Articles & Podcast Episodes

Talk-Commerce Annie Schiffmann

Unlocking the Power of Social Media Marketing with Annie Schiffmann

I recently had the pleasure of speaking with Annie Schiffmann, founder and CEO of Downstage Media, on my podcast, Talk Commerce. As an expert in social media marketing with a passion for musical theater, Annie shared invaluable strategies for creating an impactful yet efficient presence across today’s social platforms.

In our lively chat, we explored everything from choosing where to focus your efforts to crafting engaging content that sings. Read on for Annie’s top tips that will have your social media presence hitting the high notes.

Balancing Personal Passions with Professional Goals

Annie’s career is a testament to blending enthusiasm with expertise. After years of performing on stage, she now helps businesses take center stage online. This unique background gives Annie an innovative approach to digital marketing.

Composing a Social Symphony

A typical “day in the life” for Annie involves meetings, strategizing, writing, and content creation. She compares it to composing a symphony—many interconnected components creating something greater than the sum of its parts. Annie also dedicates time to sharing her knowledge through her book, blog, and more.

Harnessing the Power of Automation

One of our key discussions centered around utilizing automation tools to save time on social media. Annie explained the difference between merely scheduling posts and actually automating them for efficiency. Platforms like MeetEdgar and HubSpot help streamline your strategy.

Choosing the Right Stages

With so many options, deciding where to focus your social media presence can be daunting. Annie suggests playing to your strengths and priorities. Rather than chasing trends, select one or two platforms that align with your goals, audience, and capabilities.

Curating Your Social Media Toolbox

To maximize your impact on social, Annie recommends automation programs like MeetEdgar and HubSpot. These enable the development of an intelligent content calendar while retaining authenticity. You don’t have to do everything manually.

Engaging in Two-Way Conversations

Annie emphasized that social media should facilitate meaningful conversations, not just one-way broadcasting. By responding to comments and incorporating feedback, you build relationships.

Striking the Right Personal/Professional Balance

We also discussed best practices for developing your personal versus company branding on social platforms. Annie believes brands should highlight their human side while focusing the majority of content on professional topics.

Connecting with Annie Schiffmann gave me valuable insights into leveling up my social media strategy without getting overwhelmed. I encourage you to check out the full Talk Commerce episode, as well as Annie’s book, for more of her wisdom. Just remember—when using social media, put your best self forward!

https://www.downstage.media/
https://www.simplesocialmediabook.com/buy-simple-social-media

The Launch of Gemini

he Launch of Gemini marks a significant milestone in the evolution of digital marketing automation. This cutting-edge platform offers a comprehensive suite of features, including campaign management, marketing automation, CRM, and data analytics, to help businesses streamline their marketing operations, gain valuable customer insights, and drive growth.

Unlocking 25 Years of eTail: A Retrospective with eTail Co-Producers Kristin Schoenstein and Liz Robillard

On a special anniversary episode of Talk Commerce, I sat down with eTail co-producers Kristin Schoenstein and Liz Robillard to unpack 25 years of the groundbreaking eTail conference. As pioneers in the e-commerce events space, Kristin and Liz gave an insider’s perspective on the evolution of email and the wider industry landscape.

The Essence of the eTail Conference Over 25 Years:


Spanning over two decades, eTail has been instrumental in nurturing the growth of ecommerce. From humble beginnings as a small gathering of 50 ecommerce professionals to hosting over 1,500 attendees yearly, eTail has scaled tremendously while retaining its identity as a tight-knit community event. As Kristin put it, “eTail feels like a family reunion each year.”

Exploring the Changing Landscape of Ecommerce Conferences:


In the early days, eTail was the only specialized conference for ecommerce professionals. But over the years, the industry has exploded with events catering to every ecommerce niche imaginable. “It’s incredible to see the diversity of conferences now focused specifically on areas like mobile commerce, marketplace selling, social commerce, and more,” Liz noted. “It represents the maturation of ecommerce.”

The Impact of Ecommerce Conferences on Online Retail:


Industry conferences like eTail have had an undeniable influence on shaping the growth trajectory of e-commerce. By fostering connections and knowledge sharing amongst peers, e-commerce conferences nurture innovation and push the envelope of what’s possible in online retail. “So many business partnerships and new technologies can trace their origins back to conversations that started at eTail,” Kristin revealed.

