- Speaker #0
There's this extremely, extremely dense influencer research and vetting process that one of our clients had. They were doing influencer vetting for brands. And so they're vetting tons of influencers all the time. And their problem is not only one: it's expensive. to go through and research and make sure there's no brand safety concerns and they fit the right requirements for the campaign. All these things also takes a while. So like a brand would say, we're ready to go, can start next week. And they're like, Oh, sorry, our influencer vetting process takes like a minimum of three weeks, but they had it all documented as a really good process. And basically we were able to take that and just do a little bit of translation. And then now we have AI doing the whole thing.
- Speaker #1
And ours instead of three weeks.
- Speaker #0
If you're thinking about AI as purely a downsizing play, then that's a little bit of a short-sighted mindset because to get AI to do work in line with how you like you want it done,
- Speaker #2
like your special process,
- Speaker #0
you're going to have to have people that come in and develop that stuff. Otherwise, basically you're just having the AI do like the average thing that it already knows how to do.
- Speaker #3
Your Watch on Marketing Misfits with Norm Farrar and Kevin.
- Speaker #1
Señor Farrar, how's the great white north? How's the great white beard? How's the great white gray beard? Yeah,
- Speaker #2
I saw.
- Speaker #1
The great gray beard from the great white north.
- Speaker #2
Oh my gosh. It used to be salt and pepper, now it's gray. I think it's from talking to you.
- Speaker #1
It might be all the stress that I've put you under. It could be all those little what do you call them? The jelly beans? No, the gummies. The little gummies that's under your foot. Or it could be... It could be... So I gotta tell this story though. I gotta tell a story. Norm's down in Austin visiting me a few weeks ago and we're doing some business and doing some brainstorming and stuff and then he likes his gummies. So he likes little candies and stuff. And so I was like
- Speaker #2
Not THC. Just regular gummies.
- Speaker #1
Yeah, regular gummies. Like the sugar gummies. Not Yeah, not THC to be clear. So I come out and I have this little wooden box. So you know like, I don't know, three inches by three inches. You're going there. I was like Norm, I've got you a little present. It's a special little treat. He's like, oh right, these must be some really nice gummies he got from some really cool place or some good chocolates or something. He opens up the box has a sliding lid on the top. So you slide this little lid back. It's a small little box, you know? He slides the lid back.
- Speaker #2
Dormant chocolate.
- Speaker #1
And... I don't think I've ever heard Dorm squeal as loud as he squeals. And I got called all kinds of names that start with things that we can't say here. But when he slides that back, a spider jumps out. It's a fake spider on a string.
- Speaker #2
It's a huge fake spider.
- Speaker #1
It's a huge fake spider on a string. And it just jumps out at you and it's a plastic, but it looks real. And it freaked him out so bad because you see Norm hates spiders. He's like, spiders are like just, I mean, there's a spider in his house. Gotta get his wife to come and like put the shoe on it or get it out of there. So, and it was, it was, it was a good one. So I got a good laugh out of that, but, but Norm got me back later on and he said, I said, don't worry, I'm going to get you back. He was sitting there talking to my chef, he was cooking and stuff. And I'm like, "What are you going to do?" He's like, "I don't know but I think of something good, like maybe put a Colombian in your bed."
- Speaker #2
Right. Now, you have to know...
- Speaker #1
It's really good because I'm divorced from a Colombian. So it was really good. But speaking of really good things and really cool stuff, our guest today is on the cutting edge of something that a lot of people probably don't know about. The big companies, a lot of them know about it, but She's in the AI, I think she will get her background. I think she started out at Facebook and did a bunch of cool stuff over there in the tech side. Then she started her own agency that's helping people put in operations based on AI. So this is not let's go use ChatGPT and write an email or make some pictures for our products or something like that. It's much more involved than that where the agentic side of AI and where you're actually using AI I think she calls it an operator and we'll get her definition and let her explain with that. But this is something that I think is, Norma and I both believe is the future and something Dragonfish, our company, is going to be doing. We're not doing it at this moment. We're doing a couple other things but this is gonna be, it's on our roadmap to add this in. But because I think everybody's gonna have to be doing this or you're gonna have to be at a serious competitive advantage so... What do we meet? We met Rachel I met in Nashville, right Norm?
- Speaker #2
Yeah, we met in Nashville at DealCon. DealsCon.
- Speaker #1
That's right, a deal is gone. And I remember she jumped in a text, we were going to dinner and she's like, we got an Uber and she's like, do you mind if I go with you guys? And here's this young lady in the car and you never know who you're sitting next to. This has happened a lot, Norm. You never know who you're sitting next to. And we're just chatting about a few things and then later on we find out she's this goddess of AI and of agentic stuff and the person. And we had no idea we're sitting next to royalty. So, just the lesson there is always try to connect with whoever you're in an Uber with at an event because you never know what they might be able to do. So if you want to bring her on, do you remember how to hit that button, Norm? I can do one.
- Speaker #2
That's what they get paid for.
- Speaker #1
They get paid the big bucks for. Hey, Rachel
- Speaker #0
Hello, hello Hey guys
- Speaker #1
Rachel What up?
- Speaker #0
What an intro and a story, oh my gosh.
- Speaker #1
It's a true one too, it's true.
- Speaker #0
I'll maybe replace the words you use with like nerd but we can go into that.
- Speaker #1
If you want to call yourself a self-identify, I'll let you.
- Speaker #0
Fair, so fair.
- Speaker #1
So you got your start doing something at Facebook right? And a lot of people when they think of Thaisic, oh she was in the marketing department or she is vetting stuff. But no you were like on the tech side of things right? Doing something I remember you told me what was it you called it transformers and I don't even know what the hell that is. I think of the movie when you say that but something what did you do at Facebook?
- Speaker #0
Yeah so one of those like wild things in life where you never know what you're exposed to and then later on you're like wow that was super convenient. So Transformers is the T in ChatGPT. And I was using that technology back at Facebook when it was still called Facebook. So I never worked at Meta, I always clarify. You know, but yeah, I was using that technology when I was at Facebook doing R&D of how to make ads work better. And when I first was exposed to that tech back then, I was mind blown. And that was like the baby, baby, baby version of what we have today. And so it's just been so wild to see this type of AI just explode like it has.
- Speaker #1
So what is a transformer? What is, can you explain like in layman's terms, what is that? What does that do or...
