Navigated to 14: Moving Beyond Etsy and Amazon with Email Marketing - Transcript

14: Moving Beyond Etsy and Amazon with Email Marketing

Episode Transcript

Andrew George

Hello and welcome to the Product Growth Lab podcast hosted by Andrew George and Melissa Pickle.

This is the podcast for creative product based business owners.

who want to grow their businesses without overwhelm or massive investment.

Each episode we explore optimal strategies, real life stories, and insights from business owners and experts who know what it takes to succeed.

Whether you're just starting out or looking to scale, we're here to help you grow your business on your own terms.

Subscribe and join us each week as we dive into practical advice and inspiring stories to fuel your growth journey.

This is the Product Growth Lab.

Let's get started.

Hello everybody and welcome back to the Product Growth Lab podcast.

We are continuing our series on getting you off of marketplaces like Etsy and Amazon and over to your own site and making sales on your own terms.

In the last episode we covered how to drive traffic which is what the one that people are probably most interested in of this whole series so if you haven't heard that or any of our previous episodes be sure and go back and watch all of them in this series.

But here's the thing, traffic is only half the battle.

Most people won't buy on their first visit and even if they do You don't want them to purchase them once, you want them to be able to come back again and again.

And email is the most powerful tool that you have in your arsenal to turn visitors into loyal buyers.

So what we're going to cover today is why email is even more powerful than social media, feel free to fight me on that.

How to grow your email list without being annoying.

The must have email sequences that every handmade business needs.

And what to send if you hate writing emails.

But you're not going to hate them by the time I'm done with you, because we're going to make sales.

Melissa Pikul

It's going to be your new favorite thing

Andrew George

why does email beat social media for sales?

Basically the kind of big overview here is that you own your email list.

There's no algorithm deciding whether or not you show up in someone's inbox apart from spam rules and as long as you are playing by the rules and follow some of the advice that we give you that shouldn't be a risk.

You have so much more high engagement rates, people actually open and read your emails instead of scrolling straight past like they do on social media.

Melissa Pikul

if

Andrew George

It's super direct.

Melissa Pikul

to your fans on social media.

At least, hopefully, it's landing in an inbox.

Andrew George

It's direct, it's personal, and it helps to build relationships.

When someone's on social media, it's so obvious that this content is going out to everyone.

It's not very personal.

When you're in your inbox, you have a bunch of opportunities to personalize that.

And even when you are just sending a standard email that goes out to lots of people, it still feels much more one to one.

Other people can't see into your inbox.

There's an The kind of community vibe that you have on social media, which benefits and drawbacks to that.

But it feels much more personal.

It's like having a conversation.

And you can turn that into actual conversations, and that's where you start to build a relationship with your customers.

And building relationships is key to being able to get lots of sales and turning people into loyal buyers.

And that kind of drives me on to the next point, email drives repeat sales.

The real profit in your business comes from customers buying again.

A lot of us focus on organic traffic, which is great, but as you grow your business, you're probably going to start dabbling in paid media at some point.

And getting that customer to buy the first time can be, breakeven is lucky.

You can maybe make a bit of a loss on that first sale.

So getting people to come and buy again and start to profit on the back end is key for growing business and having email, being able to talk to the people who've bought from you before and getting them to buy again is where real profit comes from.

I know personally, and in a lot of the clients I work with, when they look into their stats, they're making far more sales from the email than their social media.

Obviously, those things are hard to track, but When you get, into your stats, you're looking in the back end of all the software that you use.

Have a look, how many of your sales are coming from social media, and if you're active in your email, how many of them come from email?

I find that in most cases, as long as you're putting some sort of effort into email, That's probably where the bulk of your sales are coming from.

Even if you have a tiny list, you might have say a thousand followers on Instagram and like 30, 40, 50.

Melissa Pikul

Oh.

I

Andrew George

No, I don't like, it can be super small like that.

And even at that point, you can be like, okay, if I look at my traffic and my sales it's the email that's driving it.

