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Episode 42 - What's New With Amazon's Communication Policies w/ Henson Wu | Lunch With Norm Podcast

#42: What's New With Amazon's Communication Policies

w/ Henson Wu

About This Episode

In this episode, We break down the new updates on Amazon’s communication policies which will be going into effect on November 3rd. We go over what exactly the Buyer-Seller messaging changes will be, how to stay compliant within the new guidelines, and strategies to maximize feedback and product reviews.

About The Guest

Henson has been engaged with e-commerce since 1999 starting from Ebay and launched multiple private label brands on Amazon in 2014 while working full time as an engineer in silicon valley. In 2017, he co-founded FeedbackWhiz software to help Amazon sellers enhance their brand reputation and profitability.

Read more about amazon changes to buyer-seller messaging 2020.

Date: September 25, 2020

Episode: 42

Title: Norman Farrar introduces Henson Wu, Co- founder of Feedback Whiz. He Launched Multiple Private Label Brands on Amazon.

Subtitle: Seller’s brand reputation and profitability

Final Show Link: https://lunchwithnorm.com/episodes/episode-42-whats-new-with-amazons-communication-policies-w-henson-wu/

In this episode of Lunch With Norm…, Norman Farrar introduced Henson Wu, Co- founder of Feedback Whiz. He launched multiple private label brands on Amazon.

Henson has been engaged with e-commerce since 1999 starting from eBay. He launched multiple private label brands on Amazon in 2014 while working full-time as an engineer in Silicon Valley. In 2017, he co-founded Feedback Whiz software to help Amazon seller’s enhance their brand reputation and profitability.

If you are a new listener to Lunch With Norm… we would love to hear from you. Please visit our Facebook Page and join in on episode discussion or simply let us know what you think of the episode!

In this episode, we discuss:

    • 4:46: Henson’s passion about e-commerce; developing software for Amazon
    • 10:29: Talked about the Amazon communication policy
    • 11:45 About insert cards or QR code
    • 15:49 Buyer seller messaging communication
    • 24:16 Product reviews, and seller feedback
    • 26:50 Buyer’s preferred language
    • 32:45 Consequences of violating communication guidelines
    • 43:57 Critical messaging
    • 55:44 Getting reviews
    • 1:01:12 About Feedback Whiz

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Norman  0:00  

Hey everybody is Norman Farrar and of course, we start off this broadcast a little bit different. Kelsey, thank you for handling pushing the button. I didn’t lose control. I felt like nobody now. I couldn’t even press the start button. But thank you, sir. 

 

Kelsey 0:16

You’re welcome.

 

Norman :17

Alright. Hey everybody, it’s Norman Farrar, a.k.a. The Beard Guy and welcome to another Lunch With Norm the rise of the micro brands.

 

Norman  0:35  

We are broadcasting to you live on Facebook, LinkedIn, and YouTube. If you’re watching this on a replay, just skip ahead. If you’re on my profile page, head over to the fan page Norman Farrar, a.k.a. The Beard Guy and you’ll see a lot more clips in different content as well as the whole episodes that we’ve recorded in the past. Also, I just wanted to remind everybody if you’re interested in hearing some non Amazon non online sales content, head over to I Know This Guy, of course, after the podcast, where I talked to some really interesting people, some people from the Amazon world but from all over entertainers, athletes, business people, about their ups, their downs, and everything in between and again, that’s called I Know This Guy, it’s on all podcast platforms. So Kelsey, where are you? 

 

Kelsey 1:31  

I’m here. Hello, everyone. Happy Friday. We’ve already got a couple people joining us already. We have Dux, good morning and Victor’s here. 

 

Norman 1:40

Oh, Victor.

 

Kelsey 1:42

I gotta multitask this lunch. 

 

Norman  1:44  

Perfect. Actually. Yeah, just he is my official button pusher. Thank you



Kelsey 1:50  

Alright, so you know what to do. If you’re watching right now, please like this video. Share it to friends. If you know someone, if you can think of someone who is interested in Amazon or e-commerce. Tell them. Why not. If you noticed, we had a little makeover with the overlay. So I hope you guys enjoy the new overlay. 

 

Norman  2:11  

They’re not gonna say anything about Facebook making us do that.

 

Kelsey 2:15  

Yeah, so yeah, let us know where you guys are watching from this episode, throw them in the comments. We’d love to hear. You can follow us on Facebook, YouTube, Instagram. We are an official podcast. So either Apple, Spotify, you can find this. Just search Lunch With Norm. Marina is joining us. Hello, Marina. How are you? Okay, and that’s it for me. So, yeah, I’ll be leaving now.

 

Norman  2:40  

Okay, so today, we’re gonna be talking about Amazon’s new communications policy, and something that we started to do this policy after listening to Hani Mourra last episode, he mentioned that in the podcast you should summarize at the beginning. I thought that was a great idea. So this is what we’re gonna do. We’re going to be talking about the new Amazon communications and in this episode, you will learn what exactly buyer sellers message. The changes have been to buyer seller messaging, how to stay compliant with the new guidelines and strategies to maximize your feedback and product review. So my guest today is Henson Wu. He’s been engaged in the e-commerce market since 1999. Can’t be as old as I am. Anyways, yeah, we started in around the same time, that’s wild. But he started with eBay and launched multiple private label brands on Amazon in around 2014. He is currently the co-founder of Feedback Wiz and helps Amazon sellers enhance their brand reputation and profitability. So that being said, if you have any comments, please put them into the comment area and sit back, relax, grab a cup of coffee and enjoy the show. Henson where are you?

 

Henson  4:05  

Hey Norm. How are you doing? 

 

Norman 4:06

Good. How’s it going? 

 

Henson 4:08

Good. Thanks for having me on today. 

 

Norman  4:11  

Hey, no problem. Are you still in Silicon Valley?

 

Henson  4:14  

Right now I’m in Los Angeles. But usually I am in Silicon Valley. Yeah. But for COVID just staying down hanging out with some family down in LA.

