ecommerce marketing

Thanks for Watching

The Best of 2025: Talk Commerce YouTube Shorts Rewind

We’ve compiled our top-performing YouTube Shorts from 2025 into one power-packed rewind video! These bite-sized insights from industry leaders cover everything from Amazon advertising secrets to AI-powered retail transformation. Thanks for listening to Talk Commerce—let’s dive into the highlights.

1. Elizabeth Greene – Amazon Advertising Mastery

Co-founder of Junglr

Elizabeth Greene shares game-changing Amazon advertising secrets for scaling ecommerce brands through strategic ad spending and automation tactics. Learn how to maximize your ROAS and dominate the Amazon marketplace.

Listen to the full episode ?


2. Adam Callinan – Mathematical Precision in Business

Founder of BottleKeeper and Pentane

Join Adam Callinan as he shares his entrepreneurial journey from creating BottleKeeper to developing Pentane. Discover how mathematical precision and lean operations drive modern business success and sustainable profitability.

Listen to the full episode ?


3. Elijah Khasabo – The Future of UGC

Co-founder of Vidovo

Elijah Khasabo reveals insights on the evolution of user-generated content pricing, why engagement beats follower counts, and why authentic human content continues to outperform AI-generated videos in driving conversions.

Listen to the full episode ?


4. Drew Chambers – Edge Computing Revolution

EVP at Harper

Drew Chambers discusses how edge computing and AI are revolutionizing enterprise web performance. Get insights into speed optimization, personalization, and the future of ecommerce architecture.

Listen to the full episode ?


5. Matthew Merrilees – Global Expansion Strategy

CEO at Global-e

Matthew Merrilees outlines actionable tactics for neutralizing tariffs, fine-tuning landed costs, and leveraging 3B2C fulfillment so brands can expand internationally without eroding profit margins.

Listen to the full episode ?


6. Mark Elfenbein – AI Visual Merchandising

CRO of Nfinite

Mark Elfenbein reveals how AI and CGI technology are transforming retail visual merchandising, enabling major retailers like Amazon and Lowe’s to reduce photography costs by 90% while creating immersive customer experiences at unprecedented scale.

Listen to the full episode ?


7. Udayan Bose – Generative AI in Ecommerce

CEO of NetElixir

Udayan Bose explores how generative AI is revolutionizing ecommerce, from boosting productivity to impacting SEO and shaping the future of Google Search. Discover key insights from this transformative conversation.

Listen to the full episode ?


Watch the Full Rewind Video

Don’t miss these concentrated insights from the brightest minds in ecommerce. Subscribe to Talk Commerce for more expert conversations that help you grow your business.

What was your favorite insight? Let us know in the comments!

Mo Elhawary

Reverse Engineering Success: Creative Marketing Strategy with Mo ElHawary

Talk Commerce host Brent Peterson sits down with Mo Elhawary, a senior creative strategist who’s spent over eight years helping brands reach eight and nine-figure revenue marks. This episode tackles the often-misunderstood role of creative strategy in direct-to-consumer businesses. Mo shares his approach to finding untapped customer segments without increasing ad spend or launching new product lines. The conversation covers everything from the five whys methodology to holiday season preparation strategies that can transform how brands connect with their audiences.

Key Takeaways

  • Creative strategy extends beyond duplicating winning ads—it’s about challenging what already works to discover new opportunities
  • The five whys model reveals deep customer motivations that surface-level research misses
  • Founders should validate products against problems they personally experience before launching
  • The 70-20-10 framework provides a practical approach for holiday season planning
  • Understanding why customers need products matters more than explaining what products do
  • Customer personas should drive product development, not the other way around
  • Early holiday promotions work because customers understand they’ll receive similar deals regardless of timing
  • Removing elements from products can sometimes create more value than adding features

About Mo Elhawary

Mo brings a unique perspective to creative strategy, having started his career as a pharmacist in Egypt before transitioning into business and marketing. His background in pharmaceuticals provides him with an analytical mindset that he applies to understanding customer psychology and behavior patterns. Mo has worked with notable brands including Huel, Organifi, Dr. Squatch, and Livegood, helping them identify and target customer segments their competitors overlook. He currently operates from Manchester, where he spends his days producing content, attending strategy meetings, and analyzing metrics that most ecommerce brands ignore.

