in the face of AI and other changes in the industry.
But before I begin, I want to give a quick shout out
to Chase Diamond for sponsoring this episode.
Chase is my go-to guy when it comes to email marketing
and he runs a successful email marketing agency
over at structured agency, which caters
to many eight and non-figure e-commerce brands.
Now, for those of you who can't afford to hire an agency,
Chase offers a pretty good email marketing course
if you want to learn how to do email yourself.
And this course can be found over at mywifequitter.com slash Chase.
Once again, that's mywifequitter.com slash C-H-A-S-E.
I also want to thank Emerge Council for sponsoring this episode.
Now, if you sell an Amazon or run any online business
for that matter, the most important aspect
of your long-term success is going to be your brand.
And this is why I work with Stephen Weigler
and his team from Emerge Council
to protect my brand over at Bumblebee Linnons.
Now, what's unique about Emerge Council
is that Steve focuses his legal practice on e-commerce
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Now on to the show.
Welcome to the MyWife Putter job podcast.
It is rare that both Mike Jackness and Tony Urback
and myself are all in the same room together.
But when we are, we always like to record a podcast.
And I thought we would go a little high level today
and maybe just talk about the future of commerce
where the opportunities are.
We'll just leave it at that.
Because I know Mike probably doesn't have anything
to say about that.
No, nothing.
I know for everything to say that anything.
It's cool being back on the podcast so soon.
I just recorded with you, I'm not sure
when these episodes go out, but we just got the chit chat.
So it's cool being back here,
cool being in the same room with you and Tony.
And looking forward to talk today.
Well, I didn't tell you this,
but I might not air that episode.
I don't blame you.
Yeah.
That's a lot of whining on your part and, you know.
That's all I ever do.
Let's whine about something else today.
So we're at the Alibaba conference.
And a big part of it is sourcing.
Let me give you this question to start out.
Of all the different factors in the success
of an e-commerce business, how would you rank sourcing
as part of that?
Yeah.
It's one of those things that doesn't seem important at all
until all of a sudden it is, right?
Because like you kind of just ignore sourcing
or take it for granted a lot of times,
I think, because you're looking at, you know,
looking at things from a marketing perspective,
or are you using a Tulic Helium 10 or Jungle Scout
or something like that and searching for opportunities?
And just looking to like scratch off that sourcing box.
But if you have bad sourcing partners,
then all of a sudden that's all you can think about,
because you're not getting your products in time.
The quality isn't good.
They're delayed.
The logistics are bad.
Something is broken in that process.
You know, they stolen your money.
There's all kinds of things that I'm climbing through
over the years.
Like again, it's one of those things
that you'd kind of take for granted.
Sometimes like your health until all of a sudden,
you can't walk properly.
You can't breathe, or you're sick,
or you get COVID or something.
And you don't think about those things
until they're happening.
And sourcing oftentimes is kind of that forgotten thing
in e-commerce.
See, I just wanted a number.
A number.
A number.
Well, you know, how would you rank it on a scale?
Oh.
And then we get this like, this is going to be a long episode, folks.
It can be a one or a 10.
There we go.
Yeah, I was thinking for myself.
I think it matters a lot just to get started.
But I'm actually of the belief these days
that, at least for your own site, 9 Amazon,
that you can pretty much sell anything with a good message
as long as the quality of your products is good.
Yeah, right.
That's what I'm saying.
I mean, it's like I think a lot of what we do
is we're either using tools, the fine opportunities,
or we're trying to be better at marketing,
or we're looking at the digital end of it.
I mean, I strongly look at e-commerce that way.
And the source things like the kind of thing that just,
you have to kind of go do that thing
in order to be an e-commerce business.
And yes, it's becoming less and less of a factor.
I mean, we're at a Alibaba conference.
Alibaba is one of the reasons why, right?
I mean, like these tools like Alibaba are out there
where it becomes a lot easier to find suppliers,
to vet suppliers, to work with suppliers.
And when I first got started in e-commerce,
I had to physically travel to China
and do all that work on the ground.
And something like Alibaba has made that much easier.
So here's a question.
Do you feel like you need to go to China anymore?
It's a tough question because we haven't been in a while.
And you know, you kind of keep on doing the same old things.
You have a routine.
I was going there all the time before COVID.
And then COVID happened.
And I had to figure out another way.
And for me, that was having a sourcing agent.
So I think, you know, the reality is, do I need to go?
No, I don't think that I need to go.
But I think that relationships are super important.
And I do think, if you're importing a significant amount of stuff
and you're working with relatively few manufacturers,
just like anything else in life,
it's probably good to put some FaceTime in
and go do those suppliers and let them get you drunk
if the big lazy Susan thing.
And do those things just to,
because it becomes harder psychologically for people
to say no, or have hard conversations with people
that they have a relationship with.
And so if you're over there and you put that work in,
it'll be more difficult for them to mistreat you.
And they'll also probably put you at top of mind
over other people that haven't been putting in that work.
So do you have to go?
No, should you go?
You probably should still make an effort.
It is true, because I think about the internet today.
And you know, a lot of people are posting
anonymously negative comments,
but they probably wouldn't do that too face to face, right?
That's right.
We're going to India here in a few weeks
and then we're going to Hong Kong.
And we're not actually going to China.
We're going to Hong Kong during the Canton Fair
and then our suppliers actually meeting us in Hong Kong.