 

Norman  4:23  

Oh, yeah. We’re and they just changed the border so I can’t get across the border until November now. I gotta get my cigars.

 

Henson 4:35

Can’t get a Cuban, Cubans right?

 

Norman  4:37  

No, I’ll smoke anything at this point. But yeah, so Hey, why don’t you tell everybody just a little bit more about your background?

 

Henson  4:46  

Sure. So I’ve been like you mentioned, I’ve been selling on eBay e-commerce since I was in high school. So I am pretty old but young at heart and have a lot of passion about e-commerce and yeah, so I started in around 1998-99, when I was in high school, just mainly selling random things, like just getting to know how eBay works, and just really found a passion on just researching products, and then see how much I can make by selling it, right. Just going through the whole process of packaging and sending it out, communicating with buyers, things like that and then I went to college and studied electrical Computer Engineering. After college, I started working in Silicon Valley high tech firm, and worked there for 13 years. But during this whole time, I kind of realized that I don’t think engineering was really, I wasn’t that passionate about working for a corporate and although it was great and everything, I was always trying to do things on the site, mainly selling on eBay, or starting Amazon, right. So basically, 2014 started Amazon and just that was kind of when Amazon just kind of up and running, it wasn’t really it, eBay was still the king back then, but you can start seeing there was a chenda shift coming and during that time, there’s a lot of opportunity, because it was a different platform, different interface. But if you get a product up there, rapidly, you start getting a lot of sales and it was great, because you had your own listing, and there’s no other people selling the same exact product as yours. So I started with doing retail arbitrage, doing wholesale and then eventually moved to private label. It was a little easy for me, because I never really had a source of my products, the products that I was selling in the kitchen and cosmetics and clothing, I had direct access to the manufacturer here and do like personal connections or family. So it was really easy for me to just literally get a whole bunch of products, create a brand since Amazon started selling and then around 2015, I’ve noticed that, hey, my business is really growing and I need a software to help me just save time, right? There’s a lot of things that software can do, whether it’s crunching numbers, or sending out automated messages to get more reviews. Of course, reviews are the most important thing on Amazon, one of the most important things and everyone was looking for a way to get reviews. So I figured, okay, let’s figure out like how we can get more reviews, and back then it was there were a lot of people doing blackhat things and but as a seller, I was always trying to be as compliant as possible without bending the rules too much and with email automation, I saw Okay, well, this is a great way to communicate with your buyers, and try to ask for reviews and during that time, there was a few software’s out there. But I felt like hey, we could definitely build something better. So I got together with my buddy Aaron’s who is our other co-founder, and he started building tools for my own store and at some point, we realized, hey, we could really make something impactful in the software site for this. So we decided hey, let’s give it a shot, right? Let’s see if we can create our own software company and just develop software for Amazon sellers and come 2017, we’re hustling like crazy working full time, going to sleep at 3am, trying to build all this stuff on the side and then we launched our product 2017 and it was great, because the stuff that we launched back then, was kind of revolutionary. There wasn’t any other software that had the functionalities we had. So it was kind of easy for us to kind of build some traction, just by sharing and making connections with people in the Amazon industry and quickly, people started recognizing our brand, they really liked our software and that’s kind of where we are today. So that’s my background.

 

Norman  9:20  

Yeah, it’s interesting, because I go to all these shows, and I meet Rob Stanley and I tell you, he is not only I know he worked with the company, but he is probably the most passionate person I’ve ever seen working for anybody. So you got a piece of gold there.

 

Henson  9:39  

Oh, yeah, definitely. Rob is great. I mean, I remember the first time I met him when we interviewed and we had a meetup in San Francisco and this was before he was even hired, and he was just like, oh, man, I want to come out with you guys and he was out all night and I think we’re up to like 3am and he was still talking and drinking and his energy level was like, still at a 10 since, I think like 3pm and we’re all like, just tired and I was like, this guy’s incredible, we’re gonna get this guy on our team, just has so much passion and energy to go out there.

 

Norman  10:18  

Right. So why don’t we talk a little bit about the Amazon communication policy in general? What does it cover?

 

Henson 10:29  

So, the Amazon communication policy basically covers any type of communication between the seller and the buyer. Right. So technically, it’s more geared towards buyer seller messaging, I would say, since that’s like, the main mechanism for sellers to communicate with buyers. However, you have to digest it and realize that a lot of this could cover insert cards, it could cover telephone, right? Phone calls, and things like that any way for you to communicate with them. However, it’s not very easy for Amazon to track your communication outside of the buyer seller messaging and outside of insert cards. So in general, yeah, it’s usually mostly buyer seller messaging.

 

Norman  11:18  

Right. During our last call, we had Dima Kubrak on and a question came up about insert cards and if people can put contact information, or QR code on an insert card, I’m just kind of curious, before we really get into this, since you’ve talked about in insert cards, are you allowed to do that?



Henson  11:45  

It’s a tough question. I think there isn’t too much. There isn’t really anything written saying you can’t. However, it’s more of the intent of what you’re doing, why you’re putting it on there for, right? So if you’re putting it on there, because the seller, the buyer needs to have a way to register or use the product, why or complete the order. If it’s something necessary for them to do, then Amazon is not going to do anything about it, right? They’re going to let you freely put in QR codes, but if you’re using the QR code to try to divert them outside of Amazon, to maybe like, go to your website to buy other products, or get coupon codes and things like that, and Amazon feels like the intention there is to divert them outside, then you can get in trouble and that’s kind of the reason why Amazon hasn’t really made insert card policies very clear, because there’s different scenarios where some sellers may need to use different tactics for different reasons. However, what I usually tell sellers is, if you feel uncomfortable about doing it, or if you even feel like your intention is to try to get more business or try to get them outside Amazon, so they can buy from you then I would avoid it just because you don’t want to take that risk. 