You can have a way smaller list, but because of the kind of engagement levels that you get from email.

You don't need as massive a following.

You don't need to cover for all the people who aren't interested and don't see your stuff.

You've got people who genuinely don't see your stuff and they're being shown it in their inbox.

So you can have way less followers, subscribers and get better or get equal or even better results.

Melissa Pikul

mean, these are much higher intent people here who are coming in who actually sign up for your email list versus, like, following you on Instagram or any of the socials.

It's a very passive kind of thing.

Like, oh, you're interesting.

I want to see more of your stuff.

But yeah.

It's much less intent than someone who's like, Oh, I want to receive emails from you.

I want to get the updates.

I want to know everything that's going on.

It's a much more valuable person who signs up for your email list than who follows you on social.

laughs

Andrew George

you also have to put out a lot less content.

On social media you need to be putting out content every day, sometimes multiple pieces, especially if someone like Instagram, it's like really you should be having some kind of static content, carousels, you should be doing stories, you should be doing reels, like there's a ton of different touch points over there and you should do most of them daily, stories even multiple times a day.

So it's quite a lot.

Email you can send as little as say once a week and be getting the same or even better results from that one piece of content.

And I also think people on Instagram, like I see a bunch of the handmade sellers and they're scared to sell.

And if you go on their social media it, it just feels like a random personal profile and there's not a ton of product selling.

It's very strange for a product based business.

When it comes to email, people feel slightly more inclined to write an email that actually talks about products.

So it's a little bit easier.

You don't have, if you're not this big social creator, if you are a little bit more of a writer or.

AI user.

You can get out an email that does gets really great results and it's a little bit more salesy and it mentions your products and you don't have to be able to, you don't have to master Canva to be able to create all these fancy graphics.

You can take a template in your email software, throw in a picture of your product, add some text.

And it's done.

Hit send.

But, the question I know is going to come up now is, okay, how do I actually grow my email list?

And, how do I grow it where I don't end up with a bunch of people who aren't interested?

And, the biggest mistake is only having one way to get people on your list.

You need to get that email opt in everywhere you possibly can.

Use pop ups.

I know everyone always says they hate pop ups, and I, we all do, but they work.

And as soon as they start working, I will say let's not use them anymore.

But pop ups have this annoying thing where as annoying as they are, they also get people to be honest.

For a lot of people I work with, that is where the bulk of their people are coming from.

People are coming to their site, they're seeing the pop up, and they're filling in their email.

As long as that's the case, I'm going to tell you to use pop ups.

Melissa Pikul

I'm going to add to

Andrew George

Product page.

Melissa Pikul

From the consumer side like we think of pop ups as scammy maybe from like the seller side because we're the ones running it But think about the consumer experience when they want to get on your email list I was on a website yesterday looking at the products be like, oh my god.

I need to like make me an offer here Going through their stuff.

There were no pop ups.

I had to search the website to find where to put in my email sign up for their lists, and I didn't get a confirmation email, so I don't know if they even do anything.

But if they can email me when they have a new product coming out, I am very likely to at least pay attention.

Even if I don't buy it.

But yeah, so think about that from the consumer side.

When they want to hear from you, you want that pop up there.

For the person who's ready.

Andrew George

Yeah.

Next thing though is your product pages and name them, just product pages, pretty much every page on your site.

Where can you fit a form?

You can have it as part of the page, especially if you're doing something like a blog.

Like when you get to the end point, you're like, okay, your call to action, like what you want people to do can be, okay, fill in this form here, but you can also put it in the footer.

And then it's just a kind of one and done.

It's on every page on your site.

Embed that form.

Have a nice catchy headline, offer them something like, get 20 percent off your next order, get free shipping, get a free gift, get whatever it is, get my download thing, whatever it is.

Can't mention all of Australia, but social media, that is, I feel like I've not been the nicest to social media today.

But social media is a great way to get people on your email list.

Yeah, social media gets people on the email list, and email list is where I get the sales.

