Mastering Marketing ROI and AI: Insights from Noble Studios' 21-Year Journey
The UnNoticed Entrepreneur July 16, 202400:31:2621.63 MB

Mastering Marketing ROI and AI: Insights from Noble Studios' 21-Year Journey

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Are you struggling to prove your marketing ROI or keep up with AI's impact on creativity? Jarrod Lopiccolo, co-founder and CEO of Noble Studios, shares invaluable insights on these challenges. With over 21 years of experience, Jarrod explains how to measure true ROI by focusing on conversions and bottom-line results, not just vanity metrics. He also reveals how his agency embraces AI as a tool for efficiency and enhanced creativity, without compromising originality. Jarrod emphasises the importance of consistent brand experiences across all touchpoints and shares a personal story about balancing business and family life as an entrepreneur. Learn why mistakes are crucial learning opportunities and how to transition from a self-employed practitioner to a true business owner. This episode is packed with practical advice for marketers and entrepreneurs looking to thrive in today's digital landscape.

Recommended book: "The Alchemist" by Paulo Coelho

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[00:00:00] Now, if you are thinking about scrapping your agency and just using AI and just using some of the cool tools that are available that can replace the people and the expenditure of those creatives, you might want to listen to this show because I've got the founder, co-founder

[00:00:19] and CEO of a company called Noble Studios who's joined me from Reno, Nevada and he's run his own company for 21 years. So they've managed to survive as an entrepreneur but also to help their clients thrive with creative advertising. My client today is Jared Lepiccolo.

[00:00:37] Jared, welcome to the show. Jim, thank you so much. You've been looking forward to talking with you today. So yeah, let's dive into it. Yeah, well, you and I had a few sort of reschedules and you're a very busy man running Noble Studios.

[00:00:50] You've got offices in America, offices in the UK now. You're thinking about expanding to the Far East as well sometime. But Jared, people are thinking about ROI on marketing. It's getting very confusing with AI.

[00:01:08] So I'd love for us to talk about AI and the impact on creativity and whether it really makes any entrepreneur creative. But before we do that, tell us a little bit about Noble Studios and why you've

[00:01:21] got over 70% of your clients still with you five years after you started the relationship, which is an amazing achievement, especially in agency land. Oh, thank you. Well, I think at the end of the day it starts out with wanting to build deep meaningful connections with other people.

[00:01:39] And as an entrepreneur, right, you usually have this gift or you have this trade that you want to sell into this demand that you see and that's like step one. But then step two is about how you show up and how you actually treat clients.

[00:01:54] And when you build these deeper, meaningful, connective relationships, you can work through those patches of stormy weather. And I always say those fair weather entrepreneurs, they just don't last because it's impossible to be, especially on a 21-year journey, to not expect these ups and downs and to

[00:02:13] make mistakes and to fall and skin your knees a little bit. And so I think it's really about showing up. So when our clients, when you ask them why is it that they stay with Noble Studios, oftentimes it starts with, well, we can just be honest with them.

[00:02:26] We can connect with them. They own our problems as if they're their problems. And then on top of it, you mentioned the word ROI, we really focus on providing that return on investment.

[00:02:36] And so a lot of times we don't talk about vanity metrics of sessions or hits or likes or comments. We really get down to brass tacks like conversions. We talk about selling more products or if you're in the B2B space downloading more demos and those things.

[00:02:49] So we really own at the very front end, what does a conversion mean to that company? And that's what we talk about when we have our monthly sort of reporting and insights is really about that ROI we deliver.

[00:03:00] So Jared, when you do the ROI return on investment, tell us how do you do that? That is the Holy Grail because with digital now, of course, attribution is very possible, right? Yeah.

[00:03:15] It's the old days of you run an ad, you see who turns up to the store but you don't know the connection between the two. That's over. So can you give us like some tips, some guides?

[00:03:27] What do you do at Noble Studios to ensure this connection between the person who's out there, the customer journey and them taking specific action for the client? Yeah, I think it really starts with reframing what you're providing for your customers.

