The șÚÁÏĂĆ
Of course, you will get to hear about the namesake rescue pup — Scout. But beyond the cute puppy stories, you will learn about:
- Creating a product from scratch
- WordPress themes and șÚÁÏĂĆ
- Instagram marketing ideas
User-generated content- Contests and gamification
- Future plans — videos and patterns
- Gratisfaction App
- Bonus from Jill: use the JOINSCOUTERWEARCLUB coupon code to get a 30% discount on anything in her .
Transcript
Jesse: Happy Friday!
Richard: It is that time, one more time, podcast day.
Jesse: I love it. Podcast day, and we get a merchant online today. We havenât had a merchant a little bit. I think weâre jonesing. Talk to a merchant and get their view of the world and offer our two cents when requested.
Richard: Itâs our favorite thing to do. We hear each other talk enough. Plenty. (laughing)
Jesse: Yeah. Iâm tired of you; I heard your voice plenty.
Richard: Even when weâre just doing our own show, and we donât have a merchant, weâre always trying to help the merchants. But we get extra excited because thereâs just so many different ways to make it be a successful business. And, you know, șÚÁÏĂĆ makes that pretty easy. We talked a couple of weeks ago about what you should sell. Part of what we love about talking to the merchants is just about the time you think youâve seen all the things you can sell; you find another one. And we found another one.
Jesse: Yeah. By the way, on the Internet, thereâs a couple of things that always win. Cats, dogs. So I think weâre playing favorites here. Our guest today makes custom fit dog coats and accessories. Letâs hear from the owner, Jill Bartlett, ScouterWear.com. How are you?
Jill: Iâm doing great. Thanks. How are you guys doing?
Jesse: Awesome. Great to have you on the show, Joe.
Jill: Thanks.
Jesse: Jill, weâd love to hear all about how you got going with ScouterWear and coming here, your full story. But with the name ScouterWear being dog coats and accessories? I have to imagine thereâs a scout somewhere.
Jill: There is. Yeah. Scout is a lovely little
Richard: So were you already as a seamstress or was this something that because of the dog you do start
Jill: Iâm not a professional seamstress. When I was a little kid, I used to make clothing for my dolls and for my teddy bears. And so I started sewing when I was really young. I took sewing in high school, and Iâve just always sewed. But Iâm not a professional sewer. I just started selling these things, and Iâm a perfectionist, and thatâs why I think the quality of the coats stands up, because I canât stand things that arenât
Richard: Yeah, I would hate to see that the standard you would put on me if I tried to make one of these because theyâd look like a professional seamstress. This does not look like anything I would put out. This is a very, very good looking product.
Jesse: Yeah. Jill, Iâd say youâre a professional now. I mean, youâre essentially sewing, and youâre getting paid. So thatâs professional, I would say. And from looking at the quality on the website, I can tell these are very
Richard: You had your dog. You started to solve a need. You have cold winters, and the dog needed some clothes. You took your skillset. People started asking you. You put a label in. You said: I think Iâm going to start a business. And so, what was it? Was it at a certain number, you know, the 12th person and the hundredth person, what number made you all of a sudden realize: I think I can actually turn this into a business.
Jill: Good question, I think. Well, what happened, as soon as I decided to kind of hang my shingle out there, I went to a market, and I was doing the market actually because I was doing jewelry as well. I thought Iâll just put a few dog coats on the side. And it was a market in my local neighborhood here. And I got ten orders right then and there. So I thought, I need to make this into a business. That was the starting point. And I come from a background of doing websites and doing
Richard: So weâre when you first went to this market, did you already have these coats made or did you just have a few on Scout? And they saw that, and you said: I will make them for you to order. Or were they just picking: I want that one.?
