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    allbirds

    Explore " allbirds" with insightful episodes like "A Recruiter’s Perspective on Job Search Strategy: Part 1", "Guest: Chris Jones of Descartes on labor shortages; Rail safety one year out from East Palestine derailment; Versatile AMRs", "Greenwashing, Sustainability, and Shopping", "Sounds Like San Francisco, A Shopify Masters Miniseries" and "Crbnly Decisions Rant" from podcasts like ""How I Hire", "Logistics Matters with DC VELOCITY", "Crbnly Conversations", "Shopify Masters" and "Crbnly Conversations"" and more!

    Episodes (27)

    A Recruiter’s Perspective on Job Search Strategy: Part 1

    A Recruiter’s Perspective on Job Search Strategy: Part 1

    Kate Sargent is a talent acquisition expert and job search strategy coach, assisting both companies and candidates alike in matching top talent with career defining roles. In Part 1 of their deep dive conversation, Kate and Roy discuss how candidates can successfully approach and prepare for a job search, and how fostering authentic relationships in the networking process can make or break a job search.

    Kate lends a unique perspective to the conversation – she’s served as Head of Global Talent Acquisition for iconic brands like Allbirds and Method, and has most recently served as the VP of People Operations at The Citizenry. Simultaneously, Kate’s built a successful career coaching business, helping candidates refine their search strategy, hone their job seeking assets, and distill their experience into highly relevant and engaging interviews. Her expansive knowledge of the talent pipeline and acquisition process make this discussion essential listening for both candidates and recruiters. 

    Highlights from our conversation include:

    • How Kate coaches and supports job seekers (3:59)
    • How to prepare for a job search  (5:47)
    • The importance of distilling and communicating personal narratives (11:29)
    • Ways in which Kate helps job candidates develop a focused job search (17:02)
    • How to track progress during the job search (22:23)
    • Using resources like Linkedin to research roles, network, and maintain relationships (25:36)
    • Ways to foster authentic and reciprocal relationships (27:29)
    • Tips to help job seekers network more successfully (30:26)
    • Building and maintaining relationships with recruiters (34:18)

    Visit HowIHire.com for transcripts and more on this episode.

    Follow Roy Notowitz and Noto Group Executive Search on LinkedIn for updates and featured career opportunities.

    Subscribe to How I Hire:

    Guest: Chris Jones of Descartes on labor shortages; Rail safety one year out from East Palestine derailment; Versatile AMRs

    Guest: Chris Jones of Descartes on labor shortages; Rail safety one year out from East Palestine derailment; Versatile AMRs

    Our guest on this week's episode is Chris Jones, executive vice president of industry for Descartes. Unemployment rates in the United States continue to be under 4% - the latest report released today shows unemployment currently at 3.7%. The low unemployment further demonstrates the growing strength of the overall economy. However, one thing that may stifle additional growth is the difficulty of finding good workers with so few people looking for new jobs. Logistics technology company Descartes has just completed a study called How Bad Is the Supply Chain and Logistics Workforce Challenge?  We talk about the results of the study and what it means for finding workers to run our supply chains.

    It has been a year since that terrible railroad accident in East Palestine, Ohio. Since then, the railroad industry, Congress, and safety agencies have been haggling over how to make trains safer to prevent such future accidents. Railroads have proposed some voluntary measures to increase safety while at the same time stifling a bill in Congress that would mandate some safety procedures. We discuss where things stand now.

    From warehouses to farms, autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) are helping boost productivity, save labor, and continuously improve operations. We look at the cover story for the  February issue of DC Velocity that discusses how AMRs are reshaping the warehousing landscape and even influencing how work is done in other industries.


    CSCMP's Supply Chain Xchange  also offers a podcast series called Supply Chain in the Fast Lane.  It is co-produced with the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals.  Go to your favorite podcast platform to subscribe and to listen to past and future episodes.


    Articles and resources mentioned in this episode:

    Podcast is sponsored by: Aptean

    Other links

    Greenwashing, Sustainability, and Shopping

    Greenwashing, Sustainability, and Shopping

    With the help of our robot friends, we've made today's summary into a poem:

    Yo, the crew spittin' truths on buyin' choices,
    Staying Crbnly, hear our voices.
    Future plans teased, episode schemes,
    Chad drops knowledge, debunking greenwash dreams.

    Stephen checks in from Florida's breeze,
    Grocery tales with his mom, easy please.
    From produce aisles to wine and bourbon,
    Topics twist and turn, never swervin'

    Find and join the Conversation!
    @crbnly on the IG
    Crbnly Conversations on YouTube
    Tik Tok
    Buzzsprout for all the Casts
    and X marks the spot

    Music and beats mixed by A. Sarr.
    Reach out to learn about the skills and beats you need in your life

    Sounds Like San Francisco, A Shopify Masters Miniseries

    Sounds Like San Francisco, A Shopify Masters Miniseries

    Shopify Masters is back with a brand new miniseries from San Francisco. 

