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The Ecommerce Revolution Podcast

Podcast de Hosted by Ramin Ramhormozi

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Tecnología y ciencia

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The Ecommerce Revolution Podcast helps emerging ecommerce entrepreneurs launch and grow smarter using AI and proven strategies. Get actionable tips, expert insights, and inspiring stories to fuel your success—whether you're just starting or scaling up. Tune in and take your next step with confidence. www.ecomrevolution.co

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53 episodios

Portada del episodio How Conversion Rate Optimization Can Grow Your Revenue Without Spending Another Dollar on Ads

How Conversion Rate Optimization Can Grow Your Revenue Without Spending Another Dollar on Ads

You’ve poured time, energy, and money into getting people to your store. But how much have you invested in what happens after they arrive? If the answer is “not much,” you’re leaving serious revenue on the table. This episode of the Ecommerce Revolution Podcast tackles that exact problem, and it’s one of the most practical conversations we’ve had yet. Host Ramin is joined by Mia Umanos, co-founder of ClickVoyant, an AI-powered conversion rate optimization platform, and founder of the Behavioral CRO Lab, a free community where marketers learn to use behavioral science to increase sales. Mia has spent years studying how shoppers actually behave online, and in this episode, she puts that expertise to work with something brand new: a live Celebrity Site Review of Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson’s men’s skincare brand, Papatui, to uncover what works, what’s missing, and what every emerging brand can steal from it. Welcome to episode #53 of The Ecommerce Revolution Podcast. Each week, we feature a guest who’s an expert in their field to share real strategies to help you launch, grow, and win in commerce. If you want support on your journey, join our community of hundreds of entrepreneurs and get access to content, coaching, workshops, and a private network of fellow ecommerce entrepreneurs. What is CRO and why does it matter for your brand? Conversion rate optimization (CRO) is the practice of studying how shoppers behave on your site and running controlled experiments to improve that experience. Mia frames it simply: your ecommerce store is a behavioral lab. Every visitor who lands on your site is telling you something, whether they buy, bounce, scroll, or abandon their cart. Most brands never read those signals. Instead, the energy goes into paid media, ROAS, and traffic growth. That focus isn’t wrong, but it’s incomplete. The industry is obsessed with paid media intelligence while ignoring what Mia calls “shopper intelligence.” You can double your traffic and still leave most of that investment on the table if your site isn’t converting those visitors efficiently. The good news? You don’t need massive traffic numbers to see real results from CRO. Mia shared a striking example: one of her clients gets fewer than 5,000 sessions a month. After a single focused test, they saw a 70% increase in revenue per visitor. The opportunity was always there. Nobody had looked for it. “You’re going to spend all this hard earned traffic and paid for traffic. You need to understand how they’re showing up, or how you’re showing up.” 5 CRO priorities every emerging brand needs to address 1. Get obsessed with your product positioning Too many brands build a product they love and figure out the messaging later. CRO flips that. Before you drive a single visitor to your store, you need to understand exactly why your customer is buying. Are they buying your bag because it’s perfect for game day? Because it solves a specific problem? That “why” needs to be front and center in your headlines, messaging, and product descriptions. Small tweaks to positioning can have an outsized impact on conversion rates, and it costs nothing to get this right before you start spending on ads. 2. Treat your navigation as a merchandising tool Most brands think of navigation as a content directory: organize what you sell, give it a label, done. But navigation is one of the most underutilized merchandising opportunities in ecommerce. A single product can and should live in multiple categories based on how a shopper might be searching. A backpack is a backpack, but it’s also a game day bag and a travel carry-on. When you design navigation around shopper intent rather than product taxonomy, you make it significantly easier for the right customer to find what they need fast, and that directly drives conversions. 