Questions and Reflections:


We had so many great questions about the evolution of eTail, the future of physical conferences in an increasingly digital world, and advice for first-time eTail attendees. Some key insights from Kristin and Liz:

  • The value of in-person networking will not fade, even as virtual events gain traction
  • Specialization will define the next generation of successful conferences
  • First-timer advice: “Be open-minded, talk to everyone, and follow up.”

Unlocking 25 More Years of Community Commerce:


After 25 years of bringing together the brightest minds in ecommerce, the future looks bright for the eTail conference. Come ready to connect, learn, and unlock the next era of community commerce this year at eTail!

Talk-Commerce-Niklas Halusa

The Ins and Outs of Constructing an Online Marketplace That Sells with Niklas Halusa

Launching an online marketplace can be an exciting yet daunting endeavor. From software selection to attracting buyers and sellers, many complex factors require thoughtful consideration. So where does an aspiring marketplace founder even start?

Look no further than episode # of the acclaimed Talk Commerce podcast, featuring an exclusive interview with Niklas Halusa. As CEO of Nautical Commerce, Niklas brings deep expertise in all facets of building and scaling online marketplaces.

In this wide-ranging conversation, Niklas pulls back the curtain on critical marketplace success factors. From concrete startup steps to long-term strategic thinking, his penetrating insights deliver immense value for newcomers and veterans alike.

Key Takeaways on Marketplace Creation:

  • Clearly differentiate a marketplace from other ecommerce models
  • Identify the ideal customer profile for your niche
  • Consider marketplace software over custom builds
  • Focus on delivering an exceptional user experience
  • Plan for future consolidation and competition
  • Curate your vendor mix for diversity and quality

With over a decade steering young marketplace startups, Niklas speaks from experience. After pivoting his career from finance to hands-on operations, he witnessed firsthand the headaches of building marketplaces. This revelation sparked his mission – to empower passionate founders to focus on their creative business-building, not software woes.

Let’s delve into Niklas’ most indispensable marketplace advice.

About Niklas Halusa, Marketplace Maestro

As CEO of Nautical Commerce, Niklas leads strategy and vision for this bustling Toronto startup. Their fully integrated platform allows entrepreneurs to launch and scale multi-vendor marketplaces at speed.

Niklas’ passion for marketplaces sparked early while sourcing investment opportunities. But he grew frustrated at the software bottlenecks hampering so many founders. After spearheading operations for various startups, Niklas knew there had to be a better way.

So he co-founded Nautical to give business builders access to enterprise-grade marketplace tech. By handling all the complex backend infrastructure, Niklas and his team enable founders to focus on what matters most – crafting a stellar user experience.

With Nautical now powering marketplaces of all sizes, Niklas draws from a deep well of hands-on knowledge.

Decoding the Marketplace Landscape

Brent Peterson, founder of Talk Commerce, opens the podcast by asking Niklas to define an online marketplace. As Niklas explains:

“Marketplace is…the exercise of building a store, a platform, a piece of real estate.”

He points to historical market squares where artisans and traders would gather to buy and sell wares. Online marketplaces create similar digital trading posts, connecting groups of buyers and third-party sellers.

Crucially, the marketplace itself holds no inventory. Instead, independent vendors handle product listings, fulfillment, and more. The platforms focus on providing tools, services and exposure to sellers. And an engaging, trustworthy experience for buyers.

Niklas contrasts this to other ecommerce models like traditional retailers, brands, and dropshipping arrangements. Retailers buy and resell goods to earn a markup. Brands sell products they manufacture directly to consumers.

Dropshippers contract with third-party vendors but drive more product curation. Marketplaces forge less involved relationships with their sellers, enabling far greater scale and diversity.

When should entrepreneurs consider building a marketplace? Niklas advises those with proven buyer demand struggling to meet it alone. Established retailers can also future-proof against marketplace disruption by expanding their vendor base.

But brands selling proprietary products don’t necessarily require a marketplace model. Their priority is moving their own products, rather than facilitating transactions between third parties.