    Join Benjamin Gottlieb and Shuang Esther Shan as they sit down with Shopify legends from our San Francisco office.

    Episodes drop each Thursday for the next couple months. 

    If you like what you hear - and would like to listen to more in person interviews - make sure to  subscribe and leave a review wherever you listen to your podcasts.

    For a full catalog of episodes, check us out online: https://www.shopify.com/blog/topics/podcasts

     

    Crbnly Decisions Rant

    Crbnly Decisions Rant

    The crew rants about purchasing decisions and how to keep or stay Crbnly. We also sneak some future episode planning into the conversation and Chad digs further into greenwashing and why it matters to consumers. Plus we get a check in from Stephen and his Florida grocery shopping with his mother and somehow we end up talking about wine and bourbon.

    Find and join the Conversation!
    @crbnly on the IG
    Crbnly Conversations on YouTube
    Tik Tok
    Buzzsprout for all the Casts
    and X marks the spot

    Music and beats mixed by A. Sarr.
    Reach out to learn about the skills and beats you need in your life

    Natural Fiber Welding's Plastic Free FUTUREVVORLD

    Natural Fiber Welding's Plastic Free FUTUREVVORLD

    Luke Haverhals came to the latest episode of Progress Over Perfection donned in items made with his own brand’s materials: a Ralph Lauren tee and Allbirds kicks. Clearly, he’s a man on a mission. And his mission is to get humans off the petrochemical supply chain and back onto the natural one.

    Haverhals is the CEO and Founder of NFW (Natural Fiber Welding), known for its revolutionary plant-based materials MIRUM® and CLARUS®, and used by the likes of Camper and Pangaia. At NFW, if it ain’t 100 percent it ain’t good enough. If you take a look at the materials that it produces, you won’t find a drop of petrol or toxic chemicals anywhere. Whereas some companies may mix plastic-based materials with plant-based ones, NFW is 100 percent plastic free.

    We sat down with Haverhals for a very interesting chat that moved from the efficiencies of engineered materials (a roll of MIRUM is much more efficient than an irregular shaped cow hide) to the hard economic truths of next-gen material production, and how to be “compatible with the Earth.”

    Haverhals and Daniel Navetta, FVV’s Co-Founder and Editor-in-Chief, also talked about what real transparency and traceability looks like. Humanity is “destined to end in tragedy [if we’re not] truthful and holistic about how we measure and discuss our impact,” says Haverhals. “And that’s something that’s not happening well in our world right now.”

    The big issue of scalability was also tackled. “If you want to change the world, you've got to get thousands of brands, including the biggest brands in the world, to show up to your place of business,” says Haverhals. You’ve got to go all in. And if the problem you’re facing is as destructive as the climate crisis, your solutions better be moonshot in ambition.

    “When you look at the 2050, 2030 climate goals, human rights goals, those things will not happen with people who simply do incremental tinkering on the current system. It requires radical vision and disruption of the current system. Not every part of the system, but certain parts cannot stay the same and should not be recognizable by 2050.”

    Plenty more fascinating subjects are addressed, including why we should think about materials as nutrients for the Earth. It’s tasty stuff.

    <>

    If you enjoyed this episode, or any of our episodes, please subscribe, rate us and leave a comment. It would be greatly appreciated.

    Also, be sure to sign up for our newsletter at futurevvorld.com and follow us on Instagram @futurevvorld.

    ESG: useful concept or greenwashing? w/ Rachel Baird & Stephen Howell, Effective Governance - EP145

    ESG: useful concept or greenwashing? w/ Rachel Baird & Stephen Howell, Effective Governance - EP145

    ESG, short for environmental, social, and governance, is proving difficult for companies to implement in practice, and some have been accused of greenwashing. What exactly is ESG and has it come to the end of its useful life, as the Financial Times has suggested may be the case? Joining show host Gene Tunny to discuss ESG are some highly experienced corporate governance experts: Dr Rachel Baird and Stephen Howell, part of HopgoodGanim Lawyers. Both Stephen and Rachel advise boards on ESG matters and Rachel is currently facilitating the Law & Sustainability short course delivered in partnership between Pearson and Oxford University.

    In this episode you’ll learn how good corporate governance is the critical foundation for everything, and how company leaders should ensure their company’s policies are not dictated by inexperienced people posing as ESG experts pushing their own agendas.  