I think for a lot of people, they're directly trying to get the sales from social media, and just getting people to make a purchase straight from social media feels like a little bit of an uphill battle, whereas getting someone to give their email is slightly easier.

That doesn't mean I never get people to make a purchase on social media, but for the most part, I tell them, get on the email list.

On the checkout page If you're on Shopify, this is super easy.

It's as simple as tick a box, but have it where people can just take a box, they can then take a box as well that says, Hey, email me with all your best stuff.

There's countless other ways, but those are like the main ones.

Let's get started, do this and then come over to our Facebook group.

You'll find the comment in the show notes and tell us that you've done it.

Take some screenshots.

I like to see them.

Melissa Pikul

Cause maybe I just tuned out when you were saying it.

I don't know.

Where would you put an email sign up on a product page in Shopify?

At the bottom?

Andrew George

If you do it in the footer, it's there on every page, but you can also have it where you have, in your, I'm going to talk about Shopify, it's a thing we use and it's a thing we recommend, so I'm just, you can do all this on all the other platforms, probably, but more complicated most of the time, but on Shopify in your product page template, you can have it where at the bottom of that page, you have a standard say you're doing a discount, you're like, okay, 120 percent off this product, Put your email in below.

Discount is the one we talk about a lot because it's the easiest to set up and it's the one that most people are doing.

But there's a ton of different ways to do this.

You can do some sort of freebie.

Do you have some sort of like download or a gift guide is another good one.

Melissa Pikul

Yeah,

Andrew George

I've been into quizzes a lot lately, and if you are in the kind of industry where someone has to make some sort of decision on your product, like if it's, skincare because they need a kind of specific routine If you sell something that comes in, say, different scents, you go, okay.

Do you like a more woodsy scent or a more floral scent?

You can do a quiz to figure that out.

Someone we know did kind of design stuff and they had your design style.

Melissa Pikul

Yeah,

Andrew George

I know,

Melissa Pikul

If you were to talk to an interior designer, how to figure out what your style is, what you like, so that they actually understand you when you talk to them.

Andrew George

Yeah, if you're doing anything like that, you can have that.

Say, okay, if you're struggling to decide if you need the, what is it dry skin, oily skin.

Other types of skin like take the quiz and we'll figure it out and then I'll recommend here are the five step routine that you need and Not only have you given them better advice and made it easier to pick it You've also told them to buy five products instead of the one they came for which I like that, too

Melissa Pikul

be like, and here's the bundle deal for all of them.

Andrew George

How can you build them for you?

And you can also, when you're doing things like launching a new collection, having things like waitlists, where you promise, and things like early access, first access to stuff.

If you are creating demand in your customers, if you have the stuff and you launch it and it's a bit crickets.

This might not work as well.

If you have stuff that sells out as soon as it comes out, and there's ways to make it where that happens, if you start talking about, hey, get on the wait list for this collection, or for Black Friday's, where we talk about wait lists a lot that can be enough of a draw in itself and you can have that as well.

So there's a ton of different ways to come up with lead magnets, and I'm sure that's an episode that will come out at some point where we dig into these in more detail.

Okay, so The next thing I want to discuss is the must have email sequences.

People think the email comes down a lot to like the newsletters and having to send things every week, but if you look in the back end of any of our clients stats, it's the automations that make the money.

The one Non negotiable for any person with any sort of business in the world with an email list is a welcome sequence.

Even if your welcome sequence is one email long for now, I'm like, you need something.

Like Melissa mentioned, that she didn't get a confirmation when she sent out someone's email list.

She didn't know if it worked, she didn't know if they sent emails.

even just hello, Rosa, thanks for signing up, Andrew, like that,

Melissa Pikul

soon!

Andrew George

a long sequence

Melissa Pikul

That's nothing!

Andrew George

but obviously we want to do a bit more there, and I have a ton of templates around this I have a five email long sequence, I have a Double that sequence like there's a ton of ways to do this.