- Speaker #0
Yeah basically it's a type of machine learning model or AI model. There's actually tons of different types out there. But it's one that's really interesting because it can learn like representations and like understand stuff in a deeper way. And so ChatGPT is a type of transformer that learns the patterns of language. And that's why we can put words into it and then it can actually understand it in its weird transformer world and then spit stuff back out to us. And so, yeah, it's just this like type of AI that works in this way that obviously now sitting where we're at is like crazy powerful and leading the charge of like the whole space.
- Speaker #1
So with ads, what was it? So it wasn't looking at language necessarily. It was looking at ad patterns or CTAs or what was it doing?
- Speaker #0
So I think I can't go too in depth to what I worked on because it's still in use in the Facebook ads platform. But at a high level, what we were doing was helping small business ads that don't. get a lot of impressions or don't learn very fast. We were helping those ads like kind of find other similar patterns to learn from using language. So things like your captions are the same, or your website text was the same, or your products are the same. You can kind of help the ads learn faster. Yeah, by putting that in the massive machine learning model that predicts what ads to show you. So super esoteric at the time. and super nerdy and deep, but then it's kind of one of those, like once you get a taste of something and I was just like, wow, this is like an amazing technology. And then I've been using it in my last company. And then obviously I have this agency now.
- Speaker #2
So how did you go from Facebook with that technology to, I guess you went to two different companies, your agency now and the one before?
- Speaker #0
So I left Facebook to actually start a, like a... VC back Silicon Valley startup. We're kind of joking about wine earlier. I love wine. So I built a wine specific like e-commerce stack that would help small wineries market better. And we were using GPT to like auto-generate the emails that they would send to their customers and the social media posts and captions. And so that's, I did when I left Facebook. Um, and then I ended up,
- Speaker #1
this was all before two, this was like GPT two or three before, before it became a household word before Jasper was using behind the scenes and all that kind of stuff back in the day.
- Speaker #0
Exactly. Yeah. Um, and then again, like crazy weird world, I ended up Um, we sold that company November 2022. and then everybody was like, what do you do Rachel? How do you do Rachel? Like, what do you do next? I was like, I have no idea. What's the most absurd thing I could say that. And, people who know me know this was really absurd to say that I said, um, I'm gonna go become a Tik TOK influencer. It was like the most absurd thing I could think of that somebody would leave me, not like leave me alone, but you know, let me go do my thing. So that's what I did and that was November 2022. I talked about AI on TikTok and then December 2022 is when ChatGPT came out and then it blew up. And so that's kind of how I got into what we're doing now, which is the agency. And then we also have the exchange, which teaches people how to use AI and operations and stuff.
- Speaker #1
Hey, Norm, you'll love this, man. I talked to a seller the other day doing 50K a month. But when I asked them what their actual profit was... they just kind of stared at me.
- Speaker #2
Are you serious? That's kind of like driving blindfolded.
- Speaker #1
Exactly, man. I told them, you got to check out Sellerboard, this cool profit tool that's built just for Amazon sellers. It tracks everything like fees, PPC, refunds, promos, even changing COGS during using FIFO.
- Speaker #2
Aha. But does it do FBM shipping costs too?
- Speaker #1
Sure does. That way you can keep your quarter four chaos totally under control and know your numbers because not only does it do that, but it makes your PPC bids, it forecasts inventory, it sends review requests, and even helps you get reimbursements from Amazon.
- Speaker #2
Now that's like having a CFO in your back pocket.
- Speaker #1
You know what? It's just $15 a month. But you got to go to sellerboard.com/misfits. Sellerboard.com/misfits. And if you do that they'll even throw in a free two-month trial.
- Speaker #2
So you want me to say go to sellerboard.com/misfits and get your numbers straight before your accountant loses it?
- Speaker #1
Exactly.
- Speaker #2
All right. So let's talk about the agency. What are you doing now?
- Speaker #0
So we do what I describe as AI operations. So I always kind of joke that most people don't really get lit up when they think about operations. I don't know about you. You guys, is operations like your favorite thing? Okay. You do. We are the same. We are the people. Most people don't like thinking about that stuff because it's like systems and processes and SOPs and documenting stuff. But turns out that's exactly what AI needs. It needs really specific instructions and prompts and all this stuff. But agentic AI needs the same thing. It needs clear... instructions to go follow. And so what our company does is helps businesses create those instructions, we call them playbooks. And then we teach this AI and then AI could do that.
- Speaker #1
So you create SOPs for AI tasks that AI can do basically?
- Speaker #0
Exactly. Yeah.
- Speaker #1
Okay. And so is that mostly big businesses using that or is that business of any size? Or where are you seeing it being adopted? Yeah. first?
- Speaker #0
So our agency focuses on, I'd say like still quote unquote small, but small to medium size businesses usually because of our smallest clients are doing in the like five to 10 million a year range. But then AI operations is really taking hold across like the whole industry. So we do on the AI exchange side, we do. courses and trainings and stuff for fortune 50 companies that are using these approaches um and really all it is is the outwriting and sop that i can can follow and i swear it's like way sexier than that sounds but um
- Speaker #1
is what it is so does that take a person to i mean like so when you when you sit down you're doing an sop walk me through how that works so i come to you and i Automate the right word or I want to agenticize? Or what's the right, I want to I got three people doing this stuff and I think a robot can do it. What do I do? Do it to someone that knows what they're doing, sit down with you and go, OK, this is what we do step by step by step. It's kind of like, you know, people say create a loom and then the loom will create, you know, tools like guide or whatever that will then turn into SOP you give to your Filipino. Is that kind of what you're doing but from for AI and then you have a human sitting on you have all these SOPs and you have a human sitting on top of it making sure that one of them doesn't screw up. Is that kind of the idea?
- Speaker #0
Yeah, I mean, pretty much exactly. So our clients either like they have the SOP already, in which case we do some kind of like shifting of some of the language and how it's set up to get it ready for AI. But once it's all you need is a process documented, and then you can start to teach that to AI piece by piece or most businesses don't have their processes already documented. And so... We spend a lot of our time coming into a business, doing kind of an interview or watching looms or watching videos and creating a process that then AI can go and execute for people. And the way that we do that is this role that I think you mentioned a little bit is this AI operator role, which is that like process oriented person that knows how to come in and structure processes and then document it and then be the one managing and getting information. AI to do that work.
- Speaker #2
How can you trust, like once you build one of your operators, can you walk away or do you have to have people constantly watching in case it makes mistakes?
- Speaker #0
So it depends on the process. There are, without getting too in the weeds, the best approaches right now are that you can kind of make a checklist of what are the things we need it to do every single time, kind of like little tests. And then we start running it, you can see, okay, it hits 10 out of 10 of the things every single time, or maybe 1% of the time it doesn't hit that 10th thing. Then you can kind of see how much you trust it and decide if you want to let it just go free or if you want to keep somebody there to make sure that it runs.