    Links relevant to the conversation

    Dr Rachel Baird, GAICD, FGIA - Director - IcebergSRC | LinkedIn

    Stephen Howell - Director - Effective Governance - Part of the HopgoodGanim Advisory Group | LinkedIn

    Origins and Consequences of the ESG Moniker (paper mentioned by Rachel in the episode)

    Who Cares Wins 2005 Conference Report: Investing for Long-Term Value

    Tim Paine scandal a mess of Cricket Australia's making — and it will get worse - ABC News

    How ESG investing came to a reckoning | Financial Times

    Effective Governance

    Thanks to the show’s audio engineer Josh Crotts for his assistance in producing the episode, to HopgoodGanim for providing a room to record in, and to the show’s sponsor, Gene’s consultancy business www.adepteconomics.com.au

    Please consider signing up to receive our email updates and to access our e-book Top Ten Insights from Economics at www.economicsexplored.com. Also, please get in touch with any questions, comments and suggestions by emailing us at contact@economicsexplored.com or sending a voice message via https://www.speakpipe.com/economicsexplored. Economics Explored is available via Apple Podcasts, Google Podcast, and other podcasting platforms.

    Digitally Native Brands Hit The Wall

    Digitally Native Brands Hit The Wall

     

    Despite all the hype, after gobs of venture capital investment, several high profile IPO's and some big moves into physical retail, the OG's of the new wave of DTC are running into trouble. Most of the digitally native brands that were supposed to disrupt the retail industry (think Warby Parker, Stitch Fix, Allbirds, Caspar, and many more) may be growing the top-line--though not even Wayfair and Peloton can say that anymore--but their operating losses continue to grow.

    Virtually all of them have seen their market valuations collapse in recent months. And the once promising pivot to opening stores must be called into question, particularly as the entire industry faces growing headwinds.

    In this episode we dive deep into just what the heck is going on here and whether the hugely disappointing recent results from Warby Parker suggest a possible reset for the new breed of DTC brands. 

    But first we open up with the retail news that caught our attention this week, including earnings reports from Target, Walmart, Kohl's and Lowe's that were, to put it mildly, rather disturbing. We also discuss whether it's a great idea for Amazon to buy Kohl's or whether they'd just be catching a falling knife. As an added bonus we also learn that you haven't lived until you've visited a Las Vegas ER in the wee hours of the morning. 

    And lastly, don't forget that Steve's book has been selected as a Kindle Monthly Deal, which means that through May 31 the ebook version of Remarkable Retail: How to Win & Keep Customers in the Age of Disruption is just $1.99 in both the United States and Canada.

    ***************************************

    Insider Intelligence Report

    D2C Brands 2022


    Steve Recent Forbes Relevant Articles 

    Store Expansion May Not Be A Slam Dunk For Struggling Digitally Native Brands

    Wayfair's Earnings Disaster Portends More Trouble For 'Disruptor' Brands


    Past Podcast Episodes We Reference

    Understanding Customer-Based Valuation with Dan McCarthy

    The Profitless Prosperity of Disruptor Brands

     

    About Us

    Steve Dennis is an advisor, keynote speaker and author on strategic growth and business innovation. You can learn more about Steve on his       website.    The expanded and revised edition of his bestselling book  Remarkable Retail: How To Win & Keep Customers in the Age of Disruption is now available at  Amazon or just about anywhere else books are sold. Steve regularly shares his insights in his role as a      Forbes senior contributor and on       Twitter and       LinkedIn. You can also check out his speaker "sizzle" reel      here.


    Michael LeBlanc  is the Founder & President of M.E. LeBlanc & Company Inc and a Senior Advisor to Retail Council of Canada as part of his advisory and consulting practice.   He brings 25+ years of brand/retail/marketing & eCommerce leadership experience, and has been on the front lines of retail industry change for his entire career.  Michael is the producer and host of a network of leading podcasts including Canada’s top retail industry podcast,       The Voice of Retail, plus  Global E-Commerce Tech Talks  ,      The Food Professor  with Dr. Sylvain Charlebois and now in its second season, Conversations with CommerceNext!  You can learn more about Michael   here  or on     LinkedIn. 

    Be sure and check out Michael's latest venture for fun and influencer riches - Last Request Barbecue,  his YouTube BBQ cooking channel!

    About Us

    Steve Dennis is a strategic advisor, board member, and keynote speaker focused on strategic growth and transformation and the impact of digital disruption. He is the author of the bestselling book Remarkable Retail: How To Win & Keep Customers in the Age of Disruption and the forthcoming Leaders Leap: Transforming Your Company at the Speed of Disruption , which will be published in April 2024 and is now available for pre-order at book retailers everywhere. Steve regularly shares his insights in his role as a Forbes senior contributor and on social media..

    Don't forget to join Steve's new Linked Group for his new book.


    Michael LeBlanc  is the Founder & President of M.E. LeBlanc & Company Inc and a Senior Advisor to Retail Council of Canada as part of his advisory and consulting practice, a keynote speaker around the world and consumer growth consultant.   He brings 25+ years of brand/retail/marketing & eCommerce leadership experience, and has been on the front lines of retail industry change for his entire career.  Michael is the producer and host of a network of leading podcasts including Canada’s top retail industry podcast,   The Voice of Retail, plus  Global eCommerce Leaders podcast, and The Food Professor , Canada's top food industry podcasts and one of the top management podcasts in the nation according to Apple, with Dr. Sylvain Charlebois.    You can learn more about Michael  on  LinkedIn. 