Jill: I just had a couple of coats, examples of what I make and then
Richard: Oe of the things I want to point out real quick to listeners right now. If you can hear one common theme that Jill has, regardless of whether it was the sewing or the making websites, is sheâs taken action. She has an idea, and she seems to take action right after that idea. And itâs really cool because itâs not that often that you run into a perfectionist that also is taking actions in so many different areas without that being perfected yet. So you really seem like you have a good mix of understanding and noticing when people are noticing. I.e., people talking to you say: Hey, whereâd you get that? Taking action on making the actual gear, taking action on getting your website together because youâre saying: Hey, I want to do this professionally, I want to look professional, so I got to get a website going. And you also foreshadowed: Hey, I can see, or I can get this in front of more people if I also take this online. I really want people to start thinking about that. It wasnât like you were sitting there watching Shark Tank and said: Iâm going to start making these. You just started solving problems in the world, and it started with your dog, and now youâve got a business. Itâs fantastic.
Jill: I am a perfectionist, but I tend to just jump in two feet. It doesnât always work well for me. But this is done well. So far, so well.
Richard: The good news is thereâs as you probably already noticed, thereâs always something you can do.
Jill: Yeah. Oh, exactly.
Jesse: To amplify Richâs point there. A couple of things is you had the product and a lot of times people will think about a product for months, years, but you made it, and you went to the market and turns out it sold. So thereâs your proof of concept like, Yeah, I made a couple of them. You didnât spend tens of thousands of dollars. Đou spent time and effort. I know there are costs involved, but you made it. People were buying it. And then you immediately said: Iâm going to get a website. You know, it wasnât like youâd sold five hundred pieces. You sold 10. Maybe a few more. And it was ready to build websites. Awesome. I hope people are listening, thinking, yeah, just take action. Get started on this. I want to dive a little bit more on this. Go ahead.
Jill: I was just saying, and itâs easy to do. There are just so many simple processes. Yeah. șÚÁÏĂĆ and everything. Itâs just easy to do. Thatâs my suggestion. Definitely. Just jump in and do it.
Jesse: Yeah. I love it. Get out there and do it. I always try to close with make it happen. You just went and made it happen. And so I want to dive a little bit more on to the website because itâs the șÚÁÏĂĆ
Jill: Yes, it is. It started off doing the site with the șÚÁÏĂĆ software and the plugin, and I use WordPress as the backbone of it. Like the actual place that I built the site.
Jesse: Got it. Yeah. I saw itâs WordPress; I was remarking to Rich earlier that itâs like itâs a very nice clean site. So for people that are if youâre driving and you canât pull up ScoutWear.com, itâs mostly like a white background which looks very nice and clean. And then if you have a white background, if you have a white background on the photos, it also blends together very nicely. You have a lot of sections in there. It looks like there was a theme as well. You had to plug in a theme and then plug in șÚÁÏĂĆ. Is that what you did?
Jill: Yeah, it actually is a software called Thrive Themes, which they provide a bunch of different things and you can go in and alter them, and itâs an awesome program for just drag and drop. You donât have to be technically savvy. So it works really well to create the theme. Itâs a great software to start from fresh.
Jesse: Awesome. So, yeah, for people listening, if youâre thinking, how do I make my site a little bit better? I think this is a very good example of a good looking site that probably didnât take that long either. Jill, you mentioned you did it yourself. You mentioned you build websites before. You know, how many websites had you built prior to this?
Jill: Probably 70 or so, 60, 70. Hard to say. I come from a corporate background. I had an
Jesse: Got it. Well, it shows then. Definitely shows. And I think that can be helpful for other people; you can see where you can take something. And since youâre from the
Jill: Yeah. Everythingâs out there.
Jesse: Yep. Go watch a little YouTube video on it, and youâll probably figure out how to do it in a few minutes. Letâs talk about it. You got the site set up. Looks great. Now how did you go about finding customers? What did you know? How did you market this product?
Jill: Primarily, what Iâm doing is on Instagram and Facebook. That is definitely where I am not as strong and need to put much more of my energies into social media. As I say, Iâve got a good local following. And because I get Iâve got it in stores, retail stores, I get a lot of customer orders out of that markets I do as well. And just the local neighborhood and word of mouth thatâs gone really well in Vancouver. But Iâm trying to really build the company outside of my local area. And thatâs something I really need to need to brush upon.