[00:03:46] And we don't work with restaurants since they're just too small but using that as an analogy, if you work with a pizza restaurant at the end of the night, they have to sell so

[00:03:54] many number of pizzas to get to their margins, to afford their team, to afford their own local marketing and to stay open six days a week or whatnot. And so I think you really need to get to talking about what it is that they're actually selling.

[00:04:08] What does the bottom line mean? And so if it's, we work a lot in the travel and tourism space, they need what they call heads to beds or what we like to say like hearts to beds. But it's the idea that they need hotel bookings.

[00:04:20] And so when we talk to our client, we don't talk about how much traffic we sent to the Marriott in that one location. We actually talked about the Marriott had over 1,500 room booked nights because of the effort that we did.

[00:04:34] And so we can to your point, attribute all that marketing back to those things. If we're working in the B2B space, as I mentioned, it could be that demos lead to, which is an MQL leads to an SQL and that leads to a conversion.

[00:04:48] I can actually a sold piece of business. So we're talking in the form of demos. We need to schedule 400 demos a month. Or so it's just like that. I think a lot of marketing and advertisement agencies, they still stay in

[00:05:00] the metrics world of marketing as opposed to living in the world of your customers and what it is they actually sell and what actually moves the needle. Jared, just help us though. You've had an MQL and SQL for those of us that are not living and breathing everything.

[00:05:16] Just help us with the terminology. Yeah. It's an alphabet soup world that we all eat and drink all day long in the marketing world. So MQL stands for marketing qualified leads. So any sort of marketing effort that you do that draws an actual invitation in for

[00:05:33] a conversation or whatnot, they call that an MQL. Once you have that conversation, if it is qualified, oh, they actually need our services or they want to buy that demo or they want to buy that product or buy that pizza, it moves to a sales qualified lead.

[00:05:49] And then the sales team actually has to carry it over the line and close that piece of business, whether it's in a contract or like I said, it's a sole pizza or whatever it is. But yeah, MQL to SQL then do a closed piece of business.

[00:06:00] Jared, in my experience, clients were always reluctant to share the sales information. And I used to run a PR firm and I would say if you let me see the metrics on the website, I can show you an uplift for example. And they're like, yeah, that's internal.

[00:06:19] We don't share that. All right. What's your advice for entrepreneurs that are holding agencies at arms length like that? Yeah, it's an age old problem. You see that and you know what has started really in the sort of big

[00:06:32] corporate world I would say in the 60s and 70s when you had these very active sales teams and then you had this marketing team and they were always separate in different buildings. They never communicated with each other. And the reality is they need to be hip to hip.

[00:06:46] And so anytime we take on a client, we always talk about bringing the sales and marketing teams together. So we look at these sales activities and what they're doing. We look at the marketing and what they're doing and we line those two up.

[00:06:58] And oftentimes what you'll find is that when you're doing this sort of marketing tactics and you drive a lead, say marketing qualified lead to the sales team, if you don't have that round tripped feedback, if it doesn't come back and say actually they weren't qualified

[00:07:13] and you're not getting information, you're just going to keep driving the same number of marketing qualified leads, aka unqualified opportunities. So you really need to close that gap and it takes a few months, it takes anywhere from like three to six months to really dial that in.

[00:07:27] And then once you get the sales and the marketing team's working in harmony, that's when you start to really mine those channels and mine those opportunities and those campaigns and that's where the lift really starts to happen. So if I can sort of maybe take away from that,

[00:07:43] a key insight for anyone listening to this is to let the agency in. You know, if you have them as a partner, treat them not as a supplier, but as a real member of the team, right? Because I remember being so frustrated by that.

[00:08:00] And I can see as well, Jared, on your website, which is noblestudios.com. Yes. That you've got quite a range of services and you've had the agency for over 21 years. So credit to you for that. You've got everything from brand strategy to marketing analytics now.

[00:08:18] Why are you not focused on just doing one thing? Because it's kind of fashionable to have one service own that and be niche. But are you not following that advice, Jared? You've got a large range of services. This is great.