3. Study how people actually move through your site Are your collection pages easy to filter? Can a mobile shopper find your best sellers in seconds? Mia calls this “wayfinding,” and it’s often where brands lose shoppers who were actually ready to buy. Tools like Hotjar or Microsoft Clarity let you visually map where people scroll, click, and drop off. One consistent pattern they reveal: most mobile shoppers don’t scroll past the halfway point of a page. If your most important content is buried below that 50% mark, it’s functionally invisible for the majority of your audience. If it matters, it needs to move up. 4. Build the right product detail page mix Your product detail page is where conversions happen or don’t. Mia describes the winning formula as a “cocktail” of imagery, reviews, authority signals, and product copy all working together. Imagery should tell a story and move the shopper toward a decision. Reviews should feel real. Authority signals matter, but vague claims are far weaker than specific ones. “Trusted by 1,000 dermatologists” or “87% of users saw improvement in two weeks” gives the shopper something concrete to hold on to. Specificity is what makes authority bias actually work. 5. Reduce cart abandonment with urgency and anxiety relief Around 70% of shopping carts are abandoned before checkout. Some of that is unavoidable, but a significant chunk can be recovered with two tactics working together. First, create genuine urgency using subconscious cues like “most popular” tags or expiring cart reminders. You don’t need fake countdown timers. Second, remove purchase anxiety by addressing it directly: clear return windows, free shipping thresholds, and a frictionless checkout all reduce the hesitation that causes last-minute drop-offs. Every shopper feels some level of anxiety before hitting buy. Your site’s job is to address it before they bail. What the review of The Rock’s site reveals The Celebrity Site Review applies a real-world lens to those five priorities. Ramin and Mia walked through Papatui page by page, looking at it through the eyes of a behavioral scientist. The result is a masterclass in spotting both what works and what might need improvement. Papatui does several things well. Strong social proof bookends the homepage. The product quiz captures email while building a sense of personalization. Product photography is clean and purposeful. The “subscribe and save” default on product pages encourages repeat purchases from day one. And the brand’s built-in authority handles a lot of trust-building automatically, something smaller brands have to earn deliberately. The biggest takeaway: best practices aren’t universal. What works for one brand, one product, or one customer segment won’t automatically work for yours. The brands that win at CRO study their own shoppers and run their own experiments, rather than copying what looks good on a competitor’s site. The behavioral science edge most brands ignore One of the most valuable threads in this episode is Mia’s framework for behavioral triggers. Shoppers are not the rational, methodical decision-makers most ecommerce sites are designed for. They’re distracted, on their phones, scanning rather than reading, and their brains are constantly taking mental shortcuts. Social proof, authority bias, and urgency work because they speak to those shortcuts directly rather than asking people to slow down and think. When you layer behavioral science on top of standard UX testing, you start designing for how people actually shop. That means thinking carefully about button contrast, page hierarchy, the placement of reviews, the language in your trust badges, and whether your email pop-up timing is helping or hurting. These aren’t massive rebuilds. They’re small, testable changes that compound significantly over time. Even the biggest brands with the most traffic still have conversion problems. That means the gap between where you are now and a meaningfully better conversion rate is almost certainly closer than you think. You don’t need to rebuild your store. You need to start studying it. Watch the full episode above for the complete site teardown, including the product page breakdown, the quiz analysis, and Mia’s specific recommendations for improving mobile performance. Disclaimer: This video is for educational and commentary purposes only. We are not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by Papatui or Dwayne Johnson. All trademarks, brand names, and images belong to their respective owners. Connect: * Visit Mia on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/miaumanos/?midToken=AQHk2dttChnamg&midSig=3T-BFurcMVEXU1&trkEmail=eml-email_m2m_invite_single_01-invitation~card-0-inviter~name-null-2aisw~met66qay~qe-null-null&eid=2aisw-met66qay-qe&otpToken=MTEwZDFiZTAxMzI4YzljZWI1MjkwMGVjNDQxYmU3YjA4N2NkZDM0MTk4YTQ4NjZhNzNjNzA2NmU0YjU5NWFmNWZjYWU5N2UxNzBkNWJhZDYwNzRhMTE5MmFiNzc2YTczOGZjNmMwNzA0NDQ1NWI4YzY4LDEsMQ%3D%3D] * Join the free Behavioral CRO Lab [https://www.skool.com/mias-behavioral-cro-school-3183/about] * Visit ClickVoyant [https://clickvoyant.com/] — AI-powered CRO * Need an online store, get Shopify free [https://shopify.pxf.io/P0LPej], then only pay $1 for 3-months 🚀 Join The Ecommerce Revolution for tips, content and resources to help you launch, grow, and win in ecommerce. If this content resonates, share it with a fellow ecommerce founder! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.ecomrevolution.co [https://www.ecomrevolution.co?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