So we are meeting our biggest supplier on this trip.
If they weren't going to come to Hong Kong,
I would have popped in the China,
but they were willing to come to Hong Kong
because they had some other things
that they wanted to do anyway.
So this will be my first time seeing them face to face
and man, four years, it was 2019 last time.
Actually, the last time I went to China was with you, Tony.
I want to say, that was back in 2017, 2018.
I can't.
2017, yeah.
I'm actually, I probably need to go back.
Here's the thing, Mike, I actually dread those meals.
Yeah, I don't want to.
I don't want to either.
Yeah.
It's so awkward, but I mean,
and I try to bust out the Chinese
just because there's always this language barrier.
Oh, it's tough.
It's very tough.
It's a lot of smiling on my part
and then whipping out the Chinese as much as I can,
then like laughing on my Chinese
or they're responding.
But things are always better after that meal.
I wonder if they enjoy it, actually.
Well, actually, I actually think they really do.
Like, I mean, from what I can tell,
it's part of the culture, right?
And I think, you know, from what,
because I've been over there several times,
I've had a lot of interactions with suppliers.
And at a high level, what I've kind of figured out
is that there's kind of like an old school and new school,
kind of faction of suppliers.
So you have like the older generation of suppliers
that seem to really love that like wine and dine
that meal you're around again, the lazy Susan.
I love that environment.
It's just, I wish they had that here in the United States.
It would be cool for business dinners.
And then the younger guys that I work with over there,
they just kind of take you out to a regular restaurant.
It's rare that they even have a beer.
If they do, it's like a drink.
They're starting out there to get you drunk.
It's a much different environment.
And so I don't know if it's a bit of a generational thing,
or it just happens they'll play it out that way.
But I did, I have to talk to people
over there specifically about that.
It does seem that like the old way of doing business
in China is that's the thing that they like to do.
And they seem to have fun doing it.
Like they, I mean, they get really drunk.
So I don't know.
I mean, and, you know, I look back at those memories,
like what I look forward to going to do that again,
like no, because it's, I mean, it's,
it's a big hangover the next day.
But looking back at it, I do enjoy like that,
that cultural thing that I got to be a part of.
See, I've never gotten completely wasted.
No, no.
I just have a drink and I just nurture it.
You never did the gumbae thing to you
where you had to like drink the,
the lychew out of the little hole.
Oh, no, I can't handle that.
I can't handle my liquor.
I'd be completely dead if you say no.
They like, they frown upon it, so.
Maybe it's because I speak Chinese.
Maybe that, then, oh yeah.
Maybe I should make my chicken poop.
So, I'm probably like, I'm telling Michelle,
so my wife speaks Chinese.
And so I'm telling her, like, tell them I don't want
any more to drink, as she's probably telling them,
give them six.
No idea.
We both use sourcing agents.
And then, at the same time,
Alibaba has all these cool features now,
where, you know, they vet the suppliers for you,
and they had, they introduced a bunch of new features
at this event.
So, do you think that Alibaba is going to replace
sourcing agents?
What are the pros and cons in your opinion?
And do you still use Alibaba?
Yeah.
Who are they going to replace sourcing agents?
I mean, I don't know.
I think that sourcing agents are still going to have a place.
I think, I look at it as a tiered system,
is the way I kind of think of it.
So, like, if you're just getting started,
or you're smaller, or you're working,
you're placing smaller orders with a whole bunch of factories,
Alibaba seems to be the go-to place, right?
Because it's just, you have this portal,
it's like a search engine for,
for source, for factories around the world.
And I think that that's awesome.
Like, it really helps people,
the buried entry is very small to find that.
I think, once you kind of graduate to a certain size,
you probably would want to use a sourcing agent
because you're looking for more unique suppliers.
You're looking for, you know, special things here or there.
You're looking for someone who's going to,
you know, have some other edge.
And for us, the sourcing agent kind of checks
a lot of these boxes.
And then I think, you know, the final step is,
like, you get large enough, you just hire
your own full-time people on the ground.
And China, I kind of think of that as like the three tiers,
or whether it's China or other parts of the world.
And so we're kind of at that sourcing agent stage right now.
Like, I love Alibaba.
I'm grateful that it's existed.
It's helped us in our community,
like, be able to find suppliers.
But I also like having a sourcing agent,
because I feel like a representative in the middle
of this process that is important to me.
Like, they, would I pay them?
Provides more value to me.
And I feel like I make that back and more.
And I, it's an important part of the process for me.
Yeah.
For me, we're just lazy.
It's not just a matter of being lazy.
And you, you probably, you know,
because you do speak some Chinese, you know,
have a little bit of a cultural leg up.
I just feel like it's, it's a very different culture.
Like, I mean, I've, I've been to 57 countries.
And I often talk about how China is the most difficult
for me to navigate.
I just call it culture perspective.
And that's even going with someone who speaks the language.
I can only imagine not having a wife who speaks Chinese,
how much more difficult it would be.
And so I think there's like this discultural divide
in China that I have not experienced
in, like, Central or South America,
or Europe, or other places that I've been.
And so having that sourcing agent on the ground
that really understands the customs
and, like, won't let me get taken advantage of.
They're really, they understand pricing better.
They understand quality better.
In terms of, like, what you can push back on
and inspections, they're physically there,
like doing the inspection for me.
They, you know, they're my advocate on the ground.