[00:08:35] So as we extended into the UK with our office, which we did about six years ago, we decided you could either lead by service by geo or by vertical. And we decided let's lead by service in the sense that we only wanted to be

[00:08:48] performance marketing in the UK. One because you Brits are so damn clever and creative that we couldn't compete on that level of branding and wit. But also it is the way to do it these days, right?

[00:09:02] Because so many people are specialized and the industry is so wide and so deep. And everyone you know is somehow connected to marketing. Whereas 21 years ago they weren't, right? It was really easy. You could do everything. You could do brand. You could do PR. You could do web.

[00:09:15] You could do all these things with a very small team member set. And what we found though as we grew when we can be that sort of record agency where we own all the creative when we can own all the digital experiences

[00:09:29] and create websites and landing pages and meeting the users where they're at digitally. And then we can own the performance side. We're the most effective for our clients. I think if we were to start over today as an agency, I would probably go a lot more specialized.

[00:09:43] It's easier to focus your attention, your skill building, where you go for conferences, what conversations you have with clients. But because we started 21 years ago, it's natural that we have all these services. And so now we've built partners around these services as well.

[00:09:56] So when the core team hits capacity limitations or whatnot, we have this really great group of partners that we can bring to the table to extend those services that much further. Right. And I think my experience as well, Jared, running an agency myself for 25 years in Asia,

[00:10:10] you know, Singapore and China and India was this quite large companies really want one vendor. Right? Yeah. And they want to have, as you say, you mentioned an agency, a record, which is what made me think of it.

[00:10:21] You know, I work with like Nortel and Phillips and they said, Jim, we just want you, you manage your suppliers. We want to have one meeting with one person who manages it. And in fact, you become their outsource marketing director, don't you?

[00:10:34] And presumably, Jared, that's what you and your account team are playing as well, that role. And yes, and after being in market for 21 years and having all of this experience, the trust has been built for clients to come to us and say,

[00:10:48] listen, we want you to manage everything and we trust you to bring in. So, you know, influencing influencer marketing is not something we provide as one of our core services, but we've got many, many partnerships and the client wants to go through us

[00:10:59] to carry paper, own the relationship, hold the accountability of those other partners. But I would say, yeah, again, starting out today, I'd probably go into one niche field. It's a lot easier to control and manage and that depth of knowledge you need for each service

[00:11:13] line just goes deeper and deeper and deeper. And so what I think is if you were to start an agency today as a full service agency, it would be quite difficult. You'd be sort of one inch deep with one mile across. We'll be back after a quick break.

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[00:11:52] within 60 days, just click on the link below as unnoticed is a gold sponsor of our summit. So you get free tickets. Enjoy. I'll see you there. Jared, we've got to move a little bit into the conversation around AI.

[00:12:11] I started this at the beginning because if you are, if you're like providing strategic council and portfolio services to the client as you are, I think you're fairly safe because AI is

[00:12:24] not going to do that for anybody. But help us with your view, where you see AI impacting the ability of entrepreneurs to co-create with AI, self-create, to do away with the bespoke service. What's your view on that?

[00:12:45] So we've always been early adopters. I think that's one of the reasons why we did so well in those early days post.com boom was that people came to us and we were experimenting with HTML5

[00:12:56] when only two companies in the world were messing around with it. And so when I got to meet Jeff Hahn, who was the creator of a multi-touch and now every single phone and tablet is all multi-touch.