- Speaker #2
Chances of hallucination. This is always my problem. So I'll do something 10 times and all of a sudden it'll be out of whack. Do you have to worry about that?
- Speaker #0
I mean, it depends on the process. Yeah. So, um, the way to think about it is just like if you were bringing in an intern to a business or, um, hiring somebody new, you know, you're gonna, um, kind of be relying on both what they already know and what you're telling them. And the more things that you tell them about what you want done, the more control you have over how they do it. And so, um, I think it's true for like hallucinations. The more you tell it, like... only use this information you have access to or, um, you know, double check your sources, like these types of things, then it won't do the, hallucinations nearly as much.
- Speaker #1
Are people coming in to do this to, to, to downsize and get rid of people? Or are people coming in to do this more to be more efficient?
- Speaker #0
We see both. Um, our personal stance is that if you're Thinking about AI is purely a downsizing play. And that's a little bit of a short sighted mindset, because to get AI to do work that is in line with how you like you want it done, like your special process, your secret sauce, you're going to have to have people that come in and develop that stuff. Otherwise, you basically are just having the AI do like the average thing that it already knows how to do. So like people need to be there to innovate and if you get rid of all your people then who's going to be innovating?
- Speaker #2
As a business owner does every business out there should they be starting to look at this or is it just a specific niche? I'm just trying to figure out, you know, who's gonna hit you up first. Is it manufacturers? Is it gonna be digital marketers? What are you looking at?
- Speaker #0
Um, the way that we talk about this role and like what we're doing is like, it really is just like the next generation of operations. And so like you guys know, like in marketing, there's marketing ops, right? Like that's a role of creating systems and processes. Sales ops is a really strong example where there's sometimes multiple people on a team and bigger companies that are doing like the sales ops function. The same thing is true of there being, AIOps, like it can be there's one dedicated team for a company or we've seen it where it's embedded in a specific team. Um, like, have you guys seen the term go to market engineer at all? kind of popping up out there. Um, it's one that's starting to take a LinkedIn by storm and, and the marketing and like, sales world. But, um, that's the same thing. It's like embedding this AI operations person and mindset inside the sales team and revenue org so they can get stuff structured and then and delegate that stuff to AI so the team could work on more important things.
- Speaker #1
Yeah. A lot of people stick AI on the end of their name or at the end of their services, and it's not really AI. It's if-then-else statements or it's just programmatic stuff. What is the difference between that and true AI? I mean, in 8n and make.com, those are still programic. But what's the true difference? What makes it truly AI and agentic versus just programming? Programmatic.
- Speaker #0
Yeah, I mean it's a good question. The way that I kind of describe AI and software is like, automation is when your software does what it needs to do next automatically. Right? Like a good example is you get an email, it's in your email inbox, you open it up, you sit on it for three seconds, and then it goes "oh, now it's red." Right? That happened automatically, that's an automation. There's no AI in there at all. Just if then statements like you're talking about. AI is when your software is like choosing what to do, like making a decision, predicting what to do. It's not an if-then automatic choice. It's actually making that decision. And so when you look at things like make.com or N8N, They have a bunch of automations in it, that those tools do. But they can also have AI steps in them. And that's what a lot of people right now are like bundling up into this, like these are agents, right? But it really is just like automation plus AI, because it happens automatically and the AI is deciding what to do.
- Speaker #1
Well, an NAN might be automation. And then for the first three steps, grab this document, extract the text, whatever. And then it puts it... go and now go out to chat GBT and analyze this and spit me back the five bullet points or whatever about X, Y, Z. And then it passes it to the automation again. And then maybe there's another step. Is that what you mean by where it's integrating the, is that agentic though? Agentic is more, isn't it more like thinking on its own and like it's, and modifying itself on its own. And so it's not, it's actually adapting to the situation and kind of, um, It has almost like its own little brain to an extent for a specific task.
- Speaker #0
Yeah. Um, so in your first question of the NADAN workflow or like, yes, it's like automations and then there's the AI steps that can be more automations. Um, agentic is a whole other rabbit hole because right now if I'm, and I'm sure, people listening to this, like might disagree with me, but. I really see agentic as being mostly a marketing term right now. There's not really like a clear technical definition of like what's Agentic or not and then I think for people if you want agentic stuff just thinking about that is like a spectrum of AI Right, like putting one AI step in an end-to-end workflow That's like AI is just deciding how to do that one step if you have AI Have access to tons of steps or having an decide to make its own steps, that is more, it's like further on the agentic spectrum. But it's all kind of the same thing, right? It's just all AI put into automations and like the software tools that we use.
- Speaker #1
Because they said that within a year, this year, a lot of experts came out and said 2025 is the year of the agents. And then I saw the Microsoft CEO, change this to in the summer and say no 2026 is going to be the year uh of agents and then you have the cosmo browser come out or dia browser and then the cosmo browser that can do some of this agentic shopping type of stuff on your behalf but some people say yeah it's kind of cool but it's pretty clunky uh and it still goofs up and you know it it's just like a quarter first time um someone plays quarterback uh you know for the college team they're gonna Blow it because they're still trying to figure it out. I think they'll get better and better and better But do you think we're gonna be at a point in the next few years where it's truly? Agentic and you see you tell it hey I need to do this and then it just goes off and doesn't look at like say lovable or something like or or look at a Um, or cloud code is a really good nano banana where you just talk to it and you say, Hey, do remove the, the Coke can and replace it with a Pepsi can. And it just does it. That's a little bit more towards the agentic side because it has to figure out behind the scenes. What were you talking about? What to go get, what to do? Is that more agentic probably, behind the scenes on that, or correct me if I'm wrong. Are we going to start seeing more of that where things are just doing stuff on their own?
- Speaker #0
Yeah, I think it's like the spectrum, right? So that is way further on the spectrum than what we had even six months ago. And so the way I think about it is expect the limits of how agentic or how much control you're letting the AI decide. Expect that to keep going because it's just going to keep getting better and better. Yeah, it's this world we're in now where this is, I mean people say all the time, but like it's true. Like this is the worst of technology is ever going to be. And so like expect that it's just gonna keep getting better and better. Yeah.
- Speaker #2
What do you think? So let's not think a year out or two years out. What about in the next six months? What do you see the changes being?
- Speaker #0
So from a tech perspective, um, it's always hard to predict forward, but I will say the thing that's, I think, um, under the radar the most, the last like even three months has been cloud code. Have you guys seen that or messed around with that?