 

Norman  13:11  

So what about, so I’ve got a product that is also in retail, it’s on Amazon, it’s on my Shopify account, or my Shopify site and I put in there that, I don’t know, it might be a QR code to get them over to my Shopify page to get their email address. Okay, so I’m asking them to go over and get a free bar of soap or whatever it’ll be. I’m on Amazon, I might be on Walmart, I might be on all these other platforms. I guess, technically, I would think it would be against TOS to bring them over to my site, but I would be doing that insert into all of the packaging, not just my Amazon.

 

Henson  13:59  

Yeah, so in that case, I’m usually Amazon’s okay with that, because your packaging is consistent through all the different channels that you’re selling one, right. Now, if your insert card for Amazon looks different than the one you’re selling on Walmart or your website, right, then you might have a problem there and I know that for a fact, I’ve talked to some really big supplement sellers and if you buy supplements on Amazon, you’ll notice they all have these like Hey register for a free bottle, right? Or sign up your email and you’re like, hey, how did they get with this? It sounds like it’s totally against the rules. However, these guys sell their supplements on every channel, right? Amazon actually does, as I heard, they do test buys. So they will actually purchase your products from Walmart or from your website just to see if the messaging or the QR code or whatever it is you’re using is consistent with the one you’re selling on Amazon and if it’s consistent, then usually nothing will happen. That’s why this kind of stuff flies. However, if you have something different for Amazon only to steer them away from your other channels with different types of messages and that’s where you can get in trouble.

 

Norman  15:18  

I guess you, you can’t be blatant. I’ve seen it where people have put it on their packaging, not an insert card, but on their outer packaging and that’s kind of throwing it in Amazon’s face and I think you could get in trouble for that. But anyways, let’s talk a little bit more about the actual changes. There have been some changes over the last few weeks. Can you can tell us, let’s just go through a list of them. What do we have to be careful of now?

 

Henson  15:49  

Yeah, so traditionally, buyer seller messaging communication policies have always been very vague, right? They haven’t really put too much like do’s and don’ts, right? Especially the don’ts are like, they don’t really make it clear. and there’s just been a lot of questions surrounding whether or not, can I do this? Can I do that? Then starting last year, a lot of sellers did hit with these 30 day proactive suspensions, which basically prevents them from sending messages, initiating messages out to the buyers and then, the sellers are going to seller support and saying, Hey, what did I do wrong and the problem seller support sends them this list of like 10 different things that you could have possibly done wrong, and then most of the time, they have no idea. So I think there has been a lot of pressure on Amazon to try to rewrite things and make things more clear. So finally, they came out on, I think September 8, or something about and they said that, Hey, we’ve updated our policies, we’ve stated or stating a whole bunch of things now, and we’re giving you guys till, I think is it November, I think November 3rd to comply with these changes. So the main thing is, they’re basically saying that, Hey, good news is you’re allowed to use buyer seller messaging, you’re allowed to use third party apps from the app stores and you can send proactive messages. However, it has to fall under these reasons, right? It has to be resolving an issue with order fulfillment, asking additional information required to complete the order, asking turn related questions, sending an invoice, they did make it clear, you can request a product review or seller feedback. So that’s a big one, right? Because a lot of a lot of sellers are saying, Hey, I don’t know if I can still use buyer seller messaging to ask for product reviews. So they made it clear you can, right? Scheduling delivery for heavier bulky items, or scheduling home service appointments, verifying custom design, or any other contact that is required for the buyer to receive to purchase. So they made it very clear, these are the only reasons why you want to send proactive messages. Now, you can always respond via buyer seller messaging if the buyer reaches out to you first, right. The buyer reaches out to you and asks you a question, then you can answer the question. It doesn’t have to follow these guidelines. But mainly they’re trying to define what you can send to the buyer without them initiating contact with you. So that’s kind of the main things that they’ve came out and said, like the high level, but the problem is, okay, so once you send a productive message out, they’ve also came up with a whole bunch of restrictions about what kind of messages you can send right or what you can put inside your template, right? So they don’t want you sending messages like ordering shipping, shipping confirmations and I know that’s one big thing that a lot of sellers were doing was they were sending out that initial email, and basically asking buyers if they had any issues with the product before they get it, please contact me if you have any questions, right? Here’s your tracking number. So they don’t want you doing that anymore. Because they are basically saying hey, we’re sending this out already and it’s just too many messages to the buyers and they just don’t want to burden the buyer. So no messages saying thank you or if you have any problems definitely no marketing, promotional messages, sending coupons. Language that’s incentivizing them to leave a positive review or exchange for compensation like money, gift cards, discounts, right asking them to remove a review or update an existing product review or like asking them if they can leave a review if they had a good experience. So if you’re using buyer seller messaging to ask for reviews, you have to be very careful on the way you’re asking for reviews. It can’t be like if you love the product because you leave us a review and Amazon will see that as incentivizing, right. Or if you had any problems with your product, please contact us. We’ll do everything we can to make you happy. Right? Before you leave a review, right. So,

basically 

 

Norman 20:13

Henson, what about if you want to make it right? So can you just put without saying leave a review, but just please feel free to contact us? If you have any issues or something along those lines?

 

Henson  20:30  

Yeah. So that you can’t really do that, right? Because they’re saying they find the following reasons where you can send a proactive message, right, so that kind of message doesn’t fall under any of those reasons.

 

Norman 20:42

No, I’m talking about like on an initial message, right. So, if you’re sending out a message, and you’re just talking about leaving one line, saying, basically showing that you’re going to take care of your customer, is that no longer allowed?

 

Henson  21:01  

Okay, so it depends on the initial message you’re sending. Wait, what is that? First of all, there’s two issues here. What is that initial message regarding right? That initial message that you’re sending out has to follow one of the reasons why you can send it out. However, like, let’s say you’re asking for a product review or sort of feedback, you are allowed to put in a line at the bottom saying, if you have any questions or concerns or issues or product, please feel free to contact us. Right? That’s okay because that’s not incentivizing them to leave your review, right? You’re just giving them a mechanism saying you can if you reply to this email, I’ll be able to answer your questions. That’s totally okay. But if you write it where, if you have any questions, if you have any issues with your product, please contact me before you leave a review. Or please contact me first, right and then if you have a condition where you want them to try to divert them outside to fix the problem, then that’s an issue. So that’s like I said, the language part is very tricky. Yeah.