And so I feel like, you know, the eight percent or so
whatever it works out to that sourcing agent takes,
it's not just a matter of being lazy.
Like, I feel like I'm getting that value
and more from them.
And yes, at a benefit is I don't have the fly across the world
two or three times a year to go as its suppliers now.
So we like our sourcing agent
because we've, we always negotiate peace per peace inspections.
They literally inspect every single thing and they know
what we're looking for because we had this document
that we've developed over the years.
Like, this is a defect.
This is a defect.
This is a defect.
Whereas, like, if we were to use, you know,
just like a regular inspector,
we'd have to convey that information each time.
And it wouldn't be as thorough.
Yeah, that's kind of what I'm saying in terms of, like,
advocating for a sourcing agent or because I mean,
it's always a sticky situation with quality in China.
And this has just been pervasive through 70 years
of doing this and it just, even if you get one batch
of the quality, they will always,
they're always trying to like revert back
to doing something squirrely, let lower quality,
let's, you know, changing the materials, doing something.
And so having, you know, a sourcing agent
that you work with on a continuous basis that isn't just,
like you said, hiring an inspection company
that's just in and out there quickly,
I think is really, really important.
If that's a big part of your business,
which for us, it is, I think most Westerners,
it's a big part of their business.
So you mentioned you're going to India.
Are you currently sourcing there right now?
We're not.
I'm going there because my friend Mutual,
friend Megla, runs a sourcing trip there.
I'm super excited about it.
It'll be Country 58.
So if I want to get to go to someplace new,
I think it's going to be another culture shock.
So we'll see how that goes.
But I am looking for other opportunities around the world.
I mean, I look at kind of some of the geopolitical stuff
that's happening with China.
The terrorist was a big wake-up call.
It's just you kind of like, again, sourcing
as someone you think you don't think about
until all of a sudden you do.
And that was one of those days where I'm like,
oh my God, this is going to change our business dramatically.
It hasn't worked out, I think, the way that it was advertised,
which is like, this is a tax on China
or something like that.
I mean, like, really what it is,
is it's a tax on our small business,
but we have not been able to pass through
even years later, the additional tariffs.
Because I mean, no one wants to raise their price.
And so everyone's just kind of absorbing that.
So it's really become a tax on small business.
And I don't know.
It just seems like it's hard to know
what the future's going to bring,
but it seems like there's more and more tension there.
And so looking at a country like India,
where there hasn't been any tension
and there aren't any tariffs.
And the other thing I think is important,
at least what I think about is that,
that we ingratiate the quote of,
skate to where the puck is going, not where it is.
It seems like everyone's already in China.
It's super saturated.
They're really good at it.
Like China is really great at manufacturing.
There's platforms like Olaibaba
that make it really easy to find all these manufacturers.
And so I think back to, you know, eight years ago
when we first went to China,
and it wasn't as saturated with the commerce
and finding these like niche opportunities,
I feel like there's probably more of those types
of opportunities in India.
And I'm excited to go, go check it out.
I didn't realize you got hit by the tariffs.
We did. We did.
Ice wraps. Yeah.
Got hit. Yeah.
Interesting. Yeah. Okay.
And the business that we owned together was with the tariffs.
And I mean, there's very few categories, really,
that had been immune to it.
There's definitely some.
We have some products that haven't had the additional tariff.
Right.
But yeah, and it was a 25%, 35% extra,
which is very, very substantial.
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Now back to the show.
All right, so let's switch gears now
because Tony has been crazily silent.
I've been enjoying this.
I kind of enjoy this silence, usually Tony.
So let's switch gears and talk about D to C versus Amazon.
Now, I think the last time you were on,
not the one that we recently recorded.
I think, did I have you and Dave on?
I can't even remember.
But the conclusion, at least from Dave's perspective,
was all in Amazon, right?
I'd be curious if he feels the same way today.
I'm not sure.
I'm curious what Tony's squealing is on this
in terms of Amazon versus other platforms.
I've definitely not all in Amazon as you guys know.
In fact, I was sitting there yesterday
in the Alibaba session when they were unveiling
all their new technology for sourcing, finding products,
some of their AI tools.
And I thought, well, this is just making it even easier
for people, right?
So I love things with the high barrier to entry
because I feel like it leads out competition,
at least on the initial stages.
So I thought, you know, because with Steve and I,
like we host like Friday, Q and A's and things like that,
most people's problem is finding their products, right?
Like they know what they want to sell,
but they don't know how to get it.
And I feel like the easier it becomes for those people,
then the easier it is for people to sell
and then the more competition there is,
even though it's probably not the same quality.
So for me, Amazon is sort of that like,
there's such a low barrier to entry,
although it's gotten much harder
since when I was selling on there, it's changed a ton.
But to me, it just felt like yesterday felt like,
well, here we go again, like here's a bunch of people
that don't know anything that are gonna be able to,
which I like the tools, like I think they're great.
But to me, it was like, well, yeah,
I'm sticking with D to C because I feel like
that's just such a much higher barrier to entry for people.
Yeah, and it's, but you have to have the right type of products.
That's the, you know, the tug of war here.
Like I mean, a lot of people that are on Amazon
are looking to like get off Amazon.
Right.
People that are off Amazon are looking to get on Amazon.
There's really, if you put a Venn diagram together,
there's very few products that have an overlap
that do well on both platforms.
I mean, it does exist.