Episode Summary

The conversation begins with Mo explaining his daily responsibilities, which range from delivering creative briefs to working with content creators and analyzing business metrics. However, what sets his approach apart is his focus on reverse engineering customer personas. Rather than accepting surface-level motivations, he digs deeper to understand the core reasons behind purchasing decisions.

Mo introduces the five whys model through a weight loss product example. Most brands focus on product superiority—better ingredients, more testimonials, competitive comparisons. Mo’s approach asks why customers want to lose weight in the first place. The answer might seem obvious at first—to look better. But asking why again reveals deeper motivations. Why do they want to look better? Perhaps to feel attractive to their partners. Why does that matter? Maybe their relationships have suffered. This process continues until the real motivation surfaces.

“Once I find that, then I can understand the core reason why people do need this product,” Mo explains. This methodology led him to help one brand target women aged 45-55 who’d experienced weight gain after having children. These women felt their partners had become distant. They’d tried expensive solutions they couldn’t sustain and cheap alternatives that didn’t work. The brand’s messaging shifted from weight loss benefits to relationship restoration and personal empowerment.

The conversation moves to product development, where Brent asks about creating customer personas. Mo’s response challenges conventional wisdom. “You should never come up with the product without knowing who you’re going to target,” he states firmly. Too many entrepreneurs start with product ideas and then search for customers. Mo advocates for the reverse—identify a problem you personally face, one you’d solve for yourself regardless of whether anyone else buys the solution.

This principle connects to the SIT Design Thinking model, which asks whether products need additions, subtractions, multiplications, or other modifications to serve customers better. Mo uses the evolution of mops as an example. Traditional cleaning required a mop, bucket, and water. Newer versions eliminated the bucket and water entirely, using disposable sheets instead. The product improved by removing elements rather than adding them.

When discussing validation, Mo emphasizes understanding customer awareness levels. Some customers know they have a problem and actively seek solutions. Others don’t recognize their problem exists. Steve Jobs succeeded with the iPhone partly because he believed in solving a problem most people didn’t know they had. “People didn’t mind having phones with buttons,” Mo notes. Jobs created a solution to an unrecognized problem because he personally experienced that problem.

The holiday season strategy reveals Mo’s practical side. He recommends a 70-20-10 framework. Seventy percent of focus and budget should support what’s already working—proven products and strategies. Twenty percent should clear inventory that’s been sitting on shelves. The remaining ten percent can test new concepts, but only if it doesn’t exceed that budget allocation.

“So many brands get distracted and they want to do a million things at the same time during this holiday season and they miss it,” Mo warns. He notes that every day during peak season represents substantial revenue opportunity, making focus critical. He also encourages brands to consider pre-holiday promotions, as customers have learned they’ll receive similar deals whether they buy early or wait.

Brent brings up Amazon’s strategy of creating multiple Prime Days throughout the year, questioning whether brands risk devaluing their offers. Mo acknowledges this concern but suggests the key lies in authenticity—discounts should represent genuine value rather than inflated regular prices marked down.

The episode concludes with Mo’s recommendation to study Huel’s founder story. The founder stepped down from CEO to CMO after recognizing his strengths lay in marketing rather than executive management. This decision exemplifies Mo’s broader philosophy about playing to strengths and building businesses around personal passion rather than forcing yourself into uncomfortable roles.

Throughout the conversation, Mo emphasizes that creative strategy isn’t about working harder or spending more—it’s about understanding customers at a level competitors don’t reach. His approach requires asking uncomfortable questions, challenging assumptions, and digging past surface-level answers until real motivations emerge. This depth of understanding allows brands to create messaging that resonates emotionally while maintaining logical product benefits.