And again, that's a whole episode in itself But the main things to include are a little bit about your story Why you start your brand thinking about talking about benefits to the customer not just a here's how like I want to Talk a lot about my business and me and why I'm so special.

We don't want that.

Melissa Pikul

Mm hmm.

Andrew George

Kind of why that matters

Melissa Pikul

in it for

Andrew George

I saw that there wasn't enough brands out there who were making products for people with dry skin.

it's why I started my business.

And it's a consumer because it's oh, I have dry skin and I've noticed that too.

And I'm desperate for someone to do something about this.

You want to mention.

You're best selling products in that sequence somewhere and give people a chance to buy them.

You want to deliver whatever that freebie is.

If it's a discount code, if it's a download, whatever it is, be sure and make sure you actually give them it.

And it's always good to put in a reason to take action now.

Normally that's because the discount you're giving them is expired.

It is going to expire, so there's still a lot of reason to take action.

And you can do all sorts of stuff.

Countdown towers and things make that really effective.

The next one, like our second most important, but I feel again, is a real non negotiable, and like these all are equal to me, are an abandoned cart sequence.

So whenever someone starts to check out and then suddenly disappears, you want to get them back.

70 percent of people who come to your site are going to abandon their cart.

And if you can recover even a tiny fraction of those people, that can be a massive difference.

If you're making frequent sales, that can be tens, hundreds of extra sales a year just from this one sequence.

These are also really simple.

You want to remind them what they've left behind.

It's good to try and answer any questions that you think they might have.

Sometimes it's just, I couldn't be bothered going downstairs and getting my card.

But sometimes it's, I couldn't find information about shipping on the website.

Make sure those questions are answered in that email.

Things around if you sell t shirts, having a link to a sizing guide things like that, like whatever kind of potential objection.

And sometimes it can be questions they have, but there's also things like objections.

If people are, say it's, say, we'll skincare example, The customers are focused on things like natural ingredients.

I want it to be cruelty free, it can't be tested on animals, and you haven't made that super clear.

Put that in that email.

Say, we are the company that makes dry skin.

Every single ingredient is natural.

We have it's cruelty free, we don't test on animals, it's an eco friendly packaging, like how many of the different objections there are can I put in there.

It ships next day, and like, how many objections may I possibly crush in that email, and it makes it much more likely to sell.

I'm putting a little bit of urgency in there.

It can be a little bit advanced and complicated to be able to say there's only two left in that email.

You might want to hurry up and get that product.

And you can add some extra emails to that sequence over time.

You can try and offer them a discount to get them back.

I normally do that once I've tried a couple emails first.

And even if you don't have an actual email kind of system software set up yet, there's ways to turn that on in most.

ECommerce software shop, if it has it even if you're like, I don't email market yet, turn that sequence on because you're going to get some extra sales from it.

Melissa Pikul

And these are like set it and forget it kind of things.

Go in maybe once a quarter or whatnot and see what the stats are, and if something is not performing, you go in and look at it, but otherwise, you get these flows, these sequences going, you set them up to go, and you hit the run button, and then you don't need to look at it again.

These are easy.

Andrew George

Yeah.

And the third one I want to cover is a post purchase sequence.

This is number three.

It definitely is the third down the list.

But this is one that really helps you build that relationship and get those repeat customers.

All right.

I'm placing an order, they get the confirmation email, hopefully they get some sort of shipping email, there's a lot of businesses that don't do that, tell you when your thing is actually shipped.

Melissa Pikul

Wow.

Andrew George

be one of those people.

Melissa Pikul

is

Andrew George

give them a tra If you have access to a tracker number, give them it.

That is a massive to get people to come back again they want to know that stuff.

That will stop there.

The, hey, you got your thing, that's it.

Include more stuff.

Give say thank you.

Say thanks for coming for the first time.

Say thanks for coming back.

Doing that split, super easy to do if you're using something like Klaviyo.

Shopping is online is a lot, it feels risky.

It's that kind of, our brains are not that smart really.