22 de abr de 2026 - 1 h 0 min
Portada del episodio The "Gift in the Mailbox" Effect That's Quietly Reshaping E-Commerce

The "Gift in the Mailbox" Effect That's Quietly Reshaping E-Commerce

I’ve wanted to do this podcast episode for a long time. Not because direct mail is some new, shiny thing. It’s literally a hundred years old. But every time I walk to my mailbox, I notice the same thing: it’s getting emptier. Mostly just the stuff the post office has to give you. Bills. A flyer or two. And then, every once in a while, a beautifully designed postcard from a brand I actually care about. And I stop. I actually look at it. That doesn’t happen with my email inbox. I can barely keep up with the promotional tabs in there. I’ve been watching Postpilot since their early days. I remember first hearing about them and thinking, wait, direct mail? But the more I paid attention, the more the logic clicked. So when I finally got Ben Walter and Drew Hart from the Postpilot team on the podcast, I came in hot with questions. Ben runs partnerships at Postpilot. Drew works closely with agency partners and spent time on the account management side, helping brands actually get campaigns off the ground. Between them, they’ve seen this channel go from “does this really work?” to brands reaching out saying, “We need this yesterday.” And Postpilot just landed at #80 on the 2025 Inc. 5000. So clearly something is clicking. Here are five things from our conversation that stuck with me. Get ecommerce insights like this one directly in your inbox. 1) Your mailbox is empty, and that’s the whole point I brought this up right at the top of the interview because it’s something I genuinely notice in my own life. My physical mailbox gets smaller and smaller. Meanwhile, my email inbox? I’ll get hit four, five, six times a day from the same brand. Ben had the perfect contrast. Think about how busy your email and SMS inboxes are, he said. Now think about your physical mailbox. One is chaos. The other is quiet. And when a postcard shows up in that quiet space — your name on it, a brand you recognize — it doesn’t register as marketing. Postpilot’s data shows that about 60% of people who receive their cards actually perceive them as a gift. Not an ad. A gift. I’ve experienced this myself. When I see one of those beautifully designed pieces in my mailbox, I’m genuinely delighted. It’s a completely different emotional response than another subject line I’m going to scroll past. The channel everyone forgot about became the one with the least noise. 2) The founders saw it firsthand, then built the tool that didn’t exist The Postpilot origin story is really what made me want to have this conversation. Co-founders Drew Sanocki and Michael Epstein are guys I remember from podcasts back in like 2005. Real veterans. They’d been running big e-commerce brands like Karmaloop and AutoAnything. Often stepping in as turnaround specialists. Massive top-line revenue, but losing millions quarterly. Sinking ships, leaky buckets. And one of their go-to playbooks for turning those brands around was to dig into the deep customer lists, especially suppressed buyers who’d stopped engaging with email and SMS, and reactivate them through direct mail. It worked every time. The problem was that for digital-native Shopify [http://skuagency.com/shopify] brands, doing direct mail was a nightmare. Source paper, find a printer, design creative for a physical format you’ve never worked in before. It felt like a foreign country. So they acquired the Postpilot technology in 2018 and set out to make the whole thing feel like setting up a Klaviyo flow. Today, it’s a Shopify app. You plug in your email provider, pull over your existing segments, and their team handles design, printing, and shipping from their own in-house facilities in South Carolina and Arizona. Ben’s line that stuck with me: “Basically zero lift to get off the ground.” I marvel at that, honestly. The ability to look at something that’s technically complicated and say, no, it doesn’t have to be. 3) Twenty-four hours from abandoned cart to printed postcard Okay, this is where my jaw dropped a little. Drew walked me through how it works on the back end. Someone abandons a cart on your Shopify store. Within 24 hours, a personalized postcard is printed and shipped. Depending on how close the customer is to their facilities, it lands in three to seven days. I told Ben and Drew, if I abandon a cart and then go pick up my mail and see that brand sitting in there? I’m going to stop in my tracks. Honestly. One, out of shock. Wasn’t I just on that website? And two, because it’s a tangible, physical thing that cuts through in a way another email simply can’t. The most popular automations are what you’d expect: abandoned cart, welcome series where a new subscriber who hasn’t converted in 14 days gets a card, and the big one: win-back campaigns targeting one-time buyers who haven’t come back after 90-120 days. That last one, Drew