Evaluating Marketplace Software Solutions

Brent then inquires about the differences between building vs joining a marketplace platform. As Niklas bluntly states:

“You should really think very, very hard about owning code…owning software is the business equivalent of doing your own plumbing or electrics.”

He points to the success of Shopify empowering ecommerce entrepreneurs to skip technology headaches. Aspiring marketplace builders need similar solutions tailored to the multi-vendor model.

But Niklas acknowledges the current landscape remains fragmented. He expects more sophisticated software packages to emerge, alongside more consolidation. Nautical Commerce aims to lead the way in providing an integrated backend built for scalability.

According to Niklas, this infrastructure layer must “just work” reliably behind the scenes. This frees business owners to focus on crafting exceptional user experiences. And those thoughtful, personalized touches will win in an increasingly crowded marketplace ecosystem.

Attracting, Engaging, and Retaining Buyers

With more entrepreneurs entering the marketplace gold rush, competition heats up. So how can newcomers stand apart?

Niklas strongly advocates finding an underserved niche and deeply understanding associated customer pain points. Rather than chasing the Amazons, he sees bigger opportunities in specialized marketplaces offering targeted solutions.

He highlights niche examples like StockX for sneakerheads or Tall Size for tall women’s fashion. By intently focusing on distinctive buyer needs, the customer experience far outpaces general marketplaces. Highly tailored product assortments and functionality also build fierce loyalty and retention.

So niche players shouldn’t fear the giants. Even offline, specialized retailers like Bass Pro Shops flourish by dominating their turf. Online marketplaces can thrive in carefully cultivated niches once considered too small.

But they must first build a rich understanding of their target customer. With buyers spoiled for choice, only ultra-relevant personalization cuts through the noise.

Curating a Marketplace’s Seller Mix

Cultivating the ideal vendor mix also proves vital for sustaining marketplace prosperity. Rather than chasing breadth alone, Niklas advocates for careful curation.

He notes how the first online marketplaces succeeded by aggregating previously hard-to-find products. But in flooded segments like cheap phone cases, the novelty wears thin. Buyers now demand quality, uniqueness and an element of discovery from their marketplaces.

So while marquee name brands attract eyeballs, they shouldn’t dominate. Diverse products from niche sellers keep buyers engaged across more browsing sessions. Curation prevents individual vendors from commandeering too much power over the platform too.

Marketplaces must strike a delicate balance between seller choice and experience quality control. But resists the temptation to over-optimize for scale alone. As Niklas concludes, “increasingly these places will become more curated, more bespoke, more localized.”

Final Thoughts on Building Marketplaces

Crafting an exceptional user experience emerges as the predominant theme from Niklas Halusa. For marketplaces to thrive in the digital economy, they must intimately understand and cater to their constituent buyers and sellers.

Rather than workflow and operational efficiencies, obsessive customer-centricity now separates the best from the rest. As Niklas concludes, “find an underserved or specialist niche that they think they can understand far better than anybody else.”

This deep empathy begets tailored functionality, personalized recommendations, niche assortments, and responsive support. Marketplaces must create a seamless experience matching buyers and sellers of related products easily.

But Niklas insists the software foundations enabling rich user experiences matter just as much. Aspiring marketplace entrepreneurs should focus less on technology, not more. SaaS solutions like Nautical Commerce now empower any founder to launch quickly without software burdens.

So if you feel equipped to identify and serve a niche audience, now is the time to bring your marketplace idea to life. The barriers to entry continue lowering while funding and support keep growing. And as Niklas predicts, “the rate of new marketplaces or marketplace business models is going to explode in the next three to five years.”

Will your marketplace idea lead this next wave of digital commerce innovation?


To hear more invaluable insights from marketplace maestro Niklas Halusa, be sure to check out [episode #] of Talk Commerce today. And don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an episode!

Now over to you – what stuck out most from Niklas’ marketplace advice? Which niche might you explore for your own potential marketplace? Join the conversation below!