 

Norman  22:02  

What about the, so I bought a shelf and I had to put it together and I can’t even hammer a nail. So I needed to find instructions. Is it possible to send a link in an email now for instructions on how to put this shelf together?

 

Henson  22:23  

Yes, you can. So one of the things that they do allow you to do is add attachments, and external links, but they have to be secure. So they have to be HTTPS, right and it has to be necessary for the order completion, right. So for example in your case, maybe there’s some special way for you to use that hammer nail, right and they might not know how to use it before they get the product, or there could be a safety issue or safety concern when they open the product. In that case, you can put attachment, right? So you can send an initial email and say by the way, here’s the product instructions for using this product, it’s due to your own safety, right, so things like that is okay, right? Warranty information, product construction invoices, it’s fine, you can send that out. But don’t try to get too crafty and try to like, if you’re selling like exercise equipment, and you’re attaching not product instructions, but here’s seven exercises to help you lose weight, right? That’s not considered something that’s necessary to complete the order and Amazon doesn’t want you attaching things like that. So it has to be related to the product itself and you have to use your own judgment to see alright, is this something important enough for me to send it to them? Or is it something that it’s like, common sense where anyone can just use it, right? So this is what Amazon is going to look at when they investigate your messaging, right? If they get flagged, and then they start looking into your attachments and say, Well, this is not really necessary to send out, then you’re getting in trouble. So make sure you send something that’s actually important and something that’s pertaining to the product.

 

Norman  24:09  

Okay, and I interrupted you, are there any other changes in the policy?

 

Henson  24:16  

Yeah, so there’s a lot of changes. I mean, so one of the things they also want you to do is the biggest change, I would say is that they only want you to send one review request per order and this is very important because back in the days, people were sending like 2,3,4 review requests staggered over a month, right. Constantly hounding them for years. So now they said,  alright, we’re cutting this down to one, right. So you only get one chance now and after one you can’t send it anymore and this also pertains to seller feedback. So it’s not just product reviews, and seller feedback. If you’re going to ask for seller feedback, anyone asked for a product review, you put in the same email. You can’t separate it out, you can send one product review and then one seller feedback request. What I usually recommend is that when you sell on Amazon, it’s very clear which one you need, right? If you’re doing retail arbitrage, you probably want seller feedback, right? Because you’re selling products that everyone is selling, right? You don’t care too much about the reviews. If you’re a private label seller, you only care about product reviews. So I would say just target either product reviews or seller feedback for whatever products you’re selling. That way, you’re going to maximize your opportunity to get the most reviews or the highest conversions. Some of the other changes are more nitty gritty things about styling, right links, opt outs. Another big one is tracking pixels or images, right? So they actually don’t want you putting any more images inside the emails anymore, unless it’s your logo, right? So they’re okay with you putting attachments, they’re okay with you putting your logo, but they don’t want you putting things like animated GIFs or pictures of your product, right. So images was another big issue, they want to get rid of. Of course, no email addresses and phone numbers and the rest of them is more styling, right. So styling is like, they don’t want you to use HTML to try to mess up the margins or width or using too many fonts or different colors, right and they also got a little bit technical on like two line breaks, right. Spelling errors and grammar issues. I don’t know how they’re gonna really enforce some of these little things. But just watch out. You don’t want to have these obvious spelling or grammar issues, but I’m sure if you have one or two, it’s not the end of the world, right?

 

Norman  26:46  

But that doesn’t look too good for you anyways, if you have a spelling mistake on an email going out.

 

Henson  26:50  

Exactly right, it doesn’t look professional and the other big one is the buyer’s preferred language. So they also made it clear that if you’re selling let’s see, if I’m selling in the US, obviously, everyone’s going to be in English. But if I’m selling in, let’s say Mexico, their buyer’s preferred language could be Spanish, right? Or I’m selling in France, it could be French, right? So they want you to send out that email in that language, not in English, right? So that becomes more of a burden on the software provider you’re using or figuring out llright, what’s the buyer’s preferred language and can you have the template to send that out? Right? So be aware that if you’re selling international marketplaces, make sure you craft templates in that language as well, because Amazon does require you to send out these messages in the buyer’s preferred language.

 

Norman  27:43  

So if you’re in Canada, can you send it out? I’ve never really, I’m not selling in Canada. I mean, live in Canada, but I don’t sell in Canada. Can you send out a bilingual email?

 

Henson  27:56  

Oh, that’s a good question. They haven’t really made it clear. But it sounds to me, they just want it in one language. So buyer’s preferred language. So there’s preferred language means there’s only one, right? It’s not like I have three preferred languages. So I think when you, as a buyer, in Amazon, you have a way to set what language you want to get your communications in, right and as a seller, I don’t think you have access to know if you’re just using buyer seller messaging, and just sending out messages by yourself through Seller Central, I don’t think there’s a way right now to detect which way it is. However, for software providers, there is a way for us to see that. So we can see based on the orders, this order has a preferred language of Spanish, right. So when we send out the emails, we have to make sure that the email template you’re sending emails in Spanish, otherwise, we’re going to block it and say, Hey, don’t send this out. Because if you send down the wrong language, you’re gonna get in trouble.

 

Norman  28:54  

Okay, so just one sec here. Just a shout out to Faye and Michelle Worthy. Faye you had a question here. Kelsey, can we run through a couple other questions?

 

Kelsey 29:04  

Yep. So we got three questions lined up if you guys don’t mind. I think you guys might have touched on this already. But how would Amazon know that the insert codes are the same across all channels?