[00:13:05] And so we've always been really close to this sort of what I want to call bleeding edge, but taking one step backwards and living in the leading edge because what we don't want

[00:13:13] to do is use our clients as sort of guinea pigs, as we say here in the US. But in terms of AI, when we started to see the rumblings of this coming about almost two years ago, we really thought, okay, let's treat this like any other technology revolution,

[00:13:28] any other tool advancement and that let's lean in really hard. Let's understand it. Let's remove any sort of skepticism or biases that we might have around it. And let's start to really mature ourselves in it. So we bought all the different licenses

[00:13:46] for the mid journeys to the dollies to the chat, GBTs and extended that to our team. We created an AI task force, which included about five individuals on our team, multidisciplinary individuals coming from different areas within the company

[00:14:00] that they meet on a monthly basis. We created a point of view around AI. We even involved our legal counsel and we created a matrix of all the different tools and the terms of uses so we could properly communicate to our clients when we're using

[00:14:12] AI. So this was sort of the foundational setup of how we could adopt it. Now what's so great is which everyone sort of experiences that AI has been acting as sort of an optimizer or an efficiency time saver, right? Maybe even like a notch up in terms of

[00:14:27] quality. But what we're finding is that because we're so leaning into it hard that it's actually giving us a lot more time to be creative, to experiment. We're pitching ideas to clients and we're able to generate imagery of what that potential campaign could look like or ideas.

[00:14:43] We do a lot of photo shoots and video production shoots. So we're actually creating instead of just a set list that you would type up, we're using a photographer set list. So we're

[00:14:53] actually pre building all of the different photos of the people we want, the diversity that we need in there, the camera angles, you know, all those things. And then we're exposing that to the client. We're getting sign off on that. And then we're working with a photography

[00:15:05] and videographer crews to say, okay, here's your shot list. Now let's do it with real humans. And so it's allowing us to really own a more of a creative process than just thinking of it as

[00:15:16] an efficiency tool. You did mention in there, Jared, about we're going to do the photo with real humans. Yes. Why does the client still need real humans? Because they've got all the illustrations, they've got the graphics. Why not just go live with the renders? I mean,

[00:15:31] that's what people are now doing with avatars like from HN or Synthesia, for example. Yeah. I think there's at some point, there's a line that gets crossed and humans and people just can see through that it's artificially generated. And so we're really trying to subscribe to the

[00:15:50] artificially assisted as opposed to the artificial generated. And there's something of value that this can't be created that anyone else can't create this. And so there's this level of originality, this level of ownership. At the end of the day, competitors when you're competing from

[00:16:06] one company to another, they want to be able to own something that can't be created on their own without the level of effort and strategy and thinking and foresight and expectations and

[00:16:16] measurables. And so I think using as a tool to build to a final product, but then the actual final product itself is human generated. I think there's a big competitive advantage to that approach.

[00:16:28] That's a great insight. Thanks for that, Jeff. And of course, I guess the other thing, Jared, is that we've got this issue where you don't necessarily own the IP rights if you've created

[00:16:37] artificially. So you could end up with a photo shoot for a client that someone then sues you for. Yes. Yes. And thank you for bringing that up, Jim. That's why we created that matrix with our legal counsel because we wanted to understand the terms and use and rights

[00:16:51] of these images that we are creating or of this content that we are creating. And a lot of times, to your point, you don't own it in its full context. Instead, you own portions or you own a snippet of

[00:17:03] it. And the last thing we want to do is see the same, say for instance, image that we generated that's on a billboard advertising to come to Yosemite. And then all of a sudden we see that

[00:17:14] on a dentist office or something like that. And so we've got to just similar to the iStock photo days, right? Or the Getty Images days. You've got to be careful that

[00:17:23] you want a limited use of that and you don't want to sit there and maybe make that your hero image for your video because your brand is so important it needs to stay original. It needs to connect

[00:17:31] with the audience. And so yeah, so all those reasons are reasons to use the tool but not have the finished product be totally AI generated. Jared, I'm going to try and see a surname correctly, Lepicolo. Yes, you got it. Perfect, Lepicolo. I apologize. I think I

[00:17:49] rather did an English trick on it earlier, which is sort of... Oh, no, it worked. I'll answer to anything by the way. So yeah. Well, I like to try and do service. Jared, I also would

[00:18:00] like you to just take us through sort of a bit of a case study of what does work because many of us don't get a conversation with someone like you about what would be a successful