There are, you know, when you're looking at,
it trillions of dollars of sales,
there's a large volume of money that does transact,
or companies that do well on both platforms.
But the reality is, is that very few things really
that do well on both.
And so if you look at, you know,
I guess the kind of question is like,
what does the future look like here?
I think it's, you know, a lot of times
it's good to look at the past
and just kind of see like, what is the trend being?
And, you know, Amazon continues to grab market share.
They are the world's largest product search engine.
They, you know, dominated Google in this space.
They built a insane footprint, you know,
across the country in terms of warehousing
and their own deliveries, the vans.
And, you know, I think it's going to continue.
Like, I mean, it's just, no matter how badly
somebody wants to go beat Amazon,
even some like Walmart, it's really difficult
to like recreate that infrastructure that they've put together.
You know, it just, it would be really, really difficult.
And at the same time, 100 million people
or if it heck it is, have their credit card
already stored at Amazon in the United States.
So the buried entry of the transactions are very low.
And now you looked at Amazon for Amazon Prime.
So like, you kind of like, for the television aspect
and then they have whole foods.
And it's just like, you know,
it becomes more and more difficult for someone
to cancel that membership and go away from Amazon.
And once you have that membership in your own Amazon,
now you feel like, I have to get my,
it's like the all you can eat buffet.
I have to get my value.
So you're ordering more stuff off the Amazon.
And so, you know, the commodity, things I need quick products,
I just do not see going anywhere.
No, I agree.
I mean, on Amazon, you want paper clips,
you want, you know, whatever,
rubber bands, something like that,
light bulbs, you're going to go to Amazon.
The need to see thing, I think, you know,
you've also seen a kind of a resurgence of that now
because, you know, there's like these micro brands
or niche brands of people,
like they, people are going back to the story in the family
or whatever that kind of create those products.
And I think that that's going to have a place
instead of to increase because social media,
especially like a TikTok,
has made it so much easier for those brands
to get quickly viral, get out those stories
and those products.
And so, you know, and I think overall,
e-commerce is going to continue to increase.
And so I think, you know, from a macro standpoint,
those are some of the things that,
that seem to make sense.
Yeah, I wouldn't, I mean, I think you should sell on Amazon.
I'm definitely not, I mean,
it's not my favorite place to sell.
It's definitely my favorite place to shop.
And now they've even introduced the buy with prime, right?
Which integrates with Shopify.
So they're basically becoming your logistics,
you know, fulfillment process.
And also integrating with the payment and everything else.
So they're trying to pull people
who maybe don't sell on Amazon, right?
And in fact, they just introduced
to Clavio integration a couple months ago.
So they're definitely, I think,
Amazon's definitely trying to infiltrate everything.
Which I would too, if I was, you know, it makes sense.
But yeah, their logistics is amazing.
We've talked to Walmart, you know, we all have.
And I think they're trying to build something great.
But they just, at this point,
there's no competition with Amazon.
Yeah, no, that's definitely,
and I, you know, the only thing that counts as change
at some point in our lives will look back.
And most likely be like,
I remember when Amazon was the big thing,
just like my parents like talk about Sears or whatever.
So, I mean, you know, things will change.
And it's interesting how there's a lot of thoughts
on how, you know, AI and just the shopping experience
is going to change things quite a bit.
Like I had someone the other day speculating
that there won't even be a search box anymore.
You know, it'll just be like,
they kind of just know what you want.
Or, you know, it's, I mean, it's, I think that that's kind of,
you know, that's a little far from that.
But like, the point is that things will probably be very different.
You don't really, you know, know until it comes.
But like, I think that things are about to change dramatically
in terms of the shopping experience
or the results experience.
I mean, right now it's like you type in something,
whether it's on Google or Amazon,
where you all use to these like you get 20 results
and you kind of sift through them.
I do think that that's going to change.
And so, you know, the thought is like keywords
are going to be different or the less people
are going to be buying or more people
are going to be buying for fewer spots in these results.
And it's going to be more difficult to compete there.
And I'm not sure is that how that's going to play out.
I mean, I don't actually don't think you're far off
when you say that you won't have a search for.
I think you'll have some sort of search.
But like, if you think about your Netflix experience
and I don't know what your Netflix account looks like,
it's probably a good thing.
But like in my family, in my family,
I have like six accounts, right?
So each kid has the account.
So one day, when I logged in,
it's like I get a certain amount of recommendations
from Netflix, right?
And I was curious when I was like,
I wonder if my kids are like,
I wonder if they're just promoting
the top 10 shows to me, right?
What if my kids see a completely different thing
based on their watching experience, right?
So I don't think it's that far off with Amazon,
not doing away with search,
but having something much more specialized.
Do you, I mean, you already see that now, right?
Like continue where you left off, you know,
all the things that you looked at before you closed the browser,
all that stuff on Amazon anyway.
I think my biggest hang up with Amazon
is I feel like when you're doing D to C,
there's just a, there's a formula.
There's a formula for building a brand.
Obviously, it changes based on what you're selling
and new things like TikTok, right?
Making short form video or promoting your products
in a different way.
But overall, to me, it feels very familiar.
Whereas on Amazon, I feel like every couple of months,
things change drastically.
And you're rewriting your listing descriptions
or you're changing something with PPC.
And to me, I don't like that hamster wheel feeling
of constantly, I mean, I like learning new things,
but I don't want my whole entire business
to be based on scrapping everything I know
and relearning it every six months to one year.