said, consistently drives the highest return. And when you compare the longevity, the difference is stark. A digital ad click gives you maybe a two-minute session, and that’s generous. A postcard? It sits on someone’s desk for days. Gets stuck to the fridge. Ben made this point and it’s powerful: we’re talking about days or weeks of impressions versus seconds or minutes. Same marketing dollar. Completely different shelf life. 4) No opt-in required — and that changes everything This is the part that really made me sit up. In email, you need consent. You worry about deliverability, spam filters, the ever-growing unsubscribe rate. In SMS, there was a moment when Texas basically tried to remove the ability to send marketing texts entirely. Digital ad targeting has been hammered by iOS privacy updates. Direct mail? None of that applies. You don’t need an opt-in to send a postcard. It’s completely legal in the United States. No deliverability risk. No algorithm deciding whether your message gets seen. I asked specifically about this. Can you still reach someone who’s unsubscribed from your email list? And the answer is yes. The Klaviyo integration and the direct mail channel operate independently. You don’t need permission to send a card. Ben put it this way: typically, maybe 20% of your customer base is subscribed to email. Direct mail lets you reach the other 80%. That’s not a nice-to-have. That’s a fundamentally larger audience. And then Ben dropped something near the end that I keep thinking about: it takes an act of Congress to change the cost of direct mail. I joked about the inefficiency of passing laws, but the point is real. Unlike digital ad auctions where your CPMs swing daily, the economics of this channel are stable. Predictable. Built into the system. The channel that doesn’t need an algorithm might be the most durable one you’ve got. 5) Get creative with what you put in someone’s home This is where I got really excited, because the creative possibilities are wild. Ben told me about a shoe brand that sends postcards with a cutout so parents can measure their child’s foot. Think about that. If you’ve got multiple kids, that card isn’t going in the trash. It’s living in your house. It’s getting used. He told me about pitching a puzzle brand on sending monthly postcards with a few cut-out pieces. At the end of the year, you’ve got a complete puzzle assembled from twelve months of mail. I mean, come on. That’s brilliant. And they’re rolling out a feature to display loyalty points and tier status right on the postcard. Imagine getting a card that says, “You’ve just reached Gold status. You have 500 points. Use them this Black Friday.” No discount code. No margin erosion. Just activating the loyalty program your customer already signed up for, through a channel they’ll actually see. When I think about a gardening company sending a seasonal trifold with tips and tricks, the kind of thing that gets a magnet on the fridge, that’s not marketing. That’s becoming part of someone’s life. You’re physically in the home. What you do with that opportunity is up to you. There’s so much more in this conversation. The 450-million-profile database and how their identity graphing can find someone even after they’ve moved and changed their name. The acquisition AI tool that builds lookalike audiences from your customer data. The benchmark AI reporting that literally tells you which campaigns to turn back on. And a stat that genuinely surprised me: millennial women are Postpilot’s highest-performing demographic cohort. Not the older generation you’d assume. But the five things above are what I keep coming back to, because they apply whether you’re running a $1 million brand or a $50 million one. The physical world didn’t go away. It just got quiet. And the brands that figure out how to show up there — thoughtfully, beautifully, at the right moment — are going to have an edge that’s really hard to replicate with another retargeting pixel. Or as Ben put it simply: It feels like a digital channel, but you’re taking advantage of being outside the busy inbox. —Ramin 📬 Connect with the Postpilot team: * Ben Walter: ben@postpilot.com | LinkedIn [https://claude.ai/chat/365e91a2-e24e-4abb-afee-3352b278749d#] * Drew Hart: drewhart@postpilot.com | LinkedIn [https://claude.ai/chat/365e91a2-e24e-4abb-afee-3352b278749d#] * Website: postpilot.com [https://postpilot.com/] * Free sign-up with 100+ reports: just connect your Shopify store * Download the BFCM Direct Mail Report at postpilot.com 🚀 Join the E-Commerce Revolution at ecomrevolution.co [https://ecomrevolution.co/] for courses, content, and coaching to launch and grow your e-commerce business. P.S. If this resonated, share it with a fellow e-commerce founder. And if you’re not subscribed yet, join us. We do this every week. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.ecomrevolution.co [https://www.ecomrevolution.co?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