Richard: Well, even though you are fantastic at doing the seamstress and you know how to build Web sites, now that youâre taking on this new adventure of the world of social media and getting out there and actually marketing. You donât have to share. Donât share. But are you going to try to take on all this yourself or you plan out do you plan on outsourcing some of the seamstress work? Because there are only 24 hours in a day and Iâm already blown away at what youâre doing and the more you sell, the more youâre gonna have to sell.
Jill: Yeah, well, Iâve got a couple of plans for that. I do have some local seamstresses that Iâm starting to train and show how to do things, do my products. And what I started doing before that was creating PDFs patterns. And then, I started developing some actual tutorial videos. And what I decided out of that, playing on my
Richard: So thatâs fantastic. By the way, I love hearing that for two reasons. One, again, weâre here in this common theme of youâre bringing in your skill sets from your past and applying them to your current endeavor. Thatâs one. But in addition to that, not more important, but in addition to that, I love this idea of bringing in the
Jill: Yeah, yeah, exactly. I got of my thinking too, because there are certain people for sure that that have the crafty mind. And then they sit down to as you say, they start looking to the video and go: Oh my gosh, this too much. But they will also from that, I think, get a whole appreciation of what goes into making that coat. There are umpteen layers and piping and reflective and Velcro, and like thereâs just so many things that you go into it. There are only certain personalities that are gonna be keen on doing that. People like me, that just love doing those kinds of things that are really crafty and like to do things for themselves. But yeah, thereâs gonna be a whole other world thatâs going to say: No, quite happy to pay for someone to do that.
Jesse: But yeah, I could see that as well. I personally might look at some
Jill: So, yeah, exactly. Thatâs what Iâm thinking.
Richard: Are you using any content from your customers? Basically,
Jill: Yeah, I do ask for pictures from people. People arenât always really great at giving any. You have to ask them a few times. Also, theyâre not always the best pictures, but yeah, I do try to get that as much as I can. I could improve on that for sure. They are getting more people to send me their pictures of their animals and their dogs and their coats and having fun.
Richard: Yeah. Itâs definitely one of the underutilized but most effective forms of marketing. Itâs still a form of word of mouth because someoneâs talking about it, but itâs almost like itâs morphed together with a testimonial. And you donât have to go find a model or a dog in this case model. You have different dogs, different breeds, and different styles, different personalities of dogs. And now maybe they have that dog, that little Yorkie thatâs in that picture. And it just really is great. But again, to your point. Itâs not always easy because sometimes itâs just the way we ask. Sometimes itâs a little comment maybe on social. Wow, we love it when people are sending in pictures, and weâre so thankful. We were thankful for your sharing because it makes us aware that weâre actually solving a problem. Please, send it, weâre so thankful. Weâd like to give you this 5 percent, 6 percent, 7 percent, whatever, some sort of coupon. And thank you. And, you know, I thank you out to them. Sometimes that may be messaging them into doing a little bit more than, Hey, can you give me a picture of your dog? So keep playing with that.
Jill: Would you suggest that your Instagram like through social media and ask people directly messaging you or directly contacting the clients themselves?
Richard: Well, no matter what. OK. So to be a higher level thought process here and then weâll bring it back to
Jill: Yeah. Thatâs great. I love that. Good.
Jesse: Yeah, I think thatâs really good. I think I would add that a little bit more in that. Yes, an initial
Richard: Lulu.