 

Henson  29:18  

Like I said earlier, I’ve heard that they do these tests buys. So they will figure out where else your products are selling and they might purchase the products just to see what it looks like. But I can’t confirm that because they’ve never made that clear. But I’ve heard from some sellers that that’s what they do.

 

Kelsey 29:39  

Okay, great. From Marina, can I give a link to a YouTube video on my branded channel with installation instructions if a customer contacted me?

 

Henson  29:50  

Yes, you can. Yeah. So if it’s the actual video of the actual installation instructions, then yes, it’s okay. Yeah.

 

Kelsey 29:58  

Okay, and we got a big one from Victor. We receive many seller feedbacks that are actually five star product reviews, we used to send the buyers message asking them to leave a product review instead, but stopped for obvious reasons last year, what is your opinion on this? Do you agree this is a prudent decision?

 

Henson  30:17  

Yeah, so that’s a thing. It’s kind of sad how Amazon doesn’t just move those over, right for you and I know a lot of sellers were trying to get the buyers to move it over, but they don’t want you contacting them to move the review. So that’s something you can’t really do anymore. Now, I don’t know what kind of messages you’re sending. Were you sending an email that had both seller feedback and product review links inside? Or was there some confusion about why they were leaving seller feedback, or product reviews and seller feedback section? So I say I think the only thing you can really do is just make sure that if your goal is to get product reviews, just send product review emails out, right? With the seller feedback, there’s not much you can really do about it. I mean, you probably won’t get too many of them. I don’t know you might be able to bend the rules a little bit. I mean, you can reach out to them and ask, but what the new proactive guidelines, it really doesn’t say you can do that. So I would be careful about doing that. But if it’s like once in a while, then you might be able to fly under the radar. But I wouldn’t risk it. 

 

Kelsey 31:27  

This is a no link provided to the seller feedback folks. 



Norman 31:32

So I’ve had that issue come up and my partner, we on AMZ and beyond, we talk about this once in a while, he has no problem doing that and he’s never had a problem. I had a brand that was a client that had a bunch that came in, but it was selling like there was a ton of product moving every day. We ended up telling people in a nice way. Oh, you left a feedback review and that should be more about the product itself, the product delivery? Sorry, not the product itself, but the delivery, the customer experience, would you mind and asking them to leave the review, take that, put it over there, we got suspended. So when we did talk to Amazon about that, that was the reason. You’re not allowed to do that. We got the account back, everything was cool. But it was like the slap on the wrist is letting us know that we shouldn’t do that. That’s one of the only times I’ve ever heard of anybody getting a suspension. But again, this guy was moving on a lot of product and maybe if it’s a smaller account, or I just don’t know how seriously, they’re taking it right now. But anyways, it did happen.

 

Henson 32:45  

Yeah, that’s the thing like, once Amazon flags your account, they’re gonna look into pretty much everything you’re sending out, right? If any of the things that you’re doing is against your Terms of Service, they will stop you with that 30 day suspension. So, the biggest thing is, yeah, like a lot of people ask, like, what kind of consequences are, what are the consequences of violating these new communication guidelines, right? So first offense, you’re going to get a 30 day proactive email restriction, so you can’t initiate any kind of contact with buyers anymore, but you can always respond to them. So someone asks you a question about customer service, or whatever, you can always respond, right. If you have something where it’s necessary to complete the order, like, for example, scheduling a delivery for your product, you can still send prata messages, however, you have to use that important tagline in the subject line to get through that. So you can still send critical messages and it doesn’t impact your ability to sell on Amazon, right? This is just basically restricting you from using buyer seller messaging to send out proactive messages. So in all honesty, like, it’s not really the end of the world, if you get hit with one of these rules. However, if you get hit the second time, they will permanently ban you from sending proactive emails. So you still want to be careful about doing a lot of these things, right and you have to kind of weigh like, Alright, how important is sending proactive emails out, right? Because it’s very important prior to last year, because this is pretty much the only way you can ask for reviews. However, Amazon didn’t release that new requested review button, right, which Amazon triggered, which you can press the button and Amazon will send out their own email to ask for reviews and feedback and that would always work no matter where it doesn’t matter if you got hit with practice email restriction. This is a separate mechanism. So you don’t have to worry about like, Oh, I can never get reviews anymore, right? However, I don’t know we’d give it time to see which method yields the highest conversions right? A lot of sellers with brands, right. They can put in logos, they can send attachments like, they see a lot of value of using buyer seller messaging to send out emails versus using request review buttons. So I would definitely still be very conscientious about following the guidelines overall, because you don’t want to get hit with that permanent ban.

 

Norman  35:16  

Okay, Kelsey, were there some more comments or questions?

 

Kelsey 35:19  

Yeah, we have a couple of comments in a few questions. So Marina, about the French ideal of replying to languages to customers in Quebec and I apologize that my French is not good. We’ve got a shout out from Faith. Thanks and a huge shout out to Norman for the amazing Facebook Lives. 

 

Norman 35:37

Oh, you’re welcome.

 

Kelsey 35:39  

We have one from friendly detectors. What about customers sending sellers messages has it changed recently?

 

Henson 35:48  

What about customers sending sellers messages? Customers can always send seller messages. There’s no Amazon doesn’t care about what buyers send to sellers, right? Because as a seller, your goal is to provide customer support, right? Especially if the buyer reaches out to you. So there’s no restriction on their end, as long as they don’t send you anything that’s like, threatening or demeaning or anything like that. If it’s something pertaining to the product itself, then yeah, they can send you whatever they want, right? They can ask you any questions they want and your goal, your job is to resolve the issue if there’s an issue.

 

Kelsey 36:29  

Okay and if you don’t mind just clarifying for Michelle, she was a little late to the podcast today. So she, can you just talk about inserts? Is there anything changing specifically about inserts?