[00:18:13] marketing campaign. Obviously, you've got so much experience but for those people that want to see this on YouTube, you can see there's a great set of case studies at noblestudios.com and I've got in front of me one about... It's called the... Well, it's the Grand Canyon Helicopter

[00:18:28] Tourist. Yes. Jared, I wonder whether you could just give us some of the top line hallmarks of this campaign and why it works so that we can learn what are the hallmarks of a

[00:18:41] successful campaign. Yeah, yeah, absolutely. Well, I think it starts with the brand and if you think... The way I define a brand or see a brand is it's the first experience you have with the brand,

[00:18:53] the last experience you have with the brand and the worst experience you have with the brand. And so if you start with that as a foundation that it's basically every time you have a touch

[00:19:00] point with the brand, it needs to be consistent and it needs to fulfill on your expectations, that leads you then into campaign work. And so the goal is like, imagine you're

[00:19:11] in Las Vegas and this is where Papillon is. You're in Las Vegas, you've heard about these Grand Canyon tours because they fly I think 38,000 flights into the Grand Canyon every year. They're the largest helicopter tour company in the world. But you've heard about this. So you're in...

[00:19:25] So you're imagining you land in Las Vegas, you're like, I'm interested in seeing... You're seeing them buzzing around like big mosquitoes in the sky. And you're like, I want to do

[00:19:32] this with this tour with the family. And you go to the concierge at the front desk and they tell you that, hey, we have these Papillon tours. You can go to the website here or you happen to be in

[00:19:43] the hotel room and you're searching online and you type in Papillon tours or you type in helicopter Grand Canyon tours, you want to make sure no matter what entry point you're into

[00:19:52] that campaign or into that brand that it has a consistent feel and touch point. And so when we create these campaigns, the calls to actions, the imagery that we're using, the messaging that

[00:20:01] we're using, all of that follows through from when you click on a banner in a social ad or being retargeted and you actually land onto the landing page, all the same imagery, all the

[00:20:12] same CTAs, the same messaging, all of it has that consistent touch point. So that we're fulfilling on the brand's promise of what you're expecting to see. And then it doesn't just stop there, right? Once the campaign is completed and that you've subscribed, you're going

[00:20:27] tomorrow at six o'clock and you have to show up at the airport. That is their, now it's their job to carry the brand promise all the way through to the experience as well. And then post your trip

[00:20:38] to the Grand Canyon. It's about what is that follow up message, share your photos, tell your stories, refer a friend, all of those pieces need to be connected to the brand and that

[00:20:47] promise. And so this is why this campaign, we did a really great job for them. It outperformed the industry standard. We just won an e-tourism award for best paid advertisement campaign for

[00:20:58] these guys just about two months ago. So yeah, really proud of the work that we did here. Yeah, wonderful. And you even got a 46% increase in organic sessions from France. So there's a whole story there I'm sure on localization and if you want to find out more

[00:21:12] go to noble studios there is. But Jared, so what I love your explanation there about the need for marketing to be before, during and after the customer journey that it has to be consistent over time and across multiple touch points, which I think is really where the professional

[00:21:32] services of people like yourself come in, isn't it? Because often the entrepreneur is busy delivering and does the sales and kind of is worried about where the next customer is coming from and it's after burn the after experience that's so powerful for people.

[00:21:47] Yeah, Jim I talked to you earlier. I think I mentioned that my background is in architecture and if you think about Disney, I always love Disney's brand. It really focuses on that user centric design and if think of any Disney experience you've had before, during and after

[00:22:02] they do such a wonderful job of holding that user centric design that brand promise, that brand experience. And so for me I've been able to transfer that physical architectural approach to the digital architecture approach and I think that's one of the reasons why we are

[00:22:16] so successful is that we just think about the user at every moment and every time, every interaction. Jared, I'm going to switch gears slightly here because you're an entrepreneur, 21 years credit to you. We know it's not easy in running an agency myself for 25 years

[00:22:33] through the ups and downs of various markets and so on. Let's just talk about as an entrepreneur, I don't want to embarrass you here but would you say there's some, let's call it learning, something that happened maybe you call it a mistake, a learning opportunity,

[00:22:51] could you just explain what that might have been for my fellow unnoticed entrepreneur to learn from? Something that you've done in those years, maybe from a marketing and branding perspective that didn't quite work out that you'd suggest we don't try at home?