    Be sure and check out Michael's Last Request Barbecue,  his YouTube BBQ cooking channel!

    The Best Earth-Friendlier Sneakers of 2021

    The Best Earth-Friendlier Sneakers of 2021

    It’s officially the New Year, but we at FUTUREVVORLD aren’t quite done looking back at the sneakers 2021 brought us. We saw an array of plant-based, recycled, and vegan alternative materials used to reimagine classics and innovate performance footwear. Companies and creators came together to help push the boundaries of Earth-friendly design. Even, new circular processes were introduced to ensure the shoe you log miles in don’t truly go to waste.

    Last year, there were a lot of great examples that showcased the progress the footwear industry has made in becoming more environmentally responsible. Of course, consuming and producing more product takes the industry away from being truly sustainable, but the efforts are there, and we’re happy to see them. And excited for what’s to come!

    So for those looking to buy better, or those that are just curious about the progression of footwear, listen in to this episode. We'll list out our favorite pairs from last year and explain our rationale behind each choice. Of course, you have to see it to believe it, so head over to our website to see the full list

    Thanks for tuning in!

    Ana Andjelic: Brands are not just economic entities, they're also social + cultural entities

    Ana Andjelic: Brands are not just economic entities, they're also social + cultural entities

    Highlights from the conversation:

    • If you build upon communities that have organically been created, the chances of success are much higher
    • People are not buying products, people are buying stories
    • [Brands] not just an economic entity, [they’re] a social entity or cultural entity
    • The most successful brands piggyback on their existing communities
    • If you're not part of someone else's story, then you're in trouble
    • Collaborations are not brand extensions. It's a big mistake to treat them as such

     

    More about Ana Andjelic

    Named one of the World's Most Influential CMOs by Forbes, Ana Andjelic is the Chief Brand Officer of Banana Republic and author of “The Business of Aspiration." She specialises in building brand-driven modern businesses and runs a weekly newsletter, The Sociology of Business. Ana earned her doctorate in sociology and worked at the world’s top brands and advertising agencies. She is a widely read columnist, speaker and advisor.

    Find Ana here: Website | Medium | LinkedIn | Instagram | Twitter

     

    Show notes

    Companies and organisations:

    Miscellaneous:

     

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    One More Question is a podcast by Nicework, a purpose-driven company helping people who want to make a dent in the world by building brands people give a shit about.

    One of the things we do best is ask our clients the right questions. This podcast came about because we want to share some of the best answers we have heard over the last 13 years. We talk to significant creators, experts and communicators we encounter and share useful insights, inspiration, and facts that make us stop and take note as we go about our work.

    Hosted by our founder Ross Drakes.

    Subscribe iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, Google Podcasts

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    Understanding Warby Parker and the Power of Customer-Based Valuation with special guest Daniel McCarthy

    Understanding Warby Parker and the Power of Customer-Based Valuation with special guest Daniel McCarthy

    As pioneering digitally-native brands Warby Parker and Allbirds prepare to go public--and the fortunes of other highflying disruptor retailers like Peloton and Chewy ebb and flow--we get the chance to dissect how to make sense of key customer metrics with Daniel McCarthy, professor of marketing at Emory's Goizueta Business School, co-founder of Theta Equity Partners and pioneering thought leader on customer-based corporate valuation. It's a fast-paced MasterClass on how the cost of acquisition, retention rates and other customer cohort data provide valuable insight on the long-term prospects of any brand. We also learn whether Dan is bullish on Warby Parker, why we may not work so hard to chase "shifty" customers (or as Steve likes to call them "promiscuous" shoppers) and drop more than a few puns.


    But first we open up the episode with our quick takes on recent retail news that caught out attention, starting first with even more Amazon news than usual, including their new line of private brand televisions, plans to hire 125,000 distribution center staff, raise hourly wages and pay college tuition for their workers. We also dig into spending per trip information from NPD, monthly US Commerce data that shows consumers continue to shop like crazy, troubles at Casper, Walmart+ hitting 32 million members and the sad story of Sears closing its last Illinois store.

    NOTE: We're now back to regular weekly episodes.

    Also check out our newish   YouTube channel.

    Daniel McCarthy is an Assistant Professor of Marketing at Emory University's Goizueta School of Business. His research specialty is the application of leading-edge statistical methodology to contemporary empirical marketing problems. His research interests include customer lifetime value, limited data problems, and the marketing/finance interface.

    He popularized “customer-based corporate valuation” (CBCV), a methodology that drives any traditional valuation model off of the underlying behaviors of the target company's customers. His work has been featured in major media outlets such as the Harvard Business Review, Wall Street Journal, FT, Fortune, Barron’s, Inc Magazine, the Economist, and CNBC. His research has been accepted and published in top-tier academic journals and has won numerous research awards.