 

Henson  36:42  

There hasn’t been anything released about inserts. It’s pretty much the same rules. However, some of these are very common sense, right? If you’re saying like, if they’re telling you communication guidelines, that’s kind of like including inserts, right? So you don’t want to have your inserts saying, if you had a great experience, could you leave me a five star review, right? That same type of policy also goes to inserts as well. So yeah, just use common sense, right? If it sounds fishy to you, or you feel like you’re gonna get in trouble, like, just don’t do it.

 

Kelsey 37:18  

Alright, and our last comments so far is Victor, the only time we use buyer seller messages these days is to immediately send a single message to someone who has returned a product, asking them for the reason of the return, and hopefully ward off a bad review. Do you think this is a legit use of the system?

 

Henson 37:37  

Yeah, so I would say don’t do that either. Because that’s one of the things where Amazon doesn’t want you to send a message to them about. However, if it depends on the channel you’re selling on, right? If you’re doing FBA, they want you to be pretty much hands off because the return is all handled by Amazon. Right? Now, if you’re doing FBA or sorry FBM right Fulfillment by Merchant then in the case where you have to process the return, you have to process the refund, then you can reach out to them and communicate with them, right. So FBM and FBA rules are slightly different, right? Because for FBM there are certain things where you might have to send me an invoice or you might have to send some kind of confirmation for shipping right. So yeah, for FBA, I wouldn’t do that anymore because that’s not something Amazon is asking you to allow you to do anymore.

 

Henson  38:44  

Yeah, my daughter I don’t know why she’s in here but come here.

 

Norman  38:48  

I love it when that happens. Let her say hi. 

 

Henson 38:57

Initially, let’s go. Come here.

 

Norman  38:57  

Alright. Hey.

 

Norman  38:59  

Hi..

 

Henson  39:01 

Say Hi.

 

Henson 39:03

Hi.

 

Norman  39:05  

Hi. That’s why I love doing live.

 

Henson  39:10  

That’s actually the first time this happened now. She seems pretty good about it, but I don’t know today.

 

Norman  39:14  

Oh, yeah, that’s great when that happens. My dog just knocked over my lights in the back. I don’t know if you saw me doing this when I was off camera trying to set them up again. But yeah. Oh, the fun of live. Hey, one of the other questions I have. You have a bad review. So somebody comes on and it’s a legit review, no smear campaign, something happened and you’re trying to make it right. They come up with Amazon seller or some bogus name. Is there any way to track that person down that you know of? I mean, I know you could before but that got blocked, and you’re legitimately trying to solve the issue, like for me, I’ll just put you don’t try to contact us at all. Like, I’ll try to respond to the review and ask them to contact us. But that hardly ever happens. Is there a way that you could reach out to these people? Anything nowadays?

 

Henson 40:16  

Yeah, I mean, back in the days, we had the mechanism to do it, right? It was a way inside the product reviews that had an identification that we could match the order ID and then we actually had a way to completely automate that process. But Amazon took it away and our understanding when we spoke with Amazon is they really want buyers or sellers to stay away from buyers, like completely. They don’t want you harassing them, because to them is more of a legal issue, right? If they have any way to identify the reviewers, then it’s a liability on Amazon, right? Because reviews are supposed to be anonymous, and they have to protect the buyers identity, right. So yeah, they’ve pretty much cut off every type of mechanism for you to detect the actual buyer is, unless you have some blackhat stuff where you have internal Amazon employees, and that’s a separate topic, right? That’s very different here. But as a normal seller, there’s no way you could figure out who it is. When you get a negative review, the best thing you can do these days really is to comment on the review itself, like on the Amazon review page, where they wrote it, there’s a way to write a comment, you log in as a your manufacturer, and they do allow you to write, adjust the issue and also say, please contact us through like buyer seller messaging. If you have any issues, we can help you resolve it, right. Now, the question is, well, how effective is that? Well, it’s not that effective in terms of if you want the buyer to remove the review or respond back to you, because they don’t get a notification about it, right and it’s unlikely they’re going to come back and read the review that they left, right. Once you leave a review, you’re done, right. You are usually never going to come back and read it again. Now, the value is that, if you respond quickly enough, right, and you have other customers that are researching your product, figuring out whether or not they should buy or not. This gives them more confidence that hey, the manufacturer responded in a timely manner and they’ve reached out saying that they’re going to take care of the issue, right. So as it shows as a seller that you’re very responsible for your product and customer service, and it’ll give confidence for prospective future buyers to come and purchase a product since these days, everyone’s reading negative reviews, more than the positive reviews. So yeah, that’s pretty much all you can do. Yeah.

 

Norman  42:45  

Right. You mentioned something earlier on too and if you’re new to Amazon, we might have just skipped over it a little too quickly. That if it is something that’s important to send a message, I don’t know about square brackets anymore. But it used to be a square bracket, all upper caps, important square bracket, and then in the subject line. So just to make that clear, you’d need to put the word important in the subject line, and then whatever the subject is, when you’re reaching out to them. So I just wanted to make that clear to anybody that’s new to Amazon and messaging.

 

Henson  43:21  

Yeah, so the important subject line is, use, you don’t really want to use it unless you have something important critical to send out because there’s another bunch of rules about critical messages. So they absolutely allow you to send critical messages if you have to, right. But otherwise, don’t try to bypass the opt out. 

 

Norman  43:40  

Right. So let’s talk a little bit about that. Because today’s we’re talking about communication, and critical messaging, can you give us a couple of reasons why people would have to send a critical message with that important in the subject line?

 

Henson  43:57  

Yeah, so let’s say I had a product where, I don’t know, it’s extremely heavy, right and it requires multiple people to carry inside the house, right? Then I might want to give a warning to the buyer that hey, by the way, this is not something that you could bring in yourself, you might want to call up a friend or have some help, right? Or let’s say, I’m selling like a color for your dog, and it’s a customized color diet. I’m not going to print the dog’s name on there, right? I can’t complete the order unless they give me the name, right? So unless they respond back to me, I can’t complete the order, right? So I have to use this critical message to be able to communicate with them, right. So these kinds of scenarios, you want to use it but if you’re sending a critical message because you want to send them a PDF instruction on how to use a product, but it’s not really,  it’s something that’s pretty common sense, then I would say avoid it, right. But if it’s instructions where maybe, it is time sensitive, maybe you’re selling something that’s perishable, or that could jeopardize your safety, right? Then I would say, yeah, that’s critical. You can send it so pretty much. Yeah, these are just kind of some scenarios.