And it's even though it is, it's just, okay, why do I lose this much money?

Like how much of a loss is it really?

But your brain doesn't know the difference between that and being like, attacked by a bear.

So it feels like a risk.

So you want to do, yeah.

And it's already taken people take action when the risk of not doing something feels worse than the risk of doing it.

So it's like my, the chance of my, of getting rid of this dry skin is worse to me than the risk of losing the twenty dollars.

That'd be really low priced.

But it's twenty dollars I spent.

with Andrew's skincare brand to get out of it.

Like I need to get over that point.

But even when I get there, it's okay, have I lost this money?

Have I lost this money?

Are my, are all my details being sold in the black market to Chinese hackers?

Like I want to know this business is legit and following up and building a relationship does that.

And then once I finally get it.

I'm like, okay, Andrew's Dry Skin Skincare.

Not only was he so good and offered me such good advice, the stuff came, it worked, I will buy this forever.

Get me a subscription.

But doing like a thank you email, offering some okay, here's how to use it, here's the order to do them in, here's how to do them, here's what you should do in the morning, what you should do at night, and all that kind of stuff.

You can also start talking about other products and get people to make their next purchase hey, you got that.

5 step thing, but here's another product that would do well.

Or maybe it's okay I know you've got this stuff, and I know my stuff is good, and you're gonna love it.

Why don't you save a bit of money, and I will ship these to you every 60 days?

Because I know you're gonna want to do that.

You can get them into a subscription.

So having really strong post purchase email sequence encourages repeat orders and it makes people happy.

Even if they never come again maybe you get them to leave a review.

And even if you don't get them to do that, you make it where they don't tell other friends that you suck.

There's no drawbacks to making a good post purchase sequence.

And so get that set up and that should be easy enough to do for pretty much anyone.

But if you hate sending emails.

What is it that you need to send?

And, I'm going to say something controversial here.

You don't necessarily have to send emails every week.

The point of having those other automated emails in the background is even if I get sick, I like, I get hit by a car, I'm probably not able to ship anything out but I don't know, I'm in the wheelchair packaging up the orders and I can get to the door for someone to come and pick them up you know

Melissa Pikul

that is a fantastic email.

Andrew George

will still go out even if, I'm just busy or want to lie in today.

I know that there's some automated emails going out there's some processes going on in the background and email that's still going out.

I still send a newsletter at least once a week, but for those times when that just isn't going to happen for whatever reason.

Knowing that you have those systems set up in the background make this really easy.

And you can have systems all over the place, like if you have things like scheduled social media, so you know that there's some people getting your email list, and that's building traffic, people are going to your site, they're getting a band of credit, there's all sorts of events happening, things like ads set up, they run in the background to grow your list.

So it's just, It's part of a whole ecosystem of stuff, but knowing that the emails are there, you know that some stuff is gonna go.

I get a report every week of my email sending and it will tell you like the total number of emails that have been sent from my email account and if I've been in the auction with my list, that can be like 6, 000 emails or something.

then there's a week where, for whatever reason, if I get sick, or I'm really busy I'll see I didn't send an email.

But there's still one, two hundred emails went out, because people are doing things in the background.

There's confirmation emails for people who sign up to us.

People make purchases, and that sends out emails.

there's other automated things like people have been interacting, so there's a sequence to try and win them back, even when I don't physically send out a newsletter.

And I know that my business can still run and still make some sales.

without me having to take any direct action.

So that's why I'm like, those automations really are key.

But when it comes to the newsletters, the tips are really just to think about what are you doing in your business?

If you're launching new products, tell people about those products.

Think about reviews that you're getting, customers who send you their stories.

Like I often have conversations with customers.

I think it's easier for me because my stuff is personalized and people want to talk about it.

Like a good Bit before they order sometimes.

Some people just order and it's fine, but some people are like, okay, this is for someone's wedding and I need to write and I end up knowing all about like people and their weddings like someone did like bridesmaids gifts They were going on a skiing break and I knew everything about this person's wedding and their Bridesmaids thing I know that I probably wouldn't go and share all her details like hey Jane is going to this place on this date.