    In addition to his roles and responsibilities at Emory, Dan co-founded and was Chief Statistician for Zodiac, a predictive customer analytics SaaS firm. Nike acquired Zodiac in March 2018. Dan has since co-founded Theta Equity Partners to revolutionize how firms (e.g., private equity, venture capital, and operating companies directly) value companies through CBCV

    Steve Dennis is an advisor, keynote speaker and author on strategic growth and business innovation. You can learn more about Steve on his       website.    The expanded and revised edition of his bestselling book  Remarkable Retail: How To Win & Keep Customers in the Age of Disruption is now available at  Amazon or just about anywhere else books are sold. Steve regularly shares his insights in his role as a      Forbes senior contributor and on       Twitter and       LinkedIn. You can also check out his speaker "sizzle" reel      here.


    Michael LeBlanc  is the Founder & President of M.E. LeBlanc & Company Inc and a Senior Advisor to Retail Council of Canada as part of his advisory and consulting practice.   He brings 25+ years of brand/retail/marketing & eCommerce leadership experience, and has been on the front lines of retail industry change for his entire career.  Michael is the producer and host of a network of leading podcasts including Canada’s top retail industry podcast,       The Voice of Retail, plus        Global E-Commerce Tech Talks  and       The Food Professor  with Dr. Sylvain Charlebois.  You can learn more about Michael       here  or on       LinkedIn. 


     

    Please drop us a rating and review wherever you subscribe to your podcasts and be sure to check out our newish YouTube channel

    About Us

    Steve Dennis is a strategic advisor, board member, and keynote speaker focused on strategic growth and transformation and the impact of digital disruption. He is the author of the bestselling book Remarkable Retail: How To Win & Keep Customers in the Age of Disruption and the forthcoming Leaders Leap: Transforming Your Company at the Speed of Disruption , which will be published in April 2024 and is now available for pre-order at book retailers everywhere. Steve regularly shares his insights in his role as a Forbes senior contributor and on social media..

    Don't forget to join Steve's new Linked Group for his new book.


    Michael LeBlanc  is the Founder & President of M.E. LeBlanc & Company Inc and a Senior Advisor to Retail Council of Canada as part of his advisory and consulting practice, a keynote speaker around the world and consumer growth consultant.   He brings 25+ years of brand/retail/marketing & eCommerce leadership experience, and has been on the front lines of retail industry change for his entire career.  Michael is the producer and host of a network of leading podcasts including Canada’s top retail industry podcast,   The Voice of Retail, plus  Global eCommerce Leaders podcast, and The Food Professor , Canada's top food industry podcasts and one of the top management podcasts in the nation according to Apple, with Dr. Sylvain Charlebois.    You can learn more about Michael  on  LinkedIn. 

    Be sure and check out Michael's Last Request Barbecue,  his YouTube BBQ cooking channel!

    Private equity giveth, and private equity taketh away

    Private equity giveth, and private equity taketh away

    Natasha and Alex and Grace and Chris gathered to dig through the week's biggest happenings, including some news of our own. As a note, Equity's Monday episode will be landing next Tuesday, thanks to a national holiday here in the United States. And we have something special planned for Wednesday, so stay tuned.

    Ok! Here's the rundown from the show:

    That's a wrap from us for the week! Keep your head atop your shoulders and have a great weekend!

    Credits: Equity is hosted by TechCrunch's Alex Wilhelm and Mary Ann Azevedo. We are produced by Theresa Loconsolo with editing by Kell. Bryce Durbin is our Illustrator. We'd also like to thank the audience development team and Henry Pickavet, who manages TechCrunch audio products.

    How to Do the Retail Zigzag with Richard Kestenbaum, Co-Founder and Partner of Triangle Capital

    How to Do the Retail Zigzag with Richard Kestenbaum, Co-Founder and Partner of Triangle Capital

    This episode features an interview with Richard Kestenbaum, Co-Founder and Partner of Triangle Capital. As an investment banker, author, and speaker, Richard has spent his career advising clients in the retail & consumer sector, with a speciality for mergers & acquisitions. 

    On this episode, Richard discusses the importance of running your business as though you’re never going to sell it, how consumer tastes have shifted to focus on brand values, and what legacy companies can learn from young upstarts.

    3 Takeaways:

    • Consumers today want products from companies that convey values like sustainability, ethical supply chain, and local production. The ability to adapt to those changes in an authentic way is where young upstarts succeed while legacy retailers struggle.
    • Run your business as though you’re never going to sell it. Buyers are generally very smart, and when they see that you're making investments for the long term that will benefit them, they’re going to give you more credit for it.
    • What is a store? It used to be a place to sell “stuff.” Now, it functions as a space to deliver experiences and raise brand awareness.