 

Norman  45:24  

Okay, so to stay compliant, can we just have a quick list? Or summary of how to sell or stay compliant?

 

Henson  45:34  

Yeah, so sellers stay compliant. I would say, basically, follow the communication guidelines, right? Understand all the new things that they’re talking about, the do’s the don’ts, right? There’s a lot of don’ts in there. So definitely don’t do the don’ts. The do’s are very little, because they don’t really write what you can do. It’s like, you have to kind of reverse engineer and figure out what you can do, right? So I made it easy. I kind of figured out Alright, what are the do’s that you can do, right? So do’s is okay, you can send attachments, you can put your logo, and you can put in secure working links, right. So if you’re asking for a review, you can take them to Amazon to leave a review. But the don’ts, just don’t do any of that stuff, right and you should be okay with not getting flagged and the biggest thing, like I mentioned earlier was don’t send more than one review request per order. So a lot of people that are getting the restriction are mostly because of that and the bigger issue is that, what the new request review button that came out, they are using both right, they’re using buyer seller messaging to ask a review, and then they’re triggering the review request. So Amazon will actually view that as two review requests per order. So you definitely don’t want to do that either. So you got to figure out which one is more effective for you, right? If you want to use buyer-seller messaging, don’t use the request button, right and vice versa.

 

Norman  47:12  

Okay, that’s an important point. So yeah, I could easily have done that. So the review, request a review button, you want to leave it alone, make your decision if you’re gonna go with a third party app like feedback whiz. Alright, so can you give a few strategies on how to maximize feedback or product reviews?

 

Henson  47:35  

Yeah, so I would say, first figure out like if you’re FBA or FBM, right? if you’re FBA, then you obviously want product reviews, right? If you’re FBM, then you’re probably more geared towards seller feedback, right? So if you’re sending out these messages, make sure that you’re only targeting one of them, right? Don’t put both of them in the same email, because most likely, they’re not going to click on both links, right? They’re only going to click on one of the links. Now, the other strategy is that Amazon gives you a time window of when you can ask for reviews and feedback, right and using the review request button, they basically said that between five and 30 days, right and with so with the buyer seller messaging, they give you up to 30 days, right? So you might, if you’re just starting selling on Amazon, you might have one product. So it might not matter to you too much on whether or not you want to set up multiple, like campaigns. So what I mean is like, every product has an evaluation window, right and that window is very critical on whether or not the buyer had a chance to evaluate the product. If you asked to review too early, then there’s a very good chance they’re not going to leave your review,right? If you ask for a review too late, maybe they forgot about your product, or they don’t care. So you got to figure out like, okay, for each product, how long is it going to take, like an average buyer to use it, test it and then be able to write something about it, right? So if you’re selling multiple products, like if you’re selling toys, or you’re selling supplements, or some electronics, these different categories might have different timing, right? So you don’t want to ask for a review if you’re selling vitamins after five days, right? Obviously, like people need maybe 20 days or 30 days to figure out if it’s working or not right for they can leave you review. So the best thing is, yeah, make sure you understand your product’s request window, right and then sending them out at the right time. Also, Amazon doesn’t say anything about like, you can’t exclude different types of orders to send it to, right. So obviously, you don’t want to be sending review requests to people who refunded your product, return your product. Maybe left you negative feedback, right. So you want to try to figure out, Okay, can I identify these types of orders that had problems, right, or let’s say a buyer reached out to you and just cussed you. you’re really angry, like, you don’t want to send, you obviously don’t want to send a review to them, right? So figure out how to kind of filter these guys out, so you can increase your positive fees, right. So that’s very important. But other than that these days, I mean, the thing is, you have like, deciding which mechanism, the request or buyer submits your request, there’s not much you really need to do except for figuring out the timing, right? Because Amazon sends out their own subject line, email, their own templates, right. It’s just generic, everyone’s going to get the same thing. Now buyer seller messaging, you have a little bit more flexibility, because you can put your custom subject line, you can write your own personalized message, you can put in your logo, you can put attachments, so there’s a little bit more strategy using buyerzone. messaging. The subject line is the most important thing, right? Whether or not they’re going to open your email and now with the pixel tracking, disappearing, which basically means that you can’t see open rates anymore, which is a big issue, you really have to figure out Alright, which subject lines are actually going to perform the best, right and I would say, people always ask me what subject lines works the best and the best subject lines are, regarding our Amazon order ID with the order ID number or information about your Amazon order ID with the order ID number, that’s always going to get you very high open rates and the reason for that is, it’s something about Amazon, something about the order, it sounds kind of important, but you don’t really give too much detail about what that email content is about and that’s pretty much the mechanism of why they would open it. Now, if you’re writing a subject line that says, could you please rate my transaction? Or could you please review my product? Question mark, and which is kind of what Amazon uses, you’ll notice the open rates are much lower, right? That’s mainly because you’re giving too much information before the opening email and a lot of times people might be busy, right, depending on when you’re sending out the email, they might not be interested in opening at that time and if they skip it, they might never come back, right? Or they’re just don’t not interested in opening at all, because it’s asking for review, right? Now, if you can get them to open the email, then that’s where you kind of have to use a little bit of more personalized message to try to get them to convert and back in the days, when emails are pretty much while so you can put whatever in there. There’re so many different strategies using pictures, emojis, animations, you can really try to capture attention. But now Amazon says you can’t put pictures, you can’t put emojis. Now it’s more towards Alright, how can I just get to the point? Write something personal yet convincing and then see if they’ll write a review for me. So there’s not too much strategies anymore, it’s just I would say the best thing to do is just keep it short, keep it a little bit personal and then ask in a very nice and neutral way for review and that’s pretty much all you can do.