Mo Elhawary demonstrates that effective creative strategy starts with understanding human psychology rather than product features. His five whys model and design thinking framework provide practical tools for brands seeking growth without proportional increases in ad spend. The 70-20-10 holiday framework offers a roadmap for maintaining focus during peak season chaos. Perhaps most valuable is his insistence that products should solve problems founders personally experience—authenticity in business often starts with genuine need.

Final Thoughts

The question remains: are you crafting strategies that merely describe what your products do, or are you creating connections based on why customers truly need them? Because in the world of DTC, that strategic difference might just be what separates sustainable growth from stagnant sameness.


Follow Talk Commerce on your favorite platform:

James Schutrop

How Robotically Handwritten Letters Transform Customer Engagement with James Schutrop

In this episode of Talk Commerce recorded live at Ecomm Forum in Minneapolis, host Brent Peterson sits down with James Schutrop, founder of Scribe. The conversation centers on how businesses can cut through digital noise using robotically handwritten letters that integrate directly into existing CRM systems. James explains how his company’s technology uses real pens and robots to create authentic-looking handwritten correspondence, complete with local postmarks that maintain the personal touch customers crave in an increasingly automated world.

Key Takeaways

  • Consumers receive over 120 emails daily, creating significant digital fatigue that handwritten letters can help overcome
  • Scribe’s robots use real ballpoint pens to create intentional imperfections that make letters appear genuinely handwritten
  • The system integrates directly into existing CRM platforms, allowing businesses to automate handwritten letter campaigns
  • Postmark location matters significantly—letters mailed from out-of-state locations raise red flags and reduce effectiveness
  • Scribe is the only company capable of removing postmarks on individual letters by batching orders to meet USPS requirements
  • An algorithm varies each character so no two letters look identical, passing authenticity tests
  • The technology works best for thank you notes, customer appreciation, and other personal business communications

What is Irish Titan’s Ecomm Forum all about?

About James Schutrop

James Schutrop is the founder of Scribe, a company specializing in robotically handwritten letters for business communications. He’s recognized the growing disconnect between businesses and their customers caused by digital saturation and has developed a scalable solution that combines automation with authentic personal touch. James brings expertise in marketing automation, customer relationship management, and understanding how traditional marketing methods can effectively complement modern digital strategies. Through his work at Scribe, James Schutrop has helped businesses reconnect with their customers by bringing back the lost art of handwritten correspondence.

Episode Summary

The conversation begins with James explaining the core problem his company solves. People are drowning in digital communications, receiving more than 120 emails each day. A standard thank you email doesn’t make recipients feel genuinely appreciated anymore. However, a handwritten letter accomplishes what digital communication can’t—it makes people feel valued and loved. The challenge has always been implementation. While most companies understand they should send handwritten notes to customers, the practice typically stops at the sales manager level and maybe a few top-performing salespeople.

“Almost every company knows that they should be treating their customers better. They should be writing them handwritten thank you letters. But the actual implementation of that usually stops at the sales manager and a couple of the top salespeople,” James notes during the discussion.

Scribe’s solution automates the entire process. The system plugs directly into existing CRM platforms, allowing businesses to upgrade any email flow or automation to include handwritten letter campaigns. Companies can set up the automation and forget about it, knowing their customers will receive personal touches without requiring constant management.

Brent observes the actual machine in operation during the interview, noting that it’s not a printer creating a handwritten effect. James confirms that robots hold real ballpoint pens and write on actual paper, creating authentic indentations and ink variations. The choice of ballpoint pens is intentional. Higher-quality pens could be used, but research shows that the imperfections created by ballpoint pens—including gaps in ink caused by pressure variations—actually increase response rates.

The technology includes an algorithm that varies every individual character. No two O’s look the same. No two E’s look identical. The result passes what James calls “sniff tests,” appearing as though the letter came from a friend or family member rather than a marketing department.