- Speaker #1
I hear people talking, I have not messed around with it, but I hear people talking about how good it is. And I'm seeing stories now about people graduating with degrees in computer science or having a tough time getting a job because the entry level jobs that they used to do and get paid for now being done by Claude code or some similar version of that.
- Speaker #0
Yeah, I mean, it's so we develop stuff and it's completely changed our coding. workflow and what specifically our front end engineer even does, like as their responsibilities are completely different now. Now it's just like kind of the last three or so months is when...
- Speaker #1
Can you explain for people that don't know what we're talking about? Can you explain what that is and what that does?
- Speaker #0
Yeah, so it's basically similar to what you were talking about Kevin of you go in and you say I want you to change the color of the menu on our website to be purple instead of red. And if you give it access to your code base, all the code that powers the website, it'll actually go in there or find the right file. It'll plan out. I mean, that's a really simple task of changing the color. But let's say you want to interpret to build a whole new page on the website. It'll plan out what that page should have. It'll write all the text on that page. It'll make sure that page is linked to other pages like it will do a full amount of work that used to take an engineer, you know. couple hours at least if not a couple days it could do that with one command um and so the pace at which you can now develop software is just so different and um that kind of mentality and that type of uh capability is is just going to keep coming to like every every function and every part of where this technology is is being applied right you're throwing some of that more on what's
- Speaker #2
Yeah, well no base 44.
- Speaker #1
Oh you did it with the cigar thing that you did? Yeah,
- Speaker #2
I did I couldn't believe what I could create in two three days yeah, it was it was and I don't know like I I'm dangerous when it comes to coding and This was like I sat there with my mouth, you know just open like where were you?
- Speaker #0
It's wild.
- Speaker #1
No arms a huge cigar smoker. So he created a you talk about that the thing you did from wine earlier and He created an app with all the cigar information so that when he's smoking a cigar, he can check it for nodes and for leaves and for tastes and smells. And he can make notes in it. It spits back out and tells him about the cigar and he can log it and all this basically his own.
- Speaker #2
Yeah. Your own personal humidor. Yeah. All sorts of stuff.
- Speaker #0
And so when we talk about kind of zooming back to the AI operations and like playbooks and SOPs and stuff. That only becomes more important when you have these agents going and doing stuff. Because I'll give you... So how did we... The way that you're using it, Norm, is very kind of like a green field, right? Like, you're like, cool, it's writing code, the code works, and that's awesome for your use case. For our use case, it has to abide by the way that we do software engineering. And it has to write in certain ways and in certain files and structure stuff. Otherwise... It's not a good software engineer or software agent. And so what did we do? We wrote a playbook or an SOP. for how to plan out in the way that we plan out, how to design, how to write their little requests to say, okay, I'm done with it. And we wrote that whole playbook out. So now the agent knows it can't just do the work in whatever way it wants. It needs to do it our way so that we actually can have it be a valuable team member. Otherwise, before we did that, it wrote great code, but our engineers looked at it and were like, this is crap, we're not putting this in our code base. But when we had the playbook, now it writes on par with the way that we do things.
- Speaker #1
So you're basically telling it the way that y'all like to do the modules and the way you don't like to document and comment and all that kind of stuff.
- Speaker #0
Exactly. Yeah.
- Speaker #1
So that if you've been going back into it, that's used to it one way, it can easily find whatever it is that they need to modify or the machine messed up or something. It makes it, they know exactly what it is.
- Speaker #0
And even if we're going to run parallel agents at the same time, like they got to work the same way. Otherwise they're going to overwrite each other's work. You know, again, you got to make the operations and the process like this rule book. And then that's how you get it to do like kind of that real business work.
- Speaker #2
I guess as it expands out and you're doing more and more of these playbooks, the more and more complicated it is keeping everything in sync. You just said about the like... one overriding the other, well, all of a sudden you have 10 of these that are depending. I think they're depending or dependent on each other. Um, yeah, you gotta put a lot of thought into that.
- Speaker #0
Yeah. I mean, that's an AI operator that we have basically figured out is like the key to this is like, you need someone who's nerdy about processes and documentation and actually figuring out what you want them to follow.
- Speaker #2
So do you have a hub? And let's, let's say it's, um, I don't know, sales hub. So you have a major hub and underneath that hub, you've got all these playbooks referring back to the hub domain hub to make sure everything's in sync.
- Speaker #0
We don't the way that we implement stuff right now, we're not to everything being technically connected in the way that you're describing. But I think the world will get there very quickly if you just have like one hub. that is your company and then all your stuff is, is plugged into and pulling from that. Yeah.
- Speaker #2
In the next six months or so.
- Speaker #1
That's why I don't predict. So, um, and then you did it. so it's,
- Speaker #0
yeah, it's just so hard to predict the, um, the future on the tech stuff because it's honestly, it's just changing and moving so fast. Not that it's not, I think it's pretty clear where stuff is going. It's just going to get better and better and more capable. But, um, The thing that is also really clear and what we see is I think the adoption side of like how businesses are thinking about stuff. I'll say even like now in September is very different in terms of where people are at versus January when they're looking at AI and how they're approaching it. And I think the way that businesses are making progress is going to change a lot in the next six months.
- Speaker #1
Well, I see a lot of businesses. You see it every time. chad gbt or perplexity or one of these guys makes an update they just wipe out a thousand tools a thousand ai tools that were doing a certain thing too many people are building businesses or building systems based on a very specific task and they therefore they don't have a moat or they don't have any sustainability instead of building it on a frontier model or something that could be interchanged in the engine you can change out the engine and still the the core stuff on top work. So how do you how do you build that moat on the top of AI? That's every day there's something new and cool coming out that's changing. How do you build that top infrastructure so that when this gets better, you get better up here, you don't get wiped out?
- Speaker #0
Yeah, it's the same thing we're talking about. We actually have a saying we call own the playbook rent to the tech Because what's actually really different about AI is you could take this playbook, these instructions and you could pull them out of one tool and put them in another. And usually like a one day turnaround for even some of the most complex stuff because like AI is all text based. So you just take the prompts out and put them in, you take the documents that the agent has access to out and put them in another tool. So what you're talking about, Kevin, it's the more that you invest in having a really good playbook. Which comes from like, does your business have a really good way of doing things? Do you have some special sauce, some advantage? That playbook is where you should be investing as much of your time and resources as possible, because then when the tech gets better, you can just drop that playbook in the next tech thing. And you immediately get that upgrade you're talking about.