This is where she lives normally.

This is a good time to rob her house.

I'm not going to do that.

But I might say, Hey, last week I was speaking to someone who's getting married.

And I might tell a little bit of a story around it.

Anonymizing the details.

I thought about them a little bit afterwards, and I thought, I wonder if That went ahead, because I think it was just before COVID.

So I don't know if they ever got to do this break, and I kinda went to.

But even now, I can be like, okay, that's five years ago probably.

I can still tell that story, it's like still within me, and I can build it and tell it to me in sequences and stuff.

Like your stories don't ever expire.

Melissa Pikul

hmm.

Andrew George

When people leave reviews, you can turn those into stories, you can share those reviews.

Think about behind the scenes.

In your emails and on your social media too.

People love to watch you making your stuff.

Pretty much every single person on the internet has been, like, slowed their scroll and sat to watch someone making soap or candles or something.

You just get sucked into the process.

Watching someone knit something or crochet.

It's that type of content.

It's like that hydraulic press thing, I've watched a million of them, for no good reason.

Melissa Pikul

Color mixing.

Color mixing videos get me all the time.

Andrew George

So you have so much content there.

The stuff that you think is boring is not boring.

Like you're sewing stuff, embroidery machines obviously I know that, set up a camera and let people watch it do its thing.

They get mesmerized by the motion and stuff.

And especially when you're trying to position yourself as this kind of expert and this person who knows what you're doing and your products are really high quality, being able to show.

Hey, here's me using that really good quality ingredients.

Here's me like hand stitching the leather with the finest threads from India.

Like I can show this.

Like you actually can dig in and oom in and show, Hey, here is it really.

And then you're like the, especially like Etsy just now, there's a lot of businesses that you're like, okay.

Should've seen them in a shop.

And there's no way that you're making them for that, but they're dropshipping from China.

You can tell that.

There's a lot of trust gone there, because Etsy hasn't done a good job of stopping that.

If you can, in your emails, and across all your different channels, social media, and like in images on your site or Etsy has a space for those images and stuff and videos and actually showing, Hey, I am Andrew.

I am a real person and I am doing this process.

The people who genuinely care about getting a handmade product can see that you are doing that.

And I often get asked about the, how much of your stuff should be value and how much of it should be promotional.

I'm the ideal number of emails that people send in a week is three.

Which I know if people are gonna scream when they hear me say that.

But I'm like, okay, if you send three emails a week, two of them are a bit more value, and that third one is where you go in for the sale.

If you're only sending one a week, I would say split the email itself because you don't want to go, say say if you're like, people do 60 like the kind of advice would be like, okay, send three emails.

That are value and then send one promotional.

That's, you're only selling tier list once a month.

Which, I don't want to wait that long.

So I would just like stock the email, where it's like, Okay, here's some value, here's a free thing, and hey, here's my paid thing.

Like you can split the email itself.

And I think that's a better way to think about it when you aren't sending a ton of content out there.

Go through your inbox, go on to sites like ReallyGreatEmails or Mild.

com and look for inspiration.

You can load those into places like Chatchabitty and say hey.

How can I use this for my business?

that is everything we wanted to cover for today.

If you want to use email to get more sales, you are going to want to go ahead and grab our flash sale in a snap guide that gives you everything you need across email, social media and the whole plan of it to do a flash sale that you can run this weekend.

if you want to grab that, go to the product growth lab.

kit.

com forward slash flash.

Melissa Pikul

look at that

Andrew George

I think the whole, I don't know what I did, but the whole lab site is down.

Not the membership one, like area works, but like the plain website is just gone.

Melissa Pikul

but I also think it

Andrew George

I noticed it when I was an age.

Melissa Pikul

at the end of these episodes.

And we're like, All right.

Andrew George

Thanks for tuning in to the Product Growth Lab podcast.

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