Jesse: Lulu. Hereâs Lulu playing with this new coat. And then thatâs on Instagram. And then hereâs a picture of another dog on this platform to give people examples of what you want them to send in because you probably want, short little snippets of video of the dog jumping around, playing and barking and having a good time in this new, piece of clothing that they have. I think thatâs great. And I think I would also go one step further. I would automate that process. I would probably do this as like a 14 or 21 day follow up. So maybe even a little bit longer. This might be more in the 30 days follow up where 30 days after shipping or 30 days after purchase, whateverâs easier to set up, you send this email with; I think a coupon code for another article is like, yeah, dogs donât need just one coat. Like you have to have. I need a leather jacket for a night on the town. I mean you can suggest other things that they might want to buy because people love their pets. They love to spend money on their pets and but seven days might be too soon. Like if I just spent a decent amount of money on some pet clothing, Iâm going to need to let that be paid off on the credit card first before I think about buying another one. But maybe in 30 days, Iâm feeling good about that, and I might be ready to make another purchase. And if I see other examples of other dogs wearing this, itâs great. Itâs dogs. Itâs pets. People love that stuff. So anyway, yes, social media is fine, but I think like email, you can control that so much more, that might be a good step for you.
Jill: Right. Thatâs great. Good.
Jesse: And we should ask, are you collecting your
Jill: I do have them. Yes, I do. And I am collecting
Jesse: Good. Thatâs an easy tip for us. Then thatâs a checkmark right there. We got gathering
Richard: Yeah. And I noticed that 5 percent of sales go back to the B.C. SPCA. I definitely would amplify that, too. I would take advantage of that. Almost potentially create a message where youâre you helping your dog is helping other dogs. I think thatâs interesting. You could even play with that a little bit as in like your dogs are helping out. So thereâs even a potential of tying that into how you share. The ideas are just coming to me. Think it out a little bit and get in contact with them more. But almost more like the social media side of it. If Luluâs post gets to a certain number, weâre gonna donate five jackets to shelter or whatever. You know, some something where youâre just really amplifying the giving back. Having value and giving back to the world right now is definitely especially for some of the younger generation. Actually, itâs really big. The percentage is back to help out.
Jesse: Yeah, youâre giving me some other ideas, Rich.
Richard: Thatâs the way this podcast runs.
Jesse: Iâm thinking you can almost gamify this a little bit more where each one of these contacts means extra points. Whatâs the app Iâm trying to look it up here.
Richard: Kingsumo?
Jesse: No, the one thatâs already integrated here. So we have an app that is already been on the podcast, so Iâm trying to think of what the pod it is, what it is right now. I will find it.
Richard: Iâll get it.
Jesse: The basic idea is this: Hey, if you like us on Instagram, you get five points. And follow us on Facebook, you get five points. If you send in a video of your dog, you get 25 points and then kind of go down the list of all these various online things that you can do, and they all result in points. And maybe then once a month or once a quarter, you can have a winner. And that winner gets a free jacket or maybe a little lower cost. Letâs not break the bank here, but maybe something a little easier to handle. I think that might be a way for you to stay in front of your customers with fresh content that they probably enjoy. Weâre helping pets here. You could also maybe at a certain point, at the end of the year or something. Itâs a little tough to do cause youâre going to feel a little rough with it. But like, you give the check to the shelter. Hey, hereâs the check. Itâs $1,000. Thanks to our customers for their help. And this is, this is what this thousand dollars will do. Like itâs a legitimate email to send, and thatâs one of the reasons youâre doing this.
Jill: Awesome. I like these ideas.
Jesse: I wish I had them better. You know, social good that I could send these emails out. Iâm happy for you.
Richard: Was it the Gratisfaction?
Richard: Gratisfaction, I think yes. Jill, check out the app Gratisfaction in the app market and see if that fits your needs. I think thatâs the one weâre talking about here.
Jill: Thatâs a plug for șÚÁÏĂĆ?
Jesse: Itâs a plugin for șÚÁÏĂĆ, and I think it allows you to plug in all these different social platforms that you can get various points for doing all these activities that we mentioned.
Richard: Oh yeah. And thereâs way more than we even mentioned. You can do it for Pinterest. There are sweepstakes, and thereâs a contest, there are loyalty points.
Jesse: I can see a lot of contests. And Jill, you mentioned, youâre asking for the pictures. Youâre getting some, not that many. Letâs see. Youâre getting like 5% of the people are sending a photo or something. If you make it into a contest or sweepstakes with some freebies, you might get like
Jill: Thereâs something about gamifying it.