- Speaker #2
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- Speaker #1
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- Speaker #2
They've helped up and coming brands like Magic Spoon compete with Cheerios for top category positioning while also helping Fortune 500 brands like Unilever launch their new products.
- Speaker #1
Right now is one of the best times to get started with Stack Influence. You can sign up at stackinfluence.com. Or click the link in this video down in the description or notes below and mention Misfits, that's M-I-S-F-I-T-S, to get 10% off your first campaign. Stackinfluence.com But the underlying tools could be different though. So like if let's say the underlying is ChatGPT right now, ChatGPT 5. And then you take that out and you dump your playbook on top of Gemini. Right. it's going to give you different results to a degree. Some similar, but different results. So does the operator then have to go back in and go tweak everything again and make smooth it all out? Or how does that work?
- Speaker #0
So in some ways, yes. Usually when we do that, we have AI help. So it's actually a pretty fast process. But actually, if you write really specific playbooks, it shouldn't vary that much of what it does in different tools. And that's, you know, and most people don't kind of get to that level of specificity. But think of it like you hired one person, they're really good. And if you have a really, really good playbook, you should be able to hire another person of equal or smarter caliber. And they should be able to do things the same way. I guess the same goal with AI is like, if you have a really good playbook, then you're protecting yourself against all of that risk.
- Speaker #2
We probably have a bunch of small business owners, sellers, online sellers listening. And they're probably wondering, you know, what can I do? Where should I even start? What are some things that they should be looking for? Like tasks that they wouldn't even realize that they could implement?
- Speaker #0
Yeah. So if you have an ops person on the team, the thing that I would have them do, honestly, tomorrow is look at your... processes or whether they're documented or not, and look go task by task and say could AI help us with this task? If so, let's either link that tool in this process or let's work on that little prompt and put that in this process. But even just starting to have kind of quick wins in all of your processes of like I can do this little task, I do this little task and save that stuff for later. That's the first and like easiest step to start progressing on these things. if you're the solo operator and you're running your own stuff, which I have, I've been there and you're probably like, I don't have stuff written because I'm doing all of it. Right. Um, if you, if you have, something that you do repeatedly spend a little bit of time with ChachiBT, do a loom or some sort of brain dump on what you're doing, get ChachiBT to write out your playbook. And then you can just take that playbook and you can even upload it into like a custom GPT, and it could start running that playbook for you and helping you with those tasks. It's really like if you just kind of spend a little bit of time documenting what you want to do and kind of save that for later, then you'll start building up this repository of these playbooks more quickly than you'd expect.
- Speaker #1
So is this your process? Are you using proprietary systems and tools you've built or are you using like just know how to properly use stuff that's publicly out there?
- Speaker #0
So we use a mix because we have, again, that own the playbook, rent the tech approach. So we use like ChatsyPT and ChatsyPT Teams a lot, especially that's something that a lot of people, like employees and teams, they already are using ChatsyPT Teams.
- Speaker #1
What is ChatsyPT Teams? People that haven't heard all this stuff.
- Speaker #0
Yeah, it's basically just chat GPT that you get a license for like a group of people. So if you have like two or three... licenses or subscriptions, then you can get a Teams account with ChachiBT. And they're all in one little closed bubble.
- Speaker #2
Yeah, they collaborate on projects.
- Speaker #1
So it's got the history and everything and all in one little bubble there. OK. Yeah.
- Speaker #0
Yeah.
- Speaker #1
OK.
- Speaker #0
And so there's a lot of stuff you can do just in that. And if I were so if you're new to like ChachiBT Teams, And again, you want like the easiest, highest bang for your buck tool to go try. I would really try to go learn custom GPTs, which is a small feature inside ChatGPT. Have you guys played with that much?
- Speaker #1
It's like artifacts and Claude, same thing. Yeah. And Claude. I don't know if Perplexity has that. But I know Claude and Jebji do. T are the two main ones for that.
- Speaker #0
Yeah, and then Gemini has gems, although they can do many things. Yeah. But yeah, if you can just load up against something repeatable, you do, then now you have this little, little AI that can help you with that task anytime you need that task.
- Speaker #1
What are some what are you in this space? What do you think is people is under the you mentioned something else on the radar earlier, but what do you think are some other things that are happening that you're seeing that people just don't realize are happening or paying attention. Just like when you were at Facebook and using ChatGPG2 before everybody even knew what OpenAI was or whatever to do your stuff. What's something else that's kind of going on in the big corporate world or big underlying that just hasn't made it mainstream yet that you're seeing? It's going to be like, as soon as this explodes, this is going to change everything.
- Speaker #0
Yeah, that's a good question. I think... There's a lot of stuff around AI taking over your browser or your computer that I think some people have seen because there's these viral tools and apps that will do that. But that doesn't work super well yet, and it's going to work very well, I think more quickly than we expect. So then you can think of any website that you have a login to. AI could now go log in every day and follow your playbook of, I want you to scan through all of my listings in this marketplace that has all these things or whatever kind of tasks that you have to do every day that is repetitive in the browser. AI can now just go do it for you. So I think that's coming. Also, without getting like... too nerdy into it. There is a phrase that the CTO of OpenAI used at one point where he said, like, AI is extremely capable now. Most of the problems that we have are going to be solved by engineering because they're actually engineering problems. Like basically, the capabilities of AI just exploded so much that now the world's kind of playing catch up So I think some of these things like hallucinations, like AI learning and remembering and all these things are just going to get better and better because there's so many engineers that are working on things. And so, yeah, that's a very broad sweeping thing, but I think that's going to still surprise people.
- Speaker #2
Have you heard of Motion? It's not Notion. I think it's called Motion. It's for your browser. It slips in as your executive assistant. And as you're working, it'll take your test and it'll slot in what you need to get done quicker. It'll go through your inbox. It's a really cool app. And when you were talking about the browser taking over, this is a start. And it's not expensive. It does a fairly good job. And, you know, it can really eat into your assistant's hours. they could spend it on something else because this is doing, I love the idea. Kevin knows everything is, I've got a time blocked and, you know, color coded and here's motion going in and say, well, no, better use of your time doing this first. It's cool.
- Speaker #0
Yeah. I haven't used it recently. I'll have to check it out again. I didn't know about the browser stuff, but like, that's a great example is like these companies that have these, Like they kind of have a playbook, right? Of like how to be a really good executive assistant that now it's carrying out across your browser. Just like super cool.