One of the most significant technical achievements James discusses is postmark removal. The postmark is the marking next to the stamp that indicates where a letter was mailed from. Most handwritten letter services mail from a single location, often Arizona or Phoenix. When an insurance agent in Ohio sends a supposedly personal letter to a customer in Ohio, but the postmark shows it came from Arizona, it raises immediate red flags.

“The only reason why handwritten letters work is because it’s the thought that counts and they think you spent the time on it,” James explains. “So if you have that out of state postmark on there, even if everything looks great, if that sets off the red flag for them and do that ad filter in their brain that, okay, maybe this was actually mass produced, they didn’t actually write this, you’re soiling the pond that you’re fishing out of basically.”

Brent shares his personal experience with this exact issue. He’d used a Phoenix-based service to send a letter to his 86-year-old father, who immediately noticed the out-of-state postmark and called him out on it. If an elderly recipient catches it, marketing-savvy customers certainly will.

Scribe solves this problem through a sophisticated batching system. The USPS allows postmark removal for batches exceeding 500 pieces. However, CRM-triggered letters are typically one-off communications sent when specific actions occur. Scribe’s system backpacks hundreds and thousands of individual orders onto each other, producing them in the proper order required by the USPS. Even though each letter is technically a one-off piece triggered by individual customer actions, the system batches and pre-sorts them as bulk mail. This allows Scribe to offer postmark removal on individual pieces, maintaining authenticity where it matters most.

The entire process is automated beyond just the writing. Inserters open envelopes, fold cards, place them inside, apply liquid to seal the envelopes, and prepare them for mailing. The assembly line approach eliminates the manual labor that prevents most businesses from implementing handwritten letter campaigns at scale.

James draws an interesting comparison between marketing trends and fashion. When everyone moves in one direction, the innovative approach often involves returning to what worked 20 or 30 years ago. With artificial intelligence increasing digital noise through more texts, emails, and advertisements, people are craving human interaction more than ever. Handwritten letters provide a breath from the bombardment while still leveraging automation.

For businesses interested in implementing robotically handwritten letters, James directs them to scribehandwritten.com where they can fill out forms or book consultations. He’s also available on LinkedIn under James Schutrop.

Regarding his experience at Ecomm Forum, James notes it’s his first year attending the event in Minneapolis. He’s impressed by the event’s focus on actionable content rather than motivational speaking. He particularly enjoyed the bagpipes signaling everyone to go into the event. “If you’re at an event you’re probably already motivated so try and find events like this where they’re actually giving you something to implement when you walk away,” he observes. James mentions he hasn’t had a chance to check out all the speakers yet but overall thinks it’s a really great event that provides practical implementation strategies rather than just inspiration.

Final Thoughts

The conversation with James Schutrop reveals how businesses can leverage technology to bring back personal touches that digital communications have eliminated. By automating handwritten letters while maintaining authenticity through real pens, character variation algorithms, and local postmarks, companies can scale personalization without sacrificing the human element. As digital noise continues to increase with AI-generated content, the value of tangible, personal communications will only grow. The question isn’t whether your business should explore handwritten automation—it’s whether you can afford not to write off this opportunity to stand out.

Follow Talk Commerce on your favorite platform:

Sharon Gee

Sharon Gee Is Transforming Ecommerce with AI and Agentic Commerce

In this episode of Talk Commerce recorded live from Ecomm Forum in Minneapolis, host Brent Peterson sits down with Sharon Gee, Senior Vice President of Product at Commerce, to discuss the seismic shifts happening in ecommerce. The conversation explores how artificial intelligence and agentic commerce are reshaping the way merchants connect with customers. Sharon brings extensive experience from her six years at Commerce, where she oversees AI offerings across BigCommerce, Feedonomics, and Makeswift. What emerges from this discussion isn’t just another tech conversation but rather a roadmap for merchants navigating the transition from traditional SEO to a world where agents shop alongside humans.