Jesse: Yeah.
Jill: People just love it.
Jesse: Absolutely. Itâs gamifying, and itâs dogs, and usually, when people go to the park and let their dog run around, they usually pick up their phones to read their email. So itâs a good time to look at social. All they have to do is use their thumb and take that video and enter the sweepstakes. Yeah. Awesome. I like that one. You mentioned on Facebook and Instagram that you have, did you sync the product catalog so you can do the Shoppable posts inside of Facebook and Instagram?
Jill: I did, yeah. Yeah. Which was so easy. I loved it. I say Iâm technical, but Iâm really not that technical. I really come from the design side of things. So when things are like a
Richard: Yeah. And actually, thatâs a great point because you are both inspirational for people and say aspirational too because they say, this is how good yours can look, but youâre also pointing out. And thank you, we always appreciate that you donât have to be a designer to do this. A lot of these functions in șÚÁÏĂĆ are literally one, two, three clicks in this particular case. I think the longest part of the process is just waiting for the approval from Instagram saying or Facebook saying, yeah, you can sell now. So thatâs, thatâs nice and thanks for pointing that out. That is really easy for people to do. Create those Shoppable posts just to get your product feed in there, a few clicks, and just wait a day or two. And youâre selling online with Shoppable posts.
Jill: Yeah. And itâs everywhere it seems. I canât remember, I think I actually had to do it manually, do you have a plugin for Google? I think I manually put it up on Google.
Jesse: Yeah. With Google, you have to do a little more. To get a product feed inside of șÚÁÏĂĆ and then you upload it there, and that can be scheduled. Thereâs a couple of steps to get it done the first time, but once you get that done, thatâs pretty automatic. So and by the way, itâs a little harder on the YouTube site, but itâs very doable. I know you can get through this, but if you do YouTube videos, itâs called TrueView for shopping. I believe that where you can sync your product catalog into that video. So if youâre talking about a very specific coat that youâre making, that you can sync that product into your YouTube video. Iâm missing a word or two there. There are a few more steps, but it is very doable. The Facebook oneâs a little bit easier, Iâll admit. But, but anyway, itâs also available.
Jill: Is that an șÚÁÏĂĆ plugin?
Jesse: Itâs not a plugin, but yeah, go ahead.
Jill: Is it part of YouTube itself?
Jesse: Yeah, actually, you definitely need șÚÁÏĂĆ for the product feed. So in șÚÁÏĂĆ, the same area youâll find where you can create a product feed for Google, and then that in Google, youâll go to Google Merchant Center, and thatâs where they want all the product feeds to go. And then, that will feed both Google ads if you want to do Google Shopping ads. And itâll also feed the TrueView for shopping on YouTube, which is not a very widely used feature, by the way. So itâs, thatâs why itâs a little harder. Itâs a little more; weâll call that a little more 301 level. But I think you can handle it. So thatâs why I mentioned it. If youâre listening and youâre like, I donât know, that sounds like too much. Okay. Maybe save that for later. But Jill, I have faith in you. All right, perfect. Couple other ideas. Richard mentioned Pinterest. If youâre already taking pictures, especially on the
Jill: Probably Ellen. Yeah. It would be awesome.