- Speaker #1
I have a different respect now for people that are doing this stuff because I'm developing an LLM for all of my content. So I have a site, a content hub right now that's got over 1,000 pieces of content like this podcast, podcasts I do for another company, all the podcasts I've been on, all my events, all my newsletters. And you can query it, but it's a text-based query. But we're actually taking that and appending some additional data from my events in LLM so you can actually chat with it versus just search it. And I've had to go through three people to actually get this to work right. The first guy was like, I got it and they were playing around. I had to fire them. Then I hired another guy. Actually, the fourth person had to get rid of him. Then another guy came in and he did some stuff and he got to the point where he's like, I can't get this to work right. And then now I've got a guy in Tokyo that seems to know how to do all the proper setup and the coding. And it's a definite skill set that there's not a ton of people that know how to do this really, really well and really right. So are you seeing like this is this operator position? Is this someone that's technical and SOP oriented or is this something that's more they're more operations oriented and they know a little bit of tech or is it an expensive position?
- Speaker #0
Yeah. So what you're talking about is like super common in the space. And the challenge that we kind of realized is like You either have somebody who's really technical and knows how to get this stuff to work, or you have somebody that can kind of figure out what it should do. Write the process, write the playbook, figure out like, what does Kevin even want to use this for? Not too dissimilar from like, if you're making a software product, you may have engineers and product managers. That's kind of what we see with the AI operator. And then usually if they're doing like more advanced stuff, they'll work with an AI implementer who is that engineer and that person who's in the technical underpants. If you have to call it that.
- Speaker #2
I like seeing Kevin in his technical underpants. You know, could you share with us just one of your client success stories?
- Speaker #0
Yeah. It's probably there's this like extremely. extremely dense influencer research and vetting process that one of our clients had. That when they came to us, they had it all documented. They had an SOP. That SOP was like 20 pages. Like it was so detailed that their team was following. And their problem...
- Speaker #1
This was to find and vet an influencer to promote their company, right? Just to be clear.
- Speaker #0
They're an agency. So they were doing influencer vetting for brands. for brand matching.
- Speaker #1
Okay.
- Speaker #0
Yeah. Yeah. Um, and so they're vetting tons of influencers all the time and their problem was not only one it's expensive to go through and research and make sure there's a brand safety concerns and they fit the right requirements for the campaign and all these things. So it's really expensive to do that. Um, also takes a while. So like a brand would say, you know, we're ready to go. I can start next week. And they're like, Oh, sorry. Our influencer And so, but they had it all documented. It's a really good process. And basically we were able to take that and just do a little bit of translation to break it up. And then now we have AI doing the whole thing.
- Speaker #1
In like an hour instead of three weeks or something probably, right?
- Speaker #0
Yeah. Because you can also parallel path all the, like you can vet as many as you want at a time, right? It does take each, each like vetting, you know, takes a bit because the AI is doing a lot of work. Like it's researching their Tik TOK and their YouTube and their LinkedIn and their Google search. And that is like all these things, but yeah, now it's as AI is doing all those steps. And so their team now has more people they can, like they say they're able to spend time looking at the best of the best. So they're getting better matches for their clients. They didn't spend that time vetting. So they can reinvest that time in other parts of the campaign. And they can deliver, those matches a lot faster. So that was a pretty cool one.
- Speaker #1
What are a couple other use cases that like an e-commerce seller or marketing person could use for this? That's a good one, but are there a couple others? Like you and I talked at the internet marketing party a while back where I was like telling you a little bit what Norm and I were thinking about doing where we're going to have this LLM brain and then have these agents going out and looking at, you know, through APIs or MCP, pulling all this data from different tools and different systems and pulling it into this brain. Kind of like what we talked about with the NADN thing a minute ago and jumbling it all up and then spitting out the right answer and then sending it back out. something along those lines. I mean, I see like in the e-commerce world where right now let's take an Amazon seller. They have to do multiple tasks. They have to do product research and use a tool to figure out what are the keywords that they need to put in their listing. Then they got to do product sourcing, go to Alibaba or go to wherever to find and deal with that. Then they got to do the marketing, create their images and create their listing copy and all that. Then they got to deal with influencers to try to get it launched. And then they got to do maintenance to make sure they're in compliance. And they got, let's call it eight different individualized little tasks just to get this thing up and running. And I see a world where in the future where agents are doing all that. You got SOPs for every one of those things based on your requirements. And there's one operator sitting on top of it. And all these agents are doing everything. Is that realistic?
- Speaker #0
It is. Yeah. I would say I wouldn't expect AI can do 100% of all of those tasks today, because there still are some limitations to the tech like the browser stuff. For example, Alibaba, I don't think they have an API. But what you're describing is where it's very clear that the future is going. And so I encourage people, it's like if you don't have like an ops person or an operator yet, like, I would go find one. and have them start helping you document your processes. You don't need to go crazy, but just start with one part of the business, write out the process, and then try to see and test, can we get AI to do this piece? Okay, cool, that worked. Now let's, that's how we do that. And then just keep going through and chucking along. And it adds up really fast because now you don't have to do those things.
- Speaker #1
A lot of people are saying they're AI first. That's one of the things Norma and I have talked about in our It is, can AI do this? Do we need a copywriter or can AI do this? Or do we need this? Can AI do this? And it's AI first. And I think that's where it was that the guy Shopify or something said, before you hire an employee, you got to give me five reasons why AI can't do this or prove to me that AI couldn't do this task. And if it can't, okay, then we'll hire the employee. I think a lot of people aren't thinking those terms though right now. I agree. There's still like the coolness and the novelty of AI.
- Speaker #0
Yeah. And especially, um, because I hope that for anybody listening, I hope that even if you're not an ops nerd, like you kind of see, like see that this is, um, you get, you get so much out of it when you can just be like, wow, I don't have to do that thing at all anymore. Like that example I shared, like I don't have to, we don't have to do influencer vetting at all anymore. Um, but I think that because AI is just going to do it for us, but I think that, um, It's hard to like wrap your mind around getting there, but asking what you guys are saying. Can I do this before you even start something like that? That's the first step. You know,
- Speaker #1
can you can we do an AI system that you do robotic stuff as well to working? It can I don't have to talk to Norm and it will wipe the tears off of the office space off his cheek since he missed it. Since he's going to miss me. OK, can you can you put that I can get you the SOP.
- Speaker #2
I would do that anyways. I'm always crying around Kevin.
- Speaker #0
I'm sure you could make it happen. As long as he got that SOP, yeah.