17 de feb de 2026 - 51 min
Portada del episodio The AI-Search Shift Is Bigger Than SEO

The AI-Search Shift Is Bigger Than SEO

Is SEO dead? Or is it evolving into something much bigger? In this episode of The Ecommerce Revolution Podcast, Ramin sits down with Jairo Guerrero, co-founder of Organic Hackers, to break down what’s really happening in the world of AI-powered search. We dive deep into GEO (Generative Engine Optimization), AEO (Answer Engine Optimization), and how tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews are reshaping how people discover, research, and buy products online. This is a practical, no-hype conversation packed with real-world examples, clear explanations, and actionable advice for ecommerce entrepreneurs. ⏱️ Chapters & Timestamps 00:00 – Welcome to The Ecommerce Revolution Podcast 01:32 – Meet Jairo Guerrero from Organic Hackers 03:43 – What is actually changing in search because of AI? 06:19 – How ChatGPT breaks long prompts into search queries 09:53 – GEO vs AEO vs SEO: what really matters 12:16 – Why AI search expands SEO instead of replacing it 14:08 – Why “AI search” might be the only term that matters 18:59 – Why ICP and buyer persona come before any SEO strategy 20:44 – Content-market fit explained with real client examples 24:54 – Why publishing more content is often the wrong move 26:21 – Do keywords still matter in the age of AI? 29:43 – Search intent, keyword clustering, and how pages rank 33:18 – Transactional intent: Google vs AI tools 34:41 – Why some businesses don’t show up in ChatGPT at all 37:25 – Backlinks, PR, and context in AI search 40:56 – Why podcasts, newsletters, and social media matter more 43:54 – Multi-channel content strategy for AI visibility 46:37 – 3 on-page changes ecommerce brands should make today 50:33 – Reviews, navigation, and conversion optimization 52:02 – Reddit, communities, and AI visibility 56:15 – Reputation, trust, and community-driven content 57:30 – AI visibility tools and why small brands should be careful 59:56 – What actually matters for smaller ecommerce businesses 01:00:39 – The future of AI search and agent-driven commerce 01:03:48 – AI agents buying products for us 01:04:22 – Jairo’s one AI superpower wish as a marketer 01:05:43 – Where to find Jairo and Organic Hackers 01:09:15 – Final thoughts and wrap-up 🔗 Resources Mentioned Organic Hackers: https://organichackers.com [https://organichackers.com] Organic Hackers Newsletter: https://the.organichackers.com [https://the.organichackers.com] Jairo Guerrero on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jdguerrerovasquez/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/jdguerrerovasquez/] AnswerThePublic: https://answerthepublic.com [https://answerthepublic.com] People Also Ask: https://alsoasked.com/ [https://alsoasked.com/] ------ Join The Ecommerce Revolution community: https://ecomrevolution.co This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.ecomrevolution.co [https://www.ecomrevolution.co?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