    Key Quotes: 

    • “It’s not that online and stores are different channels. There are no channels. There is only the consumer, and wherever they are, you have to find the best way to sell to them.”
    • “We don’t talk enough about Artificial intelligence and machine learning...what we are observing now is a land grab in technology, because whoever becomes the leader has the opportunity to remain the leader.”
    • “What I look for in a great company is: is the technology transformative, and is this the team that understands they’re standing in front of a brick wall, and they have to figure out a way to go through it, under it, around it, knowing full well that behind that wall is another wall.”

    This podcast is presented by Dell Technologies and Intel. Together they help you realize digital transformation across retail by driving IT innovation to better engage with today’s connected consumer. Learn more at DellTechnologies.com/retail and Intel.com/retail.

    150 Following opportunity with Emmett Shine, Co-founder of Pattern Brands

    150 Following opportunity with Emmett Shine, Co-founder of Pattern Brands

    For Emmett Shine, being in the right place at the right time was never a matter of luck — it was a matter of hustle. It was a practice in leveling up a bit before you're ready, but not overstretching.
     

    After designing, building, and strategizing some of the most iconic modern brands — from Sweetgreen and Whole Foods to Warby Parker and Everlane — his design agency Gin Lane closed to pursue Pattern Brands. They're scaling down and venturing out to build a thoughtful collaborative of home brands that are, of course, stunningly functional and instantly essential.

    In this episode, Emmett cuts right to the chase of what it took to get in the room with legacy fashion brands, the design and marketing strategy that built iconic ecommerce brands, and what he's looking for in new brands for Pattern.

    Visit the Lumi blog for links and images.

    Being Strong Like Water with Laila Tarraf - Chief People Officer at Allbirds

    Being Strong Like Water with Laila Tarraf - Chief People Officer at Allbirds

    Looking for inspiring reading this summer? My next guest has written a deeply moving and insightful book that I know you’re going to love!

    Laila Tarraf, is author of Strong Like Water: How I Found the Courage to Lead with Love in Business and in Life Laila offers us insights and inspiration for finding a natural balance and leading as a whole person—with compassion, courage, intellect and empathy. In this conversation Laila shares her deeply personal stories of what motived this book, and what can help you too!

    (Guest Bio)

    After graduating with an MBA from the Haas School of Business at the University of California at Berkeley, Laila Tarraf became one of the founding team members at Walmart.com. She then served as Chief People Officer at Peet’s Coffee and Tea, an iconic San Francisco Bay Area premium coffee company. Currently, Laila is the Chief People Officer at AllBirds- the sustainable shoes and clothing company whose products are made with natural materials like merino wool and eucalyptus.

    Find Laila Tarraf on:

    LinkedIn

    Facebook

    Instagram

    -----------------

    Check out the book! - Fearless: Girls with Dreams, Women with Vision

    The Fearless Women Podcast

    fearlesswomenpodcast@gmail.com

    The Beacon Agency

    Sponsors:

    BDC

    Lockheed Martin

    Export Development Canada

     

    Obsessed: Building A Brand People Love from Day One

    Obsessed: Building A Brand People Love from Day One

    This week we welcome Emily Heyward, the cofounder and chief brand officer  of Red Antler as our guest to help understand what branding is all about, why it is so important and what it takes to build and sustain a remarkable brand. We discuss lessons learned from her career working with top companies such Casper, Boxed and Allbirds, and delve into the key concepts she unpacks in her recent book, including the "5 Why's", the power of focus and simplicity and the role of physical retail in creating an immersive and distinctive customer experience. 

    After our interview we jump into our new weekly segment “Remarkable or Forgettable?” where we give our hot takes on retail headlines, and deem them wow-worthy, best ignored or somewhere in between. This week's highlights include what to make of Macy's Investor Day pronouncements, what we can glean from recent retailer earning reports, Kohl's facing new challenge from an activist investor group, Best Buy's new hybrid store model and more.

    Emily Heyward  is the Co-Founder and Chief Brand Officer at Red Antler. Author of Obsessed: Building a Brand People Love from Day One available on Amazon and / or in Canada at Indigo Books. 

    Steve Dennis is an advisor, keynote speaker and author on strategic growth and business innovation. You can learn more about Steve on his       website.    The expanded and revised edition of his bestselling book  Remarkable Retail: How To Win & Keep Customers in the Age of Disruption will be released April 13th and is now available for preorder at  Amazon or just about anywhere else books are sold. Steve regularly shares his insights in his role as a      Forbes senior contributor and on       Twitter and       LinkedIn. You can also check out his speaker "sizzle" reel      here.