- Speaker #1
So the key of what you're saying is if you're not on top of this right now, at least at a fundamental stage, start creating SOPs for every single thing you do. Norm used to do like years ago. I remember the first time I met him, I didn't know who this bearded guy was at a conference in But someone said, that's the dude that has an SOP for how to make coffee in the office. And that's always stuck with me. Norm is the coffee SOP guy because he was very... So you should be doing that in your business, whether you're ready to take this leap to do what Divi Up does or to do something else, right? That's the fundamental thing is start getting everything down so that you can try to job some of that off to AI.
- Speaker #0
Yep. Yeah. Writing it down was the first step to delegating it.
- Speaker #2
What about common mistakes? Are there any common mistakes you're seeing businesses make right now?
- Speaker #1
With AI?
- Speaker #2
Yeah, with AI. Yeah,
- Speaker #0
just in general.
- Speaker #2
How long is a piece of string, by the way?
- Speaker #0
I think a big one is, you know, a lot of AI projects and initiatives have failed. And a lot of the root cause that we've seen is it's really hard to treat this as like a, a solo sport. Like it really is something that you need either like almost all of the pitfalls and reasons why I can fail come back to like, it wasn't kind of like an organized organization to take it seriously. So either like we hired a developer and that developers like working on their own and doesn't have like the right requirements. And so then that's why the project like didn't go well or didn't finish. Or that, you know, the team's not really on board. And so you build something that works great, but the team never uses. And, Um, that sucks. Right. I think that really taking it kind of seriously as a, as a, as a company, as a team, um, is important. and then the piece is like not treating it like magic, which is so hard because it feels, we all feel like we're magicians sometimes, you know, when we like go into chat GPT, it's like, oh, I can tell it to do anything and it will just grant my wish. It's like so awesome. But, um, yeah, to get to like the real business value, And it's a kind of less sexy path, but that is just what it takes.
- Speaker #1
What does it cost to do something like with you guys to do this process? Let's say I have the SOPs and you don't have to come in and do the whole SOP setup. And I come to you and say, I want to automate this. Is it based on the complexity of the task or how... Walk me through the process if I'm a new client, maybe on a couple levels or something.
- Speaker #0
Yeah. So it kind of depends what help... you need, we like assess every business that wants to work with us beforehand. We tell you where we think you're at, but let's say you do have all the SOPs and you're like, we just want to turn this into something that AI does. Then really we can provide like implementation as a service. So that's where our team will build the stuff. And then usually we give you guys some trainings. So you kind of learn more of that AI operator piece. Um, that's where we usually will like embed someone in your team is actually our most common model right now. We actually say, Hey, part time, we're gonna give you somebody they're going to come in and they're going to be sitting next to you figuring this stuff out and driving those projects forward. Um, that's been working really well. And, the like actors there just really vary based on like how big the company is and how complex the stuff that we're going after is.
- Speaker #1
Are we looking at like 5,000? A month, $100,000 a month? What's the range of services?
- Speaker #0
Yeah, we're definitely priced more in the small to medium business range. So packages are $5,000 to a good chunk are in the $5,000 to $10,000. And then oftentimes what happens is things are going really well. And so we're like, cool, we can go faster if we double up on some of that stuff. And that's where we can be doing multiple projects at once. all those things.
- Speaker #2
So that's when you say, "Hey Kev, how long is a piece of string?" That should be your answer.
- Speaker #1
I don't know. This one sounds right. Yeah. So how are clients finding out about you? Are you having to go out there and market? Is it you speaking on stages like events, like Tom's event and some others? Is it... I don't know if you're speaking at Jordan's event or not that's happening here, but I know I saw Tom's. Is it is that where the clients are coming from? Are you going to do social media marketing or is it word of mouth? Or where are you getting how you getting clients?
- Speaker #0
Yeah, we've had a wait list since we started. It's definitely a nice a nice place to be. But yeah, we have, you know, referrals from our current clients like will pop those referrals up to the. the top of the list because that's like really important to us. Um, and then a lot of it is if we're not, if we don't have the bandwidth to work with a client today, we really encourage them to get involved in our other business, the I exchange that has all of these trainings and courses. And it's like a lot of the same material that we train our internal team on. So at least you can start, you know? Um, and that way then whenever we start working together in the agency you can go faster. So.
- Speaker #1
Hey, Kevin King and Norm Farrar here. If you've been enjoying this episode of Marketing Misfits, thanks for listening this far. Continue listening. We've got some more valuable stuff coming up. Be sure to hit that subscribe button if you're listening to this on your favorite podcast player or if you're watching this on YouTube or Spotify, make sure you subscribe to our channel because you don't want to miss a single episode of the Marketing Misfits. Have you subscribed yet, Norm?
- Speaker #2
Well, this is an old guy alert. Should I subscribe to my own podcast?
- Speaker #1
Yeah, but what if you forget to show up one time and it's just me on here? You're not going to know what I say.
- Speaker #0
I'll buy you a beard and you can sit in my chair too. And we'll just, you can go back and forth with one another. Yikes. But that being said, don't forget to subscribe, share it. Oh, and if you really like this content, somewhere up there, there's a banner. Click on it and you'll go to another episode of the Marketing Misfits.
- Speaker #1
Make sure you don't miss a single episode because you don't want to be like Norm. So the AI exchange is a content platform or it's a courses or what is, what is the exchange?
- Speaker #2
It's a membership. And so if you either, if you're, you know, an AI operator or you are an owner who wants to learn about AI operations or really you're just trying to learn more about how to start doing this stuff. That's why we created a exchange. So we have kind of like many courses and videos, and then we also have some more advanced stuff in there.
- Speaker #1
So it's static content or that's like you going in there every month and short.
- Speaker #2
All the time. One of my favorite things is all the videos are done by Rachel AI. So it's not actually me delivering all the content. It's our AI avatar. And then we have an entire set of playbooks and the backend that take all of our latest insights and convert that into the end product that they get. So the video, you know, planning out the content, doing extra research if we need to scripting and then running the automation to do the avatar. And then, um, yeah, it's pretty cool. So our content stays really up to date. Yeah.
- Speaker #1
That's awesome. That's cool. And that's, how much does that cost? That one actually on the spot that when,
- Speaker #2
the price is, going up before the end of the year. So, um, Yeah, right now it's just like the AI models. See, Norm has taught me how to answer this one better. No,
- Speaker #0
we try to keep it affordable. It depends on how big your pocket is.
- Speaker #1
That's how much it costs. We do it as AI enforcement on you first, like Delta Airlines. You're going to pay more for this seat.