Yeah, but I feel like that happens in D to C as well.
I mean, at least on the ads part of it,
or how to get the traffic.
Because like, when we first really got started in D to C,
we were all on Facebook.
And now, Facebook's like, you're much more difficult
to make the numbers work.
And everyone's moved over to TikTok.
So you're learning something new from that perspective.
But I get what you're saying and point well taken
in terms of your on Amazon's hamster wheel for sure.
And I was shocked that one of the things
they're testing right now is hiding the bullet points.
Like I just saw it this week.
You're like, it's like, learn more about this product.
You click that, then the bullet points appear.
And so it kind of goes to what I've always theorized
is that people never really read this stuff.
Because if they're testing hiding it,
they'd probably realize that no one's really
reading the bullet points.
Then maybe they don't matter as much as you think they do.
And the imagery is what it really is at.
You should be focusing more on your imagery
because people look at stuff, but they don't read stuff.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, not just another example of,
maybe there's going to be a giant shift in Amazon
of like, we spent all this time putting
all this effort into bullet points.
And overnight, they might just become irrelevant.
I took pretty big development, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
What's your next question?
Okay, apparently Tony has run out of questions.
All right, so I wanted to ask this way back,
but I didn't want to interrupt you guys.
So what types of products work well
on DDC versus Amazon?
Yeah, I think this was actually pretty easy to answer.
So the things that work best on Amazon
are things that people are searching for, you know,
taping in that product, right?
It's like, I just mentioned paper clips
and remember, Nancy, we'll stick with that or light bulbs.
And so that's typically a pain point of like,
I need this right now or very soon.
So it's like, I can wait till tomorrow.
So I'm not going to go drive down the staples
and go get those paper clips or whatever.
But like, and then I mostly just
be able to care what the brand is.
Like I just need some paper clips
and, you know, whatever.
And so whatever that might be,
I mean, we sell ice wraps.
So I'll mention that as one of these things.
It does very well on Amazon
because like someone is in pain right this minute.
Like, probably a week beforehand,
they didn't realize that they were going to need it
or they just got an operation or there's like,
there's a need in their life at that moment
that just kind of popped up
and they need to solve that problem.
They type in what that product is.
Again, brand is not as important here in this.
I mean, there are situations like Amazon
where brand does matter.
And so I'm not advocating to like, not do branding.
But for the most part, it's like, I need this.
I'm searching for it.
I'm going to get it within one to two days.
Brand isn't super important to me.
Price is the most important thing.
You know what?
I want the Amazon experience.
And so those types of things do really well.
You can, conversely, as a e-commerce seller.
You know, if you're putting stuff up on Amazon,
you're looking at search volume
with particular keywords
and like there's opportunity to sell products
that fit those keywords.
D2C does very well on an emotional trigger.
So it's like you're looking at a TikTok video.
You're looking at a Facebook ad
and literally 10 seconds before hand,
you were never thinking about this product.
You never thought you were going to buy this thing the day
you never thought you needed it.
But you just saw someone like with a really cool ad
and this worked really well for our coloring company
where I can now advertise to a group of people
that aren't searching for that stuff right this minute.
But we know that they have an affinity
to coloring books as there was an audience for that.
And so you show them an ad, triggers this emotional response,
the price points low enough,
the product, it's something's unique enough about it.
I'm going to give this a try.
All of a sudden they pull their credit card out
and they're making a 10, 20, 30 dollar purchase.
That again, five minutes beforehand,
there was like, if you ask them the question,
you're going to buy coloring books today,
zero percent chance that that was going to happen.
And so there's a lot of products that do very, very well
in that D2C environment.
And then also like you can,
things that have a really good brand story
like it's an emotional hook of like,
maybe like eco-friendly or you're like you're trying to go vegan
or you have coffee beans that are like a single source.
There's like something that triggers it relates to you
and things that you believe in or care about
where like there's lots of other people who don't care.
But as an advertiser,
you can really get in front of the right people.
D2C I think will continue.
It does work really well with that right now
and will continue to work well there.
And by the way, a lot of those things that I just mentioned,
you take those exact same products
and throw them on Amazon and they won't succeed.
Like you try to put this really unique single source coffee thing
on Amazon, it's probably going to be much higher price.
People are typing in coffee on Amazon.
Are they really going to go buy this other thing?
It's a much harder road on Amazon, not impossible,
but certainly works way better in that in another environment.
I mean, you will get the halo effect
from your own marketing on Amazon, right?
Because some people just like buying on Amazon.
I just wanted to mention something that you just said, though,
on Amazon, you said the brand doesn't matter as much.
Doesn't that imply that someone could just copy your product
almost exactly, throw it up since brand doesn't matter?
And then eventually just kind of becomes a race
to the bottom to represent what I'm dealing with right now.
And this is the problem.
This is the hamster world that I want to get off of.
Okay.
Right, me, I just,
and so again, I think it's skate to where the puck is going.
I love the book who moon my cheese.
So I got very cognizant.
Podcast would not be complete.
I had it if the man did not mention who moved her cheese.
This author likes to give me a kickback at some point.
That's true, yes.
It's an old book.
It's an old book.
It's a good book.
Someone handed it to me when I was in my 20s and corporate life.
And I just think that it's, you know, it's always applicable.
The story's applicable.