[00:23:06] Well, I'll start with a philosophy very short and then I'll go into a story. So I believe that we learn when we make mistakes. Now it sucks when you make the same mistake over and over and over again because then you're effectively not learning but we don't

[00:23:19] really learn when we win or when we're successful. You assume this is why you won but when you lose or when you make that mistake, you know right away okay and

[00:23:29] that's one of the reasons why we created this tagline for Noble. We call it Let's Be Better Every Day. It's an invitation to always optimize, always looking tomorrow to say what can I do a

[00:23:38] little bit different and when we carry this in with our clients and such. So first I would say that's a subscribed sort of mindset and I encourage all entrepreneurs to really adopt that. The mistakes are okay but you just got to learn from them and build systems and

[00:23:52] processes and things like that. Now I'll take you on a story that I think every entrepreneur does struggle with and it's this concept of moving from a tradesperson to a business person right.

[00:24:03] If you're a pizza maker, you were a great pizza maker but now you want to own 10 restaurants. You can't be making and flipping pizzas anymore and so we're about five years in and this is

[00:24:12] I talked to a lot of entrepreneurs this happens. I can remember it as if it was yesterday. It was December 5th 2008. It was a Friday at five o'clock at night and we have in the U.S.

[00:24:23] We have what's called the tree lighting ceremony in the small town Carson City that I live in in which where Santa Claus comes down and as he's coming down the street, the main drag,

[00:24:31] all the lights turn on and the whole town comes out at five o'clock and it's this big parade and everyone celebrates and it's the kickoff of the holiday season. Well we work this is by the

[00:24:41] way don't make this mistake if you're an entrepreneur do not set a deliverable at five o'clock on a Friday because naturally it's Murphy's Law and it'll bite you in the butt but we're sitting there with a big really large client Fortune 100 client. We have a deliverable

[00:24:55] season who's my business partner. She's like I'm going to run real quick grab the kids from daycare come back and then we're going to go across the street and we're going to enjoy the

[00:25:02] tree lighting ceremony. This is a family tradition so she comes back and she yeah okay let's get going we got to go before you know the Santa comes down the street my kids are five and two

[00:25:10] and I looked at her I said we're missing this deadline I can't I can't make it you know and she just kind of her eyes welled up and she just turned around and walked out and

[00:25:19] and at that moment I was stuck there with my hands and my heart you know my heart and my hands excuse me and I just thought what the hell am I doing I'm choosing business over family

[00:25:28] and every entrepreneur has these moments where you remember those moments where you had to choose business over family and you always regret that but you'll never regret choosing family over business and so you know my team swiveled their chairs and they looked at me and they said

[00:25:42] what the hell Jared what are you doing get out of here we've got this you know let it go like let it go you know let it go and I thought okay so I left and I just arrived just in time

[00:25:51] lights went on I'm crying you know season's crying you know we're there and it's just this there was this pivotal moment to say okay we've got to create balance we have to delegate

[00:26:01] and in order to delegate you have to you know really kind of create a matrix which is on the on the y-axis you have like team readiness and on the x-axis you have importance of task and

[00:26:11] if their readiness is high they can handle any level of importance of tax and you can delegate if their readiness is low well then you can't and you have to monitor it and walk

[00:26:18] them through and so I think this is it aligns to mistakes because most entrepreneurs won't let go they won't delegate they won't build systems and processes they won't transition from a trades person

[00:26:30] to a business person and we would not be here 21 years if I was doing the same stuff being a designer or a project manager or an account manager or doing or being a strategist you know

[00:26:39] not everybody wants to be the CEO so you've got so you know I don't know we're a business owner so that's what I would encourage everyone is like you know you know subscribe to mistakes is where we