Tags: online marketplace, marketplace software, niche marketplace, marketplace platform, marketplace tips, build a marketplace

Talk-Commerce Akeneo Kristin Naragon

Transforming Retail through Product Experience with Kristin Naragon

The future of retail lies in delivering exceptional product experiences. That’s the key message from digital commerce expert Kristin Naragon in this insightful episode of Talk Commerce. As Chief Strategy and Marketing Officer at Akeneo, Naragon has seen firsthand how centralizing product data and incorporating AI is revolutionizing online shopping.

Key Takeaways:

  • Implementing a product information management (PIM) solution led to a 36% sales increase for Rural King and 15 minute time-to-market for Staples Canada.
  • 61% of retailers are adopting augmented reality, with some seeing conversion rates double for AR-enabled products.
  • AI can be transformative but needs human validation – incorrect product details could be dangerous.
  • A comprehensive product experience strategy requires buy-in across the c-suite, not just marketing.

About Kristin Naragon

With nearly 20 years in tech marketing, including senior roles at Akeneo and Adobe, Kristin brings a wealth of go-to-market strategy experience. As a customer-obsessed, outcomes-focused leader, she’s passionate about developing partnerships and solutions that drive business success. At Akeneo, that means delivering product experience innovation that transforms retail.

Exploring Centralized Data and AI for Next-Gen Shopping

Kristin traces the genesis of Akeneo back to a frustrating shopping experience – her husband struggling to find compatible AV equipment across various retailer sites. The problem? Inconsistent and conflicting product information stemming from decentralized data. As Kristin explains, “You can control the product information. Having that core record, categorized, cataloged, complete, enriched…that’s what Akeneo uniquely solves.”

That product record lies at the heart of Akeneo’s product experience cloud. By centralizing all product data into a PIM, retailers can distribute accurate, up-to-date listings to every touchpoint – web, mobile, print, and more. The result, as evidenced by Rural King and Staples Canada, is operational efficiency, reduced time to market, and revenue growth. “It touches every part of the business,” Naragon states.

And that was just the beginning. The launch of Akeneo’s in-platform app store unlocked innovation opportunities through 3rd party AI integrations. As Kristin explains, “We had about a dozen applications developed leveraging AI to help different parts of the product experience management process.” From onboarding data to generating descriptions and translating content, AI is transforming PIM capabilities.

Ultimately, Akeneo’s acquisition of AI startup Unifi was fueled by demand for enhanced data enrichment. But Kristin cautions AI requires oversight. “Bad product information generated from these AI models can really serve the business in a bad way,” she warns, sharing examples of incorrect phone storage stats and dangerously mixed chemical data. The solution lies in Akeneo’s workflows – “introducing a checking system with employees, humans.”

The Future of Retail Will Be Experiential

As the podcast wraps up, Kristin points to AI, AR, and the blockchain as technologies that will converge to enhance shopping dramatically. But the biggest shift must start internally. “Making product experience strategy a C-suite initiative – that’s something we’re going to be focused on,” she predicts. Because as omnichannel retail blurs lines, the brands offering the most contextual, consistent and helpful product experiences will win consumer loyalty.

In closing, Kristin perfectly captures the ethos of our digital era: “It seems so obvious, I guess. And sometimes the things that seem so obvious are often overlooked.”

Memorable Quotes

“You can control the product information. Having that core record, categorized, cataloged, complete, enriched…that’s what Akeneo uniquely solves.”

Here Kristin eloquently sums up the universal product data dilemma facing retailers – and how a properly structured PIM solves it through centralization.

“Bad product information generated from these AI models can really serve the business in a bad way.”

A stark reminder that while AI delivers efficiency, its capability to propagate nonsense means implementing guardrails is crucial.

“Making product experience strategy a C-suite initiative – that’s something we’re going to be focused on.”

This prediction underscores Kristin’s belief that optimizing product content across channels needs to become a boardroom priority to drive sales.

Tune In and Join the Product Experience Revolution

If mindset shifts, emerging technologies and real-world use cases have you rethinking your ecommerce content strategy, be sure to check out the full episode. Subscribe to Talk Commerce so you don’t miss future conversations at the intersection of commerce and digital disruption.

At its core, this podcast highlights that product experiences represent the new competitive battleground. As consumers increasingly demand personalized, contextual, and helpful shopping journeys, retailers must transform product content from a cost center into a revenue driver. The brands that invest in product experience now will shape the future of retail.