You know, it's, I can see here and whining cry
about how it isn't fair.
And I put all this work into this business.
And I used to make all this money and blah, blah, blah, blah.
None of that matter.
Like no one cares about any of that.
Like the reality is is that I have to reinvent myself.
I have to either reinvent my product, my brands,
my company, myself, we're getting to something new
and reinvent completely differently.
But I think that that's where we're at.
Like the reality is is that people probably don't care
about my brand of products.
Now there are branded searches that we get.
It's great.
We do work on this and it is important.
I think we do a better job than a lot of people on Amazon.
But the reality is that helium 10 or jungle scale
or data dive or whatever tools that are out there
are going to show that there's an opportunity out there
to go sell this particular type of ice pack.
And then you go on Alibaba and you can find 70 manufacturers.
I'll make that ice pack.
And it's going to look and feel exactly like my product.
You know, or very, very similar.
It'll be indistinguishable from someone
that was looking at a results page
and quickly trying to fix that pain point thing
that they have.
They just got their wisdom teeth extracted.
They need wisdom teeth ice packs.
They're typing that in.
Everything looks kind of similar.
They haven't done any.
They haven't done any research.
I'm not going to do any research for this 15-dollar product.
They're freaking mouthhurt.
They just got their wisdom teeth out.
They want that ice pack there quickly.
You put it in the freezer.
It gets cold.
It's not going to be our evolutionary.
So I'm thinking about where I can build another mode.
And it's not going to be in these types of products.
And so right now we're continuing to work on this business
because we have a business that sells millions of dollars
of products.
And I'm positioning it to put it in the best spot
to sell it in a year and a half or so.
And so I'm going to work on that for right now.
But I'm thinking about what the future might hold.
And I think what you said is dead on.
That's the reality is that it's going
to become more and more difficult.
So the million dollar question is, Mike,
where is this cheese going to be?
I mean, again, I'm a pretty open book with a lot of things.
I don't want to give my next ideal lake like yet.
I talk to you personally about this.
Yeah.
But in general, in broad strokes, what I'm thinking about
is a silly margins, way better margins.
Whatever product I'm going to be working on next,
like I think I look at your products,
great, your products check a lot of these boxes.
It's got really good margin because you have customization.
You're doing some final thing here in the US that is on mute.
Like is someone going to go buy a sewing machine
or embroidery machine or whatever does that?
That extra thing adds some moat.
And so I'm thinking about things like that.
And one of the things that I really want to get into
is something that has intellectual property,
which is another step over and above that.
Repeat business.
There's a lot of things that I look at that is important to me
when looking at, because literally,
what Tony just said, you like the barrier to entry, right?
I want that.
The complexity to me is the opportunity.
The barrier to entry is the opportunity.
I want to get into something that not everyone can do.
And so I'm legitimately prepared and ready
to go get another warehouse in Nevada.
We live in Las Vegas.
I'm back to that again.
And have that part of it.
I can't not know that.
Okay, I think that this is what's going to be necessary.
You know, that final assembly thing
or doing something in the US at the, you know,
kind of at the last touch point,
we had this similar thing in the business
that we own together.
You know, and I just saw, like,
as much as I hated having a warehouse previously
and all the things that that brings,
I know I'm going to have to go through that again,
but like the problem is that like,
I need something that's going to help again,
dig that moat and make it deeper and deeper and wider
and not have someone else that's constantly,
because someone else is constantly coming back
with a dumb truck and backfill in that damn thing
like every day, right?
And so you have to, and right now,
the moat's getting filled in way quicker
than I can do anything about it
with the products I'm talking about.
And so having that warehouse, having
some sort of machinery here in the US
that does some type of final something to the product
or even manufacture the whole thing maybe or,
but in my case, it'll be, you know, kind of,
I create or finish the products here
and get them in the Amazon or sell them
on demand basically as needed.
Now, similar to what you're doing,
you have the blank handkerchiefs
and someone has a wedding,
you put the final touches on it.
That adds the value.
Most people aren't willing to do that.
Most people can't do that
because you have a warehouse.
You have employees that are sitting in front of that machine.
You've also spent all the time getting the traffic
and building a brand and doing those things,
but like, if someone else wants to go do that,
you know, it's not,
they're not gonna just go find it off of Alibaba, right?
I mean, it's the barrier is much different.
So that's the type of stuff that I have put a lot of thought
until, you know, I think colorate has been a,
a big inspiration for me for that
where we had the intellectual property part of it
where we had highly defensible products
and we had a brand that people really cared about.
So I can take that and kind of marry it
with some of the stuff that you're doing, you know,
things I've seen, you know,
and I've done some stuff like this in the past.
And also things I learned from the business
that we own together,
we had this facility in North Carolina.
It was the best business I owned, like, through COVID
and all the other mess that was going on
because having that facility,
there you can keep low amounts of inventory in Amazon.
We had the facilities of store extra inventory.
We had the ability to be nimble
and make the stuff to order basically
that was necessary at the time
as things were shifting during COVID.
And I see this as something
that's going to be really important moving forward
if you're willing to put the extra effort into it.
It's interesting because whenever someone asks me,
I'm like, don't start your own warehouse.
It's a pain to bug.
It is a pain.
I am not looking forward to it.
Yeah.
I mean, one of the things that we talked about,
from the last episode we recorded,
it's getting, for me, increasingly more difficult
to work with employees.