[00:26:48] learn and then make sure you continue to develop new mindset skill set tool set to grow into that business person. Thank you for that lovely story I'm glad that you and season managed to go down

[00:26:59] and enjoy the life I'm sure your kid to look appreciated that as well and I guess you're also leaning into that concept of the Gerber emith right? Yes. Many of us start off as

[00:27:09] self-employed practitioners and over time the people that burn out of those that don't graduate to be true entrepreneurs with systems and employees and trustworthy people and you know expanded which is then as I know myself you know two offices is more than twice as complex right? Multiplied

[00:27:30] offices multiplies the complexity sort of like to a power of three or four so you've plainly made that leap from being a self-employed to being a true entrepreneur which is fantastic.

[00:27:44] Jared if there is a book that I can ask you or a blog or a podcast that you'd recommend what would that be? Yeah you know there's this great book it's called The Alchemist by Paolo Colo and I would

[00:27:59] say that you know as an entrepreneur it's really about also the journey whereas I think a lot of us you know we put ourselves in this future state and we negotiate with ourselves as to where

[00:28:11] we want to be and the reality is is the journey is actually probably more important than the actual end state and so it's okay to set a waypoint you know or a direction on the compass to go after

[00:28:23] but I really think it's about enjoying the journey and The Alchemist really talks about finding our own personal legend you know and it's so it's really all this journey and yes at

[00:28:32] the end there's this reward for the journey but it's really about the journey and the life lessons that we pick up along the way and stuff so I highly encourage anyone I read this book about every five

[00:28:42] years and I find I pick something else out of it because the journey continues to change for us you know as especially as entrepreneurs and so that would be the one I'd recommend it's a really

[00:28:51] great book. Jared I'd recommend people get in touch with you if they want to do that Jared look look pick a low how can they find you? Yeah so well I always say go to our website take

[00:29:00] a look at our case studies read some of the thought leadership that we have on there just so you get an idea of what we do and who we are but I'm you can tell I love being in conversations

[00:29:10] I think everyone has some level of wisdom to offer and advice to deliver and give and so I just hit me up direct message me on LinkedIn you can find me there Jared look pick a low JARROD

[00:29:21] LOP ICC OLO direct message me let's get into a conversation let's find something authentic that we can connect around and then we'll sell each other's shit you know later but don't do it off

[00:29:32] the bat that's that's the only thing I ask is don't do it right off the bat like if you're interested you're going to want to find a you know then have a real honest conversation after that you

[00:29:39] build a relationship and then we naturally sell to each other. Jared that's one of I was kind of hoping you'd drop in sort of a free Papillon helicopter trip because when I went to the

[00:29:49] Grand Canyon we couldn't afford that we walked all the way down and we slept under some of those picnic tables at the bottom of the river there. Those are those are the days I think almost

[00:30:00] sort of before really helicopters were flying around it was back in the 1970s I was there so Jared thank you so much for joining me on The Unnoticed entrepreneur today with you great stories and insights. Jim thank you so much appreciate being here today and

[00:30:14] hopefully everyone got a little something out of it so. I'm absolutely sure that everyone would have done it I know I did and just to you know sum up if I can our conversation

[00:30:22] with Jared a couple of points I think really for me takeaways one is that we really need to think about the brand experience in its totality and the marketing is not at just the beginning

[00:30:36] or just in the store or just after sales it really all has to be joined up but it also has to all be consistent yeah and it's the hardest thing and the most obvious thing

[00:30:48] but it takes discipline and consistency of vision to do that and I think this other point about mindset that there aren't mistakes there are learning opportunities and that we've got to keep embracing those because as entrepreneurs the only way to grow a business is to grow ourselves

[00:31:05] so thank you for joining me Jim James based here in the west of England in Wiltshire Jared was in Reno in Nevada and if you've enjoyed this do please share it with the fellow

[00:31:15] unnoticed entrepreneur because we don't want anyone to go unnoticed and if you can leave a review on the show site that would also be wonderful until we meet you again just encourage you to keep on communicating