Key Takeaways

  • Data has become the new storefront as consumers increasingly turn to answer engines rather than traditional search
  • Merchants need to provide structured, contextual data to AI agents, not just visually appealing websites for human shoppers
  • The adoption rate of AI tools like ChatGPT has outpaced every other consumer technology in history, including cell phones
  • Product data must now exist on multiple levels, from basic ad information to unstructured content hidden in PDFs
  • B2B commerce stands to benefit significantly from agentic AI, particularly through AI-powered sales assistants
  • Trust protocols are being established to manage transactions between shoppers, shopper agents, merchants, and merchant agents
  • AI democratizes marketing tools, allowing creative thinkers to execute ideas without engineering expertise
  • User reviews represent a treasure trove of search terms that should inform product descriptions

What is Irish Titan’s Ecomm Forum all about?

About Sharon Gee

Sharon serves as Senior Vice President of the Product Organization at Commerce, where she focuses on AI offerings across the company’s portfolio. She played a key role in leading the acquisition strategy for Feedonomics four years ago and served as General Manager of that business during its successful integration. Before joining Commerce, Sharon spent time agency-side in New York City. Her expertise spans ecommerce platforms, enterprise data feed management, and visual editing solutions. Outside her professional life, Sharon owns a flower farm and coffee shop in Colorado, offering her a unique perspective that balances digital commerce with hands-on retail experience. Throughout the industry, Sharon has become recognized for her insights on how AI and data optimization can transform merchant visibility and customer acquisition.

Episode Summary

The conversation begins with Sharon outlining her role at Commerce and immediately diving into what she describes as the most exciting development in ecommerce: agentic commerce. She explains that for decades, commerce professionals have been optimizing data for advertising channels, trying to improve conversion rates and return on ad spend. However, the fundamental rules remained consistent—acquire customers through Google or Meta, drive them to your website, and hope to convert them at rates between two and five percent.

“Somebody came along and bopped the board game and now we get to reset all the pieces,” Sharon explains. The game-changer is that consumers now turn to answer engines for their most basic questions. These aren’t simple queries based on price or size filters. Instead, shoppers ask complex questions like wanting a dress for a wedding in Italy in a specific color and size, delivered by tomorrow. This shift requires merchants to bring together data from marketing channels, internal systems, and content teams because data has become the new storefront.

Sharon emphasizes that answer engines need deep context to respond to long-form queries effectively. The challenge for merchants becomes ensuring their products are discoverable wherever shoppers are looking and making it easy to shop however the consumer prefers—whether that means clicking through to a personalized product page where they can visualize furniture in their living room or buying mascara with a thumbprint because they already know what they want.

The conversation then shifts to the technical differences between old SEO practices and the new reality of AI-driven discovery. Sharon points out that ChatGPT reached 100 million users faster than any other technology in history. This rapid adoption creates both opportunity and challenge. Answer engines need data, and while they can scrape websites for it, those websites aren’t optimized for agents. They’re full of HTML, images, and visual elements designed for human brains, not for AI consumption.

Sharon introduces a framework for thinking about data levels. Level one includes basic information needed for Google ads—title, description, image, size, color, and weight. Level two encompasses the significantly more extensive data required to list on marketplaces like Amazon. Level three consists of product specifications sitting in Product Information Management systems—manufacturing details, materials, origins, and technical specs. Levels four and five venture into unstructured data territory, including PDFs on websites and user reviews.

“That’s not the kind of data you usually show on a product detail page,” Sharon notes. This creates what she calls a bifurcated experience. Merchants now need to provision different experiences because agents are customers too. When an agent visits a site, it doesn’t need pretty pictures—it needs structured data and links to images it might want to reference.

Brent raises the question of whether this means adding data below the fold on product pages or creating entirely separate experiences. Sharon confirms the latter. When a merchant senses that an agent rather than a human is visiting, they should render a different version of the website filled with data rather than images. This aligns with what Sharon identifies as three fundamental truths: the customer is the channel, data is the new storefront, and agents are customers too.

The discussion moves to whether merchant sites might eventually become pure APIs without customer-facing elements. Sharon argues for a both-and approach. The brand site remains one channel where people interact with data, and it’s the one channel merchants fully control. However, on third-party agentic channels, merchants don’t control visualization—they only control the data they provide. This makes data investment critical for visibility on channels merchants don’t control, while simultaneously requiring deep investment in owned channels.