And those types of employees
are traditionally the hardest ones to work with.
And so, yeah, I'm not looking forward to that.
But I see it as a necessary evil, right?
I mean, this is like what entrepreneurial
ship or entrepreneurship is all about.
It isn't like every one of us,
every single part of every day
is doing everything that we love at all times.
There's a lot of crap we have to deal with and endure
as a part of the ultimate goal of success
that we're reaching for.
I don't like having to deal with employees
or accounting or there's just a bunch of things
that come up from time.
Laws who'd serve whatever,
it's annoying, but like I deal with it
and put on a smiley face every day
because it's a part of, without those things,
I can't go do the other things that I do enjoy.
And so I think warehouse is probably back on the list
of things that are a necessary evil
to achieve the bigger goal.
I mean, I think my philosophy has always been
optimized for sleeping well at night.
So that's why we bought the warehouse earlier this year
because then because our rents were going up 30% every year.
And then even if everything were to completely collapse,
I think it would happen much slower with our business
than it would on Amazon.
So I can sleep at night,
knowing that I wake up the next morning
and not everything's just going to go to crap right away.
Yeah, and again, I think this is almost exactly
what I'm talking about, right?
Like it's a highly defensible business.
It's probably, it's not recession proof,
but like recession proof.
Recession resistant.
Because when people get married, they do stupid things.
People are going to get married in a recession.
They're going to spend a little bit less money.
They're still probably going to want a handkerchief.
I mean, like, you know,
and some type of personalization or something.
And so, you know, and I think that,
and now, you know, in the building,
so that, you know, rents are going to be stable.
Like it's a great investment regardless.
I think it's a really good move no matter what.
And so, yeah, I mean, I think that I look at this,
I think it's super important
because like I did not sleep well for a long time.
Like I'm sleeping on that better now
because we have less going on.
And even though like the one business we have
is very susceptible to a quick change on Amazon,
we have more cash in the bank
and it just makes it look so it's like less pressure.
But yeah, I don't like owning a business
where in the back of my mind,
any morning can wake up and find that it's gone.
I've been there before.
It's like, I know how that feels.
It's happened multiple times.
And so I'm trying to think through,
what are some things that can be doing?
Because I want to stick with e-commerce.
What are some things that can be doing?
And the things that we just talked about,
including having a warehouse,
really is one of those things, right?
Because I mean, if something goes drastically wrong,
is a macro thing in e-commerce,
which is like, you know,
and you have something that less people can do,
then if you're in one of the few people left,
then it's actually a good thing
that there's kind of a reset or whatever.
So I mean, I don't know.
It's not going to happen at least for another year
because I do want to position this other business for sale,
but it's certainly the direction I'm heading right now.
So where does that leave the beginners
then who are just starting out?
Yeah, that's an interesting question.
Wow, that's a tough one.
I think that, again, intellectual property,
that you need products, working on branding,
having something that's unique,
if you can be thinking about things that have a move,
you don't have to have a warehouse.
Like that isn't, I'm,
if I was doing the same business idea that I have right now,
and I was just getting started,
I would do it in my garage start with.
Right, I think that you can, you know,
do things on a different scale.
It just, I, you know, I only have,
you and I've known each other for a long time.
I have one speed.
Right, yes.
I'm like, I'm all alone.
Although your speeds have changed.
I have, I have downshift a little bit,
but like still, I'm still in the highest gear
that I can be when I go do this thing.
And I really believe in myself, right?
I mean, like I have 20 years of experience doing this stuff
at this point, like 20, it'll be 20 years in January.
It's nuts.
I quit my job in 2004.
So I mean, it's gonna be, it's really weird.
It's like where the hell do 20 years go?
It's a long time.
But at the same time, like I've developed a lot of skills
and I have a lot of confidence in myself.
It's not cockiness or something like that.
I think it's just that like, I'm going to go do this thing,
whatever this next thing is.
And I'm not gonna be reckless with my bets
or what I'm going to go do,
but I'm not going to like tipy toe into it either, right?
It's like, I'm going to go do it.
You know, I could do it out of the garage
and I have to like move it, you know,
a few months later, then get the way out.
Like I'd rather just, I know what this life cycle is like,
right?
So it's like, I'd rather just get the building now.
I'll rent it.
I won't buy it to start with,
like, you know, get the facility now and have everything there.
So like, if, if and when things start to turn me up up,
I'm not having to move and disrupt that process
and deal with those things at that time.
And the thing that I'm looking at doing
requires some light machine.
So I had to actually do some modifications to my house
to make it work there, which my wife would prefer
that I didn't do.
Yes, I'm so, that's probably the biggest thing.
All right, let me ask you this following question
that how much money do you think to start?
This business that I'm looking to do is going to cost
about 150,000 to 200,000 all in to buy the machinery
and, and, you know, let's say just have like a year's
worth of capital for the facility and stuff.
What about for the person starting out?
I mean, that's an intimidating number, right?
Yeah, no, it is.
But like, again, for me, I like that number, right?
I mean, I'm in a different life cycle
because I want that very entry that Tony was mentioning.
Like to me, it's just, it's just enough.
It's like, it's in my comfort zone,
but it's way out of someone else's comfort zone.
And can someone else go do it?
Yes.
And while I have competitors, yes.
For someone just getting started, I mean,
I would look at trying to check all the boxes I just mentioned
without needing to make that extra step.