23 de dic de 2025 - 1 h 10 min
Portada del episodio The Landing Page That Changed Everything

The Landing Page That Changed Everything

Richard D’Souza didn’t start out trying to fix ecommerce landing pages. He was deep in the world of big retail — working with brands like Walmart, Home Depot, and CVS — helping them digitize their promotions and shape the weekly deal experience for millions of shoppers. But one pattern kept surfacing. Whether it was a seasonal flyer in-store or a digital ad online, one thing determined whether someone made a purchase: Welcome to episode #50 of The Ecommerce Revolution Podcast. Each week, we feature a guest who’s an expert in their field to share real strategies to help you launch, grow, and win in commerce. If you want support on your journey, join our community of hundreds of entrepreneurs and get access to content, coaching, workshops, and a private network of fellow ecommerce entrepreneurs. The story being told at the moment of discovery. That insight followed him into his next chapter — launching a startup called Nishe that focused on helping ecommerce brands create high-converting landing pages for TikTok and Meta ads. Most ecommerce brands treat their homepage or product page as a “landing page.” Richard realized that was a mistake. Those pages were filled with distractions — menus, popups, collections, and content that didn’t match the ad that brought people there in the first place. The better approach?Build a focused, frictionless experience — where the story continues the moment someone clicks your ad. That might mean reusing the exact same video they saw in the ad. It might mean showing product photos that match the buyer’s age or demographic. It might mean stripping the page down to one product, one offer, one action. Richard calls it putting “horse blinders” on the customer — guiding them with zero distractions. And the results?One ecommerce brand using Nishe jumped their conversion rate by 49%. Another went from a 2% to nearly 7% conversion rate — just by changing where their paid traffic landed. Richard’s now helping ecommerce brands scale their landing pages fast — without breaking their Shopify stack or losing control of their offer. The insight that changed everything? “If you’re spending money to get someone to click — you better be ready with a story that sells.” 5 Landing Page Tips from Richard * Re-use the ad creative at the top of the landing page.It may feel repetitive, but starting the page with the exact same video that appeared in your TikTok or Meta ad dramatically boosts conversion — because most people never heard the full pitch. * Tailor the landing page to the audience.Selling skincare to women over 50? Don’t show 20-something models. Match the visuals and testimonials to your ideal customer profile. * Keep it simple.Don’t overload the page with science, certifications, and awards. Strip it down to the offer, the product, the story, and the proof. * Make checkout frictionless.Don’t force users to click through multiple pages. Add-to-cart and checkout options should be visible at all times — especially on mobile. * Use landing pages for more than ads.These focused pages also work for email campaigns, QR codes in retail stores, influencer campaigns, and affiliate traffic. Thanks for watching the latest podcast at The Ecommerce Revolution! This post is public, so feel free to share it. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.ecomrevolution.co [https://www.ecomrevolution.co?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

10 de dic de 2025 - 52 min
Portada del episodio TikTok Shop: The Truth No One Talks About