Sharon draws a parallel to how marketers have always known that sending better data to Google results in lower cost-per-click because the data more relevantly answers searcher queries. She observes that data specialists are inheriting the earth—the people who once led organic search, then paid advertising, now lead agentic strategy. This mirrors how creative directors once ran websites before being replaced by people who could read website analytics.

The conversation touches on both first-party and third-party AI applications. Sharon describes the baby version of what’s coming as shopper assistants or chatbot experiences on brand websites. However, she sees massive potential in B2B sales assistants trained on the same documentation as human sales representatives. If three-quarters of the sales cycle could progress overnight while sales reps sleep, those reps could focus on high-touch human interactions. Sharon believes B2B commerce will leapfrog B2C experiences through agentic AI because B2B companies are manufacturers with deep data, extensive documentation, and sophisticated pricing structures with custom price books and customer groups.

Brent raises concerns about AI reliability, noting his frustrations with coding assistants that make illogical mistakes and assumptions. He envisions scenarios where an agent searching for hiking shoes for Tuscany presents three options but autonomously purchases one without confirmation. Sharon acknowledges these valid concerns and explains that commerce platforms, channel partners, and payment partners are collaborating on protocols to address exactly these issues.

“You’ve seen more open protocols released in the past six months than like the previous 10 years combined,” Sharon observes. Companies across the industry recognize that nobody wants an internet that isn’t safe or trustworthy. Trust becomes paramount when authorizing agents to shop on behalf of consumers. The human-in-the-loop component requires careful protocol design because transactions now involve four parties: a shopper, a shopper agent, a merchant, and a merchant agent. All four must trust each other.

Sharon mentions specific initiatives like Stripe ACP and PayPal protocols, as well as Google’s AP2 and other agentic protocols. Technology companies are leaning into these challenges because the problems are both complex and exciting. Meanwhile, attorneys are appropriately concerned about data security. Sharon frames this moment as one where the new rules of the internet are being written in the agentic space.

The opportunities this creates excite Sharon tremendously. She asks Brent to imagine rewriting an entire product catalog with a button click using generative AI, based on search terms from various channels. A merchant could refocus their entire catalog around Halloween instantly. Previous limitations—insufficient copywriters or creative resources—no longer apply. While many discuss AI primarily as a cost-reduction tool for operational efficiency, Sharon emphasizes its role as a growth enabler. AI provides jet fuel for existing team members, unlocking capabilities and scale never before possible because humans are freed from operational tasks that robots handle better.

“I would love it if our generation is the last one to use a mouse and a keyboard,” Sharon declares, capturing her optimism about AI’s potential to improve user experiences fundamentally.

Brent agrees and adds that AI’s greatest value for merchants might be identifying what they’re not doing rather than what they should be doing. Instead of worrying about generating content, merchants should focus on finding patterns in their data that reveal missing content opportunities.

Sharon confirms that many Commerce customers use tools to define simulated personas based on actual users, then understand what queries those personas might ask on various channels. Based on those questions, merchants can determine what content they need. She returns to the example of someone in Colorado planning an Italy vacation—does a merchant have the right content to ensure their products get referenced instead of competitors’ products?

Sharon believes marketers who understand what shoppers actually want and can articulate their unique value proposition will win because AI has democratized tooling. All platforms are working to ensure an open, trusted transactional experience with secure data presentation. For brand marketers, this represents an extraordinary opportunity. An army of agents can now support goals that previously required engineering expertise. If someone can think it, dream it, and believe it would deliver good outcomes, they can do it.

As the conversation concludes, Sharon reflects on why she values Ecom Forum. She praises Darin and the Titans group as heartfelt humans in commerce who curate thought leaders dealing with real implementation problems. Despite AI’s omnipresence, Sharon reminds listeners that commerce still centers on humans. Sharon Gee’s insights reveal that success in this new landscape requires merchants to embrace data as their most valuable asset while never losing sight of the human experiences they’re ultimately trying to enhance.