And so it's going to eliminate a few other opportunities,
but there's still plenty of other things out there
that you can do that check all the boxes I mentioned
without having to actually have that machinery.
You know, and I think the only thing that's really important
that people, I had this conversation with someone
at cellar summit, the first cellar summit that I went to
because they were in analysis paralysis phase.
I think the most important thing,
if you're just getting started, is just they get started.
It doesn't matter what you're selling.
Just pick anything.
Whatever I do you have, it literally doesn't matter
because even though that product might fail,
it probably will fail because like if it's just something
you haven't thought all the way through or whatever,
that is still going to be the cheapest education
you're ever going to get.
You're going to learn how to create your Amazon account
or launch your Shopify story.
You're going to learn how to do Amazon ads.
You're going to learn how to ship inventory
and Amazon, you're going to learn how to label your stuff.
You're going to get your trademark.
You're going to create a listing.
You're going to figure out who to get listing images from
and who to work with graphics for,
how those resources.
And again, if you're doing things D to C,
you're going to learn some Facebook ads or TikTok ads
and learning how to get your payment processing done.
And if you get your LLC set up,
I mean, there's like a ton of other things
that you have to do before being successful.
And so picking the product, I would just go get started.
Like learn the ropes of e-commerce over the next three,
six, 12 months.
And for me, all these things I just talked about
are all connect the dots from day one,
the very first thing that I sold online
which was fitness equipment, treadmills,
and learn what to do or not to do.
And all through the school of hard knocks, right?
And we were successful, we were lucky
that we were successful in most of the things that we did.
There were definitely some things on the way,
but most of the things that we did,
okay, we were successful at this.
You know, the timeline kind of man out,
or I felt like I could do better in something else.
And so we pivot a little bit.
I think you pivot to something else.
And now, I feel like we're going to make a pivot
to like the best thing that we've ever done.
All I wanted was a dollar amount.
A dollar amount.
What does that sound like?
Well, I don't know.
I'm just kidding.
Yeah.
I mean, I think realistically,
you can get started for $1,000.
Yeah.
When we started for $6000, something bucks, but yeah.
It's the really the perfect example.
Like again, I love, I mean,
we know each other for a long time.
We've talked about this for more than once,
but like, it is the perfect example.
Like the perfect success story example
of an e-commerce business.
Because again, you can start with very little money.
Hanker just don't cost a whole lot of money.
Like the blanks, or I would imagine pennies each,
or maybe a dollar at the most.
And I can imagine they cost that much.
Like you said, $600 is what you guys started for.
But you had, you know, you can look,
the riches are in the niches, right?
And so like this is a very niche thing.
Like it's, like I always still make fun of you for it.
It's like you still handkerchiefs.
It's like almost laughable.
It's like such a weird corner of e-commerce.
Like you're never going to sell a billion dollars
or the stuff or, you know, whatever.
But no one else is looking there.
Because it's not the thing that pops up on the tools
because it's just below that radar.
People that do find, like, oh, that's a good opportunity.
It's like, oh, it's just enough extra work
to create a little bit of a barrier of entry.
You are able to, you know, build a really good brand
and good search presence and good repeat business
and have some defensibility and a moat,
all from something that costs $600 and begin to start with.
So it's like literally what I'm talking about,
just the thing that I want to do is,
I mean, you're probably have now bought
some equipment and things.
We've got a lot of equipment now.
And so I'm just going to make that investment to start with.
Like, you know, if I was just getting started,
I would do exactly what I'm talking about $4,000.
Right.
I'm willing to, like, skip those initial steps.
Yeah.
Because, again, I have the confidence in myself
and I'm willing to, to be wrong
and lose that money if it doesn't go right.
Because, again, 20 years of experience
and I feel like I've really nailed this idea.
But if you're just getting started, 600 bucks,
like you said, like, gets the job done.
It's kind of crazy.
Cool.
Well, Mike, I guess we'll have to have you on
when you do the big reveal.
I'll come to you with this.
I'll do the, give you the exclusive.
20, anything else?
I think Mike talked us out.
Okay, I'm just not used to hearing you so silent for so long.
But, yeah, let's wrap this up.
Mike, I imagine you're going to reveal it on your own podcast
before you read a little on mine.
So I want to tell everyone where they can get the scoop first.
Well, I'll promise that I'll come to it on your podcast.
Okay, but you can come with an e-com curve anyway.
Thank you.
All right.
I hope you enjoy that episode.
Now, it's always interesting to hear what Mike's perspective is,
and I can't wait to give more details
on what he is going to work on next.
From our information methods episode,
go to mywifecooterjob.com slash episode 491.
And once again, I want to thank
Emerge Council for sponsoring this episode.
If you sell an Amazon FBA or your own online store,
and you want to protect your IP from theft and fraud,
head on over to EmergeCouncil.com and get a free consult.
Just mention my name and you'll get $100 off.
That's emergecounscl.com.
I also want to thank Chase Diamond.
Chase is my go-to guy when it comes to email marketing.
And if you want to learn how to run your own
successful email marketing campaigns,
check out his class over at mywifecooterjob.com slash Chase.
That's mywifecooterjob.com slash C-H-A-S-E.
And if you were interested in starting your own e-commerce store,
head on over to mywifecooterjob.com
and sign up for my free six day mini course.
Just type in your email and send the course right away.
Thanks for listening.