    Michael LeBlanc  is the Founder & President of M.E. LeBlanc & Company Inc and a Senior Advisor to Retail Council of Canada as part of his advisory and consulting practice.   He brings 25+ years of brand/retail/marketing & eCommerce leadership experience, and has been on the front lines of retail industry change for his entire career.  Michael is the producer and host of a network of leading podcasts including Canada’s top retail industry podcast,       The Voice of Retail, plus        Global E-Commerce Tech Talks  and       The Food Professor  with Dr. Sylvain Charlebois.  You can learn more about Michael       here  or on       LinkedIn. 

    About Us

    Steve Dennis is a strategic advisor, board member, and keynote speaker focused on strategic growth and transformation and the impact of digital disruption. He is the author of the bestselling book Remarkable Retail: How To Win & Keep Customers in the Age of Disruption and the forthcoming Leaders Leap: Transforming Your Company at the Speed of Disruption , which will be published in April 2024 and is now available for pre-order at book retailers everywhere. Steve regularly shares his insights in his role as a Forbes senior contributor and on social media..

    Don't forget to join Steve's new Linked Group for his new book.


    Michael LeBlanc  is the Founder & President of M.E. LeBlanc & Company Inc and a Senior Advisor to Retail Council of Canada as part of his advisory and consulting practice, a keynote speaker around the world and consumer growth consultant.   He brings 25+ years of brand/retail/marketing & eCommerce leadership experience, and has been on the front lines of retail industry change for his entire career.  Michael is the producer and host of a network of leading podcasts including Canada’s top retail industry podcast,   The Voice of Retail, plus  Global eCommerce Leaders podcast, and The Food Professor , Canada's top food industry podcasts and one of the top management podcasts in the nation according to Apple, with Dr. Sylvain Charlebois.    You can learn more about Michael  on  LinkedIn. 

    Be sure and check out Michael's Last Request Barbecue,  his YouTube BBQ cooking channel!

    140 Streaming the runway with Hilary Milnes, Americas Editor at Vogue Business

    140 Streaming the runway with Hilary Milnes, Americas Editor at Vogue Business

    In the summer of 2018, we talked to Hilary Milnes about how retail isn't dead but it's changing, the struggle of shuttering department stores, and innovative ways that online and offline shopping can intersect.

    Over two years later, it's a case of same same but different. Hilary is still covering retail and fashion, but as the Americas Editor for Vogue Business. And now, one year into the pandemic, these trend trajectories have spiked, forcing brands to accelerate faster than anyone predicted. The customer-facing shifts came quickly — adapting to an online fashion month, pivoting retail strategies, and riding the ephemeral wave of creator-driven trends. But behind the scenes, supply chain shifts are still happening far too slow, leaving frontline fashion workers shortchanged and overworked, even amidst consumer outcries.

    On this episode, Hilary Milnes has optimistic and pessimistic takes on which of these shifts will stick in a post-pandemic world. She also illuminates new opportunities or smaller fashion brands and the ever-growing, ever-elusive role of the "creator."

    Visit the Lumi blog for links and images.

    6 Best Growth Hacking Strategies You Can Learn From AllBirds

    6 Best Growth Hacking Strategies You Can Learn From AllBirds

    In Episode 18, we dissect into Allbird’s business & marketing strategy – Founded in 2016, Allbirds sells eco friendly minimalist shoes. It created its own category within the sneaker industry & sold over a million units within 2 yrs since its launch. They are valued over a billion dollars & the majority of their sales are from word of mouth.

    Timestamps:

    00:45 Introduction To AllBirds
    1:58 Why your business strategy should focus more on D2C vs Retail
    5:55 Add Your Unique Selling Points (USPs) in Your Ad Copy. AllBirds adds their USPs like "Sustainable, natural materials" "Free Shipping & Returns" etc..
    8:10 How AllBirds Created A New Category in Shoes That Helped Them Disrupt Their Industry.
    9:25 Consider Launching 1 Product Rather Than Multiple Skus. Allbirds initially launched their brand with just 1 sneaker & dominated in that specific category "A Sneaker Made With Wool"
    12:56 Add Product Videos Onto Your Product Page To Increase Conversions.
    15:13 AllBirds Multiple Instagram Account Strategy — Should you create multiple Instagram Accounts?
    18:25 Increase sales by adding a quick add to cart functionality for your consumers.

    ABOUT MATT SKOPAK:

    An adventure and fitness addict with a passion for entrepreneurship and numbers. Lead Investor in Sweetberry Bowls and CFO of Sugar & Kush CBD.  Rutgers MBA 2020 in Entrepreneurship & Accounting

    ABOUT SEAN AZARI:

    In 2015, Sean launched a creative ad agency called Breakthrough Social specializing in content creation & distribution, marketing campaigns, & paid media that helped brands build awareness and drive sales. Prior to starting his agency, Sean worked in finance for 4 years as an Investment Banking Analyst at Credit Suisse & studied Mathematics & Statistics at Rutgers University.

    Connect with Sean:

    Fashion That Gives Back With Oliver Tomalin, Founder of Love Brand & Co.

    Fashion That Gives Back With Oliver Tomalin, Founder of Love Brand & Co.