Final Thoughts

The transformation Sharon describes isn’t coming—it’s already here. Merchants who recognize that data has become their new storefront and invest accordingly will capture outsized visibility in channels where attention is rapidly shifting. The bifurcation between human and agent experiences requires technical sophistication, but platforms are building the infrastructure to make this transition manageable. What remains constant is the need to understand customers deeply and articulate unique value clearly. As protocols establish trust frameworks for this four-party transaction ecosystem, the merchants who win won’t just be the ones with the best technology. They’ll be the ones who recognize that while agents are shopping, humans are still the ones making the final decisions—and both deserve experiences built specifically for them. In the end, you might say the future of commerce isn’t just about making transactions easier—it’s about making discovery more intelligent and trust more transparent, one data point at a time.


Follow Talk Commerce on your favorite platform:

Talk-Commerce Jacob Baadsgaard

Smart Scaling Secrets from Disruptive Advertising’s Jacob Baadsgaard

In a recent episode of my podcast, I had the pleasure of hosting Jacob Baadsgaard, the founder of Disruptive Advertising. We delved into his journey from starting as a freelancer in his basement to becoming the founder of a thriving agency. We also discussed his passions, the importance of balance, and the lessons he learned from being out of balance in the past.

The Journey of Disruptive Advertising

Jacob shared about his day-to-day role at Disruptive Advertising and his passion for helping businesses reach their potential. He revealed that Disruptive Advertising started as a freelance side gig in his basement and has now grown into a thriving agency with employees across the country.

Life Beyond Work

When asked about his passions outside of work, Jacob mentioned that his biggest passion project is his four kids. He recently took his oldest daughter on an adventure to New Zealand, which was a great bonding experience for them. Jacob also enjoys zone two cardio, spending time on the bike or running outside while listening to books. He finds that these workouts help him clear his mind and feel connected to his life.

Transitioning Roles and the EOS Model

Jacob discussed his transition from the CEO role to focusing on his passions within the company. He has stepped away from the day-to-day management and execution of the business to focus on developing education and experiences for digital marketers. He emphasized the importance of working on the business rather than in the business and the need to let go of how things get done while maintaining a clear vision and strategic direction.

We also discussed the EOS (Entrepreneurial Operating System) model, which we both use in our businesses. The EOS model provides simplicity and clarity, allowing everyone in the organization to be on the same page and work towards a common goal.

Core Values and Mission of Disruptive Advertising

Jacob touched on the core values and mission of Disruptive Advertising. They have a unique approach to operating below industry benchmarks in terms of margin. Instead of focusing solely on profitability, they have a profit-sharing program and a personal development budget for their employees, investing in their growth and well-being.

Unique Aspects of Disruptive Advertising

Jacob explained three unique aspects of Disruptive Advertising. First, they limit the number of clients they work with, focusing on quality rather than quantity. Second, Disruptive Advertising is the top-rated performance marketing agency, with many happy customers. Lastly, Jacob emphasized the importance of alignment between business goals and marketing strategy.

The Role of Guessing in Marketing

We discussed the role of guessing in marketing. Jacob emphasized that guessing in marketing leads to nowhere and compares it to steering a rudderless ship. He appreciates the fact that on our podcast, we don’t give advice but rather share our own experiences.

The Current Disruptor in Advertising

When asked about the current disruptor in advertising, Jacob responded that AI is the game-changer in marketing right now. He expressed excitement about the possibilities of AI, such as chatGPT and image/graphic creation. He believes that AI will make marketers more valuable by freeing them from repetitive tasks and allowing them to focus on strategy and creativity.

My conversation with Jacob Baadsgaard was insightful and inspiring. His journey from a basement freelancer to the founder of a top-rated agency, his passion for his family and fitness, and his insights into the future of marketing were all enlightening. I look forward to seeing what Disruptive Advertising will achieve in the future under his visionary leadership.