- Speaker #2
Yeah. We want all this stuff to be accessible to people because, again, we can't serve everybody. And so we want to... make AI operations as easy for businesses to start getting started on as possible.
- Speaker #1
So is that AIexchange.ai or where's that at?
- Speaker #0
We have theAIXchange.com.
- Speaker #1
Okay.
- Speaker #0
There you go, we gotta get that .com.
- Speaker #1
Now Norm before you go she has a story about domains.
- Speaker #0
Oh yeah
- Speaker #1
You're the domain guy.
- Speaker #2
I do. It's so funny, I say the .coms are super valuable Right. And the joke is it's so hard to get a good.com these days. Um, but as I mentioned in my, um, kind of like how I got here, November, 2022, I was like, this GPT thing is like pretty cool. I feel like this might be something. And so I bought a bunch of gpt.com domains. So I had like data, gpt.com health, gpt.com assistant, gpt.com. Like I had a a bunch of these. And I was just like, I'm going to probably build a company in the space. I'll just buy these. Then chat GPT launched. And like three to four months later, um, my email inbox is just filled with people asking to buy these domains. And so then I just was like, what's, and I bought these for like $14 at the time each because they were like, who wants to buy a gpt.com domain? There was no markup on it. Um, I ended up selling two of them, for 17 grand. Um, within four months, which was insane.
- Speaker #0
Wow.
- Speaker #2
Because I decided what I was going to do and I wasn't going to use them. So I didn't start with the idea of like, let me buy a bunch of domains, let me sell them. But then I was like, man, the ROI on this, maybe I'm in the wrong profession. So I thought you'd enjoy that story.
- Speaker #1
That's cool. That's really cool. Norm, have you sold any years for 17 grand?
- Speaker #0
No, I've never sold any.
- Speaker #1
You've never sold any?
- Speaker #0
Really? No, I have sold some but no. I was just...
- Speaker #1
He's paying five figures per year in renewal fees too to keep these things.
- Speaker #0
Yeah, it's meant to high five. Yeah.
- Speaker #2
I have a lot of domains that I plan to use. Like I have, I don't know if you're allowed, Melody Curse on this podcast.
- Speaker #0
Go ahead. Oh, I have to beat Kevin. It's a good idea.
- Speaker #2
It's an okay one. So I have badbitchbot.com because my personal mantra is be a bad bitch.
- Speaker #1
Yeah, that's cool. Awesome. Well, this has been great, Rachel. I appreciate you coming on and sharing. How do people reach out to you if they want to reach out?
- Speaker #2
So I think LinkedIn is probably the easiest place to find me. If you just search Rachel Woods AI, I'll come up. I'm pretty active over there. And then I'm also on TikTok if anybody is active on TikTok.
- Speaker #0
Is it really you?
- Speaker #2
It is. Oh,
- Speaker #0
okay. Okay.
- Speaker #2
It actually is me on the, on tech talk at the moment. Yeah. So yeah, but I'd love to talk to anybody who's, who's excited about this stuff. And again, we have an awesome community. So if you're wanting to get more involved around fellow AI ops nerds, then we can definitely invite you into the group.
- Speaker #0
Fantastic. Now we do have one question and we ask our guests or our misfit at the end of every podcast. Do they know a misfit?
- Speaker #2
Great question. And you did seed me before we started, so I did have some time to think about it. I would say if you guys haven't talked with or know Mike Stelzner, I'm sure you might. Social media examiner is the thing he's been doing for a while. And then he has the coolest new endeavor in the AI space around making communication in a remote work environment. Incredible. And I would say, I don't know what your definition of a misfit is formally, but I would lovingly put him in that.
- Speaker #0
Fantastic. All right. Well, that's it. You made it.
- Speaker #1
Appreciate it, Rachel. This was great. Thanks for coming on.
- Speaker #2
Yeah, this was so fun.
- Speaker #0
All right, Rachel. We will see you later. And don't go away. We'll just put you, we're going to remove you. I think if I can hit that button.
- Speaker #1
It's the green one, Norm.
- Speaker #0
No no no it's not Kevin It's the blue one.
- Speaker #1
Oh it's the blue? You changed it you changed it.
- Speaker #0
Yes of course.
- Speaker #1
I figured you might have made your favorite color pink. Uh yes yes yes. Like to match my sh- my reddish pinkish shirt. You know I would never I never would never wear pink. If you asked me 10 years ago I'd never I would never wear pink. I like that's a female feminine color. And then someone gave me a pink shirt and I wore it because everything else was dirty. And I got more comments from the ladies saying, "Hey you look good in pink." Now I have like three or four pink shirts. You see how that works Norm? See? And you're an old married guy, you don't gotta worry about this stuff anymore but you know... No,
- Speaker #0
don't even think about it Kev,
- Speaker #1
right Tom That's another one... You know your whippersnappers still have to uh, you know, worry about those things. But no, that's a... That was great. I mean, that's this is what Rachel just talked about is the future. It's something that a lot of people probably aren't paying attention to or they don't quite understand. But I think she broke it down really well. And it's something that we're going to be doing at Dragonfish. And, you know, once we get launched and going, it's going to be it's on our roadmap of to do that not only for ourselves, but to help other people do that and maybe even be working with her along those ways. So cool stuff.
- Speaker #0
Yeah, I can't wait to dive into it even more. It just keeps changing every day.
- Speaker #1
That's the problem is it's changing so fast. But something that also changes so fast is the episodes. Every single week we change out the episode to a new episode of Marketing Misfits. Every Tuesday brand new episode just like this one comes. If you like this episode with Rachel, share it with somebody you think that might be interested. Forward it to them or make sure you hit that like button or that subscribe button You know, what that does is we don't make any money off of that when you hit the subscribe button. But it helps the algorithm show this to more people so that we can help expand the marketing misfits brand. So if you don't mind just doing us that favor, just that's all we ask. Just pay us back from all the content we deliver just by hitting that subscribe button or the like button. That'd be great. And we're on a few other channels than whatever your list they're watching this on now. Maybe it's YouTube or Spotify or the talk tickers or whatever it is. We're a few other places.
- Speaker #0
Yeah, we're... and I don't know if it's us or if it's our avatars, but we are on TikTok. And we also have two channels on YouTube. One is pretty much exclusively for long form content. But the other, and I know we're going to be able to pick a ton of short clips from this episode, is over at Marketing Misfits Clips. And that's all of our content, little nuggets, three minutes and under. So you can check those out or just go to the website, marketingmisfits.co. That's right.
- Speaker #1
And we'll be back again next Tuesday with another episode. Until then, happy marketing. See you later. Ciao.