    Welcome back to episode three as we continue to discuss the Myths and greenwashing that surround Sustainable Fashion. This week we discuss fashion brands that do more than just give to charity. Their entire ethos is built around charitable giving and raising awareness. We often hear about brands who donate to charity. Buy this t-shirt and save the planet, buy this tote bag and we'll donate some money to solve world hunger. Rarely are brands created with the sole purpose of giving back. 

    How Does Fashion Give Back

    Have you ever been suckered into buying a charitable t-shirt on the promise that 20% of profits went to a charity, we felt better about buying another t-shirt we didn't need. But the picture isn't as clear as that. Lets break it down. Firstly, 20% of sales profits isn't much. A lot of fast fashion and luxury brands could afford to give a lot more that than from their own pockets. Second, who made that t-shirt? If its making a charitable donation to a human rights fund, then you have the right to ask how the garment workers were paid and treated. Not to mention whether or not the cotton farmer got a fair deal. If this makes you feel uncomfortable then the simple answer is to either give directly to the charity instead, or to support a small business with a difference.

    Love Brand & Co.

    Love Brand & Co. Is one such company. After a chance encounter with an Asian Elephant through the charity Elephant Family, Oliver Tomalin came up with the idea of supporting Elephant conservation through a swimming trunks label. Fast forward 10 years and Oliver's company are a proud member of 1% For The Planet. If you've not come across it before, the organisation was co-founded by Patagonia's Founder Yvon Chouniard, and these guys love to give back to Mother Earth. Any brands that join are partnered with vetted charities that benefit the earth and help to combat the climate crisis. Love Brand & Co. Is proud to work with Elephant conservation charities around the world. 

    How Does Love Brand & Co. Give Back To The Earth

    Oliver is passionate about raising awareness, while creating great products. What started with swimming trunks, has turned into a full blown mens apparel brand. Sustainably sourced linen shirts, with nut buttons, organic cotton polo's and of course the swimming shorts make up a stylish selection. The shorts themselves are made with recycled polyester and they use an innovative eco printing technique with uses paper that can then be reused. They even use carbon offset initiatives when you purchase, so you can be sure that your footprint as a consumer is minimal.

    Has this conversation fired you up to include more charitable giving when you shop? Here are a few other brands who are making donating money too dam easy.

    Love Brand & Co. Have generously shared a discount code with us for you to get 15% off when you shop online. Use offer code THEVENDEUR at checkout.

    Rites - This is a preloved platform with a difference. Donate luxury fashion pieces to sell and Rites automatically make a minimum 20% donation to charity from your sale. 

    Ninety Percent - not only are they an uber cool casual wear brand that is totally perfect for any lock down situation, they also donate you guessed it, 90% of their distributed profits to charity. 

    Patagonia - The OG's of giving, Patagonia have been donating 1% of sales since 1985. And more recently they gave $10 Million dollars back to the planet, which was the money they saved in US tax relief. 

    Toms – have moved on from their initial one for one model, to now donate a third of net profits to organisations around the world. Currently that is to their own COVID-19 Global Giving Fund, created to help existing Giving Partners who are responding to the pandemic.

    Allbirds - the sneaker brand beloved by Leonardo Dicaprio et al, are partnered with Souls4Souls an initiative that supports micro enterprise programmes in developing countries. They donate gently used trainers to be resold in local markets, helping people to lift themselves out of the cycle of poverty.

    With thanks to our amazing guest Oliver Tomalin, Founder of Love Brand & Co. And to Alexandra at Carello Consulting.

    Sustainable Podcast Shout Out -  Scribbles and Nipples 

    Please Support Us And Join Our Community

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    Credits

    Host: Lucy Kebbell 

    Theme created by Joe Murgatroyd

    Yancey Strickler | Co-Founder and Former CEO of Kickstarter

    Yancey Strickler | Co-Founder and Former CEO of Kickstarter

    Yancey Strickler is the co-founder and former CEO of Kickstarter, a global crowdfunding platform that has helped bring hundreds of thousands of creative projects to life since its launch in 2009.

    As of today, the platform has received more than $4.6 billion in pledges from 17.2 million backers to fund 445,000 projects, such as films, music, journalism, video games, technology, and more. Some notable companies that started off with a successful Kickstarter campaign include Oculus VR, MVMT, Popsocket, and Allbirds.

    Aside from founding Kickstarter, Yancey is also a former music critic and author of “This Could Be Our Future: A Manifesto for a More Generous World,” as well as the creator of Bentoism.

    In this episode, Yancey joins Pat and Posh to share personal stories of his upbringing, his obsession with pop culture from a young age, how he fell into writing, his thoughts on creatives vs. businesspeople, and much more. He walks us through the story of how Kickstarter was born, how he met his co-founders and his experience as CEO of the company before ultimately stepping down and returning to a career in writing.

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