TikTok Shop: The Truth No One Talks About

A few years ago, hardly anyone was talking about TikTok Shop. Most ecommerce founders saw it as a curiosity.A side project.Maybe a place for influencers, but not a real sales channel. Then sellers started posting numbers that didn’t make sense.Days where one product would move thousands of units.Creators driving more sales than traditional ads.Categories exploding seemingly overnight. And right behind a lot of that momentum was today’s guest. Welcome to episode #49 of The Ecommerce Revolution Podcast. Each week, we feature a guest who’s an expert in their field to share real strategies to help you launch, grow, and win in commerce. If you want support on your journey, join our community of hundreds of entrepreneurs and get access to content, coaching, workshops, and a private network of fellow ecommerce entrepreneurs. Jessamine Dong built CreatoRev into the first certified TikTok Shop agency partner in the United States. Her team helped seed the earliest top sellers, tested the first winning playbooks, and watched the ecosystem evolve from a handful of brave sellers to one of the fastest-growing commerce platforms in the world. When we spoke, I wanted to get past the hype.I wanted to understand what is actually real. Here is what Jessamine shared. TikTok Shop does not behave like traditional ecommerce Most founders walk into TikTok Shop thinking it will operate like Amazon or Shopify. Upload your product.Add photos.Publish.Wait. That is not how TikTok Shop works. TikTok is entertainment first.TikTok Shop succeeds when the product becomes part of a moment: a reaction, a curiosity, a spark of emotion. Sellers who win understand that their first job is not to sell. It is to get attention. As Jessamine put it: if your product cannot stop the scroll, it has no chance. Creators shape everything On Amazon, reviews drive trust.On TikTok Shop, creators drive desire. But there is a twist. In the United States, there are many more sellers than creators. That imbalance gives creators the leverage. They choose the products they want to work with, the offers they accept, and the stories they want to tell. Good product is not enough.You also need clear messaging, strong incentives, and an angle creators can run with. When a creator hits the right note, it feels like flipping a switch. Scaling requires intention Many sellers believe TikTok Shop is a lottery.If the right video hits, you win. Jessamine sees it differently. Momentum is intentional.The sellers who keep growing are the ones who: * Test many creators * Boost the content that works * Strengthen the offer * Track performance daily * Iterate instead of guessing Nothing about it is random.There is a rhythm to it. Once the rhythm clicks, TikTok Shop starts influencing sales everywhere: on Shopify, on Amazon, and even in retail. The opportunity is getting bigger, not smaller Jessamine’s team is expanding into Mexico, Brazil, Spain, France, and the UK. She sees growth curves in those markets that look just like the early United States curve. For founders thinking about selling internationally, TikTok Shop removes many barriers. The infrastructure is already in place.The demand is rising.And creators in emerging markets are eager for new products. It is a rare moment when global expansion is this accessible. AI helps, but authenticity wins At the end of our conversation, I asked Jessamine how she uses AI in her business. Her answer was simple. AI speeds up planning, scripts, workflow, and operations.But it does not replace the human behind the camera. Creators still win by being themselves.Sellers still win by building trust through personality and clarity. AI is a tool.Connection is the advantage. P.S. A quick industry update worth noting TikTok Shop is already shifting in ways that matter for every seller watching the platform. According to a recent analysis from Modern Retail, the average price of products sold on TikTok Shop is climbing fast. What started as a bargain-heavy marketplace filled with ultra-low-cost items is maturing into a channel where higher-priced goods are gaining real traction. Categories like beauty, electronics, and home goods have seen meaningful increases in average order value over the past few months. This signals two important things. First, customers are becoming more comfortable buying more expensive items on TikTok Shop.Second, sellers with mid-range and premium products may find more opportunity than they did even six months ago. For emerging ecommerce founders, this trend matters. It reflects a platform that is moving away from the perception of being a discount outlet and evolving into a mainstream shopping channel where strong brands can compete and win. Source: Modern Retail [https://www.modernretail.co/operations/tiktok-shop-sheds-bargain-bin-reputation-as-average-prices-climb-across-categories/], “TikTok Shop sheds bargain bin reputation as average prices climb across categories.” This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.ecomrevolution.co [https://www.ecomrevolution.co?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

5 de dic de 2025 - 59 min
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
MI TOC es feliz, que maravilla. Ordenador, limpio, sugerencias de categorías nuevas a explorar!!!
Me suscribi con los 14 días de prueba para escuchar el Podcast de Misterios Cotidianos, pero al final me quedo mas tiempo porque hacia tiempo que no me reía tanto. Tiene Podcast muy buenos y la aplicación funciona bien.
App ligera, eficiente, encuentras rápido tus podcast favoritos. Diseño sencillo y bonito. me gustó.
contenidos frescos e inteligentes
La App va francamente bien y el precio me parece muy justo para pagar a gente que nos da horas y horas de contenido. Espero poder seguir usándola asiduamente.

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