Richard: Thatâs a perfect example that itâs like we talked this out on what weâre going to talk about next. But giving this to a celebrity and like, Oh my gosh, your dog is so cute. Almost going out of your way in those scenarios to not ask for something back actually seems to work better. Iâm sure there are always exceptions to the rule, and someone asked to, but if you just were giving for giving sake, especially the fact that youâre actually giving the percentage of this money to help other dogs too. Iâm just hey Ellen, hereâs a coat. I tried hardest to guess the exact dimensions of your dog cause I can only see it in these, Iâve looked at a few pictures youâve posted online. If this doesnât fit, let me know the exact size, and Iâll get you another one. Like that literally would be priceless, you know better than I do. Could you imagine Ellen going on her show and saying, look at this cute little coat that this lady sent me and you donât even have to ask. Of course, she understands this, giving first and making people feel good and how that works. Her whole show is based on that. I would definitely try something like that with some form of celebrity that you literally just give it to them and then you just in the narrative of, Hey, these are all custom made, so if it doesnât fit, and how much time does that take you and what is it maybe taking away $200 total in sales. If you give them to, and youâll potentially get something back, thatâs priceless. But no matter what, thereâs no way, in my opinion, and I think you could actually hold me to this. Iâll pay the difference. You wonât be able to give this to a celebrity and not somewhere down the road quadruple or potentially just like not even be able to measure how much return you would get.
Jill: Right. Yeah.
Jesse: High risk, high reward on that one. I think if youâre low risk, whatâs the high risk of a couple of products, right? Yeah. Thatâs the risk. I mean, thatâs low risk. High reward. Agree to disagree. Rich, Iâll give you that one. (laughing)
Richard: Iâll pay the difference. I guess it is low risk, a couple of hundred dollars potential sales.
Jesse: Jill, weâre going to make some bets on your business over here, so if you donât mind, Iâll let you guys know how it goes. If youâre on Ellen, maybe you get to invite one of us. Invite Rich. (laughing)
Jill: Iâll play it back to you guys and say this is where it all came from.
Jesse: Awesome. Yeah, thatâd be great. So yeah, I hope we are able to give you a couple of ideas that you could try in your business next. I can tell youâre already on the right path here. Like youâve already done the right things to get going. But is there anything we should have asked about what we didnât?
Jill: I donât think so. I think you guys touched on most of this stuff.
Jesse: All right. And where can people go to find out more about you in the store?
Jill: ScouterWear.com, which is a play on my dogâs name Scout and also the word out as outerwear. So ScouterWear.com. Also, as I said, by the end of February, weâre going to have ScouterWearClub.com, which is where people can get discounts. Planning on doing that kind of gamifying thing, which Iâd love to use your plugin cause thatâll just make it that much easier. But thinking of adding ScouterWear pup points is what I was going to call them and have people being able to build up, the more they buy them where they get kind of thing, but also discounts on products, sending out product packaging. Iâm also going to package up all the supplies needed in order to make a coat. All of that will be coming. ScouterWear.com is the main site. And Iâd love to offer a coupon for any of the listeners that are interested in signing up.
Jesse: Do you have the code ready that we can make sure it makes it?
Jill: I do. Itâs a JOINSCOUTERWEARCLUB, all one word. So if they put that in when they sign up, I havenât got the sign up yet on the ScouterWear page, but I will have that avenue once Iâm ready to go. And they can find with sign up with the Join ScouterWear Club.
Richard: Well, youâll have a week or two before this airs.
Jill: Perfect.
Jesse: Little podcast secret. This wonât be live for about another week or so. You have time. But for people listening to you can, we can check it out and see if thatâs ready. So ScouterWearClub.com.
Jill: Yeah, weâll have it done. Iâll have it done by the end of the day anyways.
Jesse: And if you watch Ellen, youâre eventually going to see Jill there. So just look for Jill on Ellen, and then if you really put in Gratisfaction, maybe we can do around two in like six months of hereâs what Gratisfaction did for your business. So I donât know, just a little teaser of round two. So Rich, any last thoughts here before we sign off?
Richard: No, this is great. Again, always happy to get merchants on right now. To come up for this podcast. Jill, actually, I missed my daughterâs little publishing party. Luckily my wife filmed it, but it was a book that she wrote all about dogs, and she loves her dog, so Iâll be sure to get her to that coupon code, and sheâll definitely make a video for you; hopefully, she can.
Jesse: Awesome.
Jill: Sounds good.
Jesse: Well, perfect. Well, Jill, I really appreciate you being on the show. I hope for all the listeners out there, youâre able to gather some knowledge here, and you know, doggy clothes, doggy coats, ScouterWear.com.