 

Norman  53:16  

Right. And one of the things you’re talking about is the subject lines, you could go to usability hub, or pickfu and ask people to rate your subject line and it’s not so much on the engagement side. But you can ask the question, which has the most curiosity or something along those lines? So, what would get your attention and give them three to take a look at and you’ll get your answer right away within about five minutes of which email that you could use or lead with. It’s just an option. It’s very inexpensive to do.



Norman  53:57  

Yes Kels? 

 

Kelsey 53:58

We have two more questions. We’re almost at the hour mark. So for Marina, if a customer contacts us with a question and mentions how much they love our product, can I ask them to leave a review in the situation?

 

Henson  54:13  

Yeah, you definitely can. I mean, I don’t see why you can as long as you only asked him once, right? So if you’re using an email automation tool, make sure you don’t send a second email out. If you’re responding to them and saying, Hey, by the way, could you leave us a review and out the link in there, that’s totally okay, right. You’re not incentivizing the review. Just make sure you don’t send a second one to them.

 

Norman  54:37  

Okay, Henson, but if you send a review back or a message back saying, Oh, I’m so happy that you love our product. Is that an issue? Would you leave a review? 

 

Henson  54:52  

Well, I wouldn’t say it’s an issue because you’re not the one that initiated contact right. The customer came in contact with you, first thing they loved your product and you’re just responding to them saying that, hey, I’m happy you love my product. Could you leave a review? Now, if you are really paranoid, then don’t put that in there. Just say like, Oh, that’s great, thanks for the feedback, can you leave me a review? Then you shouldn’t have a problem. But I really doubt Amazon is going to nitpick to that point where they’re gonna say, oh, by the way, you had this language in there. They’re more nitpicky about you sending this message to all your orders, right? If you’re doing this in bulk or mass, that’s where the problem comes in. If it’s once in a while, here and there, like it’s probably fine. 

 

Kelsey 55:36  

Then our last question, I guess, will be the last one for the day, should you always request a review?

 

Henson  55:44  

Absolutely. I mean, Amazon’s giving sellers a way to ask for reviews, right and they’ve made it clear with these new communication policies that you can ask for reviews, you can use buyer seller messaging right. They’re allowing you to do it and getting reviews now, versus getting views back in 2015, is completely different, it’s so much harder to get reviews, Amazon has done so many things to try to prevent false reviews or fake reviews. Right? So, if they’re giving you a free right to ask for a review, like you gotta maximize opportunity, there’s no reason not to ask for a review, right. So, definitely use either buyer seller messaging or use the review request button to ask for a review.

 

Norman  56:31  

I got a question. So on the review side, this has happened to a couple products that we’ve just had really great listings, and people have left reviews, and then all of a sudden you start seeing 50 reviews being deleted, 100 reviews being deleted, and these are all quality buys. They’re not going out there and we’re trying to get a like reap through rebates, put it that way. Yeah, they’re not lower quality buys, these are just people that are buying the product on a regular basis and all of a sudden, and big sometimes, like we’ve seen 300 reviews just removed. Is there anything that we can do to go back to Amazon and say, hey, these are all real.

 

Henson  57:17  

Yeah, so, I mean, there’s different scenarios of why they would delete those reviews. I mean, it could be fraud within Amazon, right? So we know there’s a lot of fishy stuff going on internally right? It could just be they made a, misdetected those reviews as fake reviews, possibly right or, even though it’s not, right? So the best thing I would say is open a case with them and then having a way to prove that these reviews are there. Because sometimes, as I heard internally, like someone has enough power, they can wipe out the review out of existence from Amazon, right and they have to like they’re some of these guys internally might not have the ability to backtrack and see Alright, these reviews used to be here, they’re gone. A lot of our customers have feedback, since we have the review management system, like once we grab the reviews that come into our system, like they’re always stored in our system. So you’ll be able to see the history of the review forever, you can download the whole thing in the CSV file, and we have a record of it. So then a lot of sellers like I think the review deletion started happening last year. So they were opening cases of seller support and saying, here’s a PDF of 50 reviews that used to be here and they disappeared, like, Can you tell me what happened? Right? So at least you have something to show that I had 50 reviews and these are review questions, Why are they here, they can look at that and then from that information, they can at least support your case a little bit better. So the actual reason for review deletion is I really don’t know, it could be many factors. But if you have plenty of support that these reviews are here before, it makes your case a lot stronger.

 

Norman  58:59  

So you have something that tracks the history. I wish I knew about this earlier, because we do this all manually, we take the review URL, and we copy it, and we put it into a note.

 

Norman  59:13  

Oh yeah, our review man was awesome. Like you can, all the reviews come in by time, grab it every four hours, you have a way to look at all the reviews that come in or only reviews by the asin because sort filter, one star or five star whatever you want to see. We have a labeling admin system inside, so you could write notes about the review saying Harry responded or you can label them and say these are reviews that have issues that we need to address. We have keyword detection for reviews, so we’ll figure out like alright, these are the most commonly used keywords in the last week about your reviews. So like if this is broken, it’s damage,  if it sucks you identify that right away, right? So there’s a lot of functionality and using software especially,  monitoring reviews because, if you have once you start selling a lot of products, there’s no way you can monitor all these products every single day. Right and like I said, you want to respond to them as fast as possible.

 

Norman  1:00:09  

Right. So we’ve hit the hour now, do you have enough time for two more questions? 

 

Henson 1:00:15

Yeah, go for it. 

 

Norman 1:00:16

Okay. Perfect. Kelsey.

 

Kelsey 1:00:17  

Okay. Yep. Two more questions. So anyone from the audience? If we don’t get to them now? Maybe you guys can go through the comments and reply afterwards. But forensic detectors, what about review edits from customers, I had a situation and got one star, fixed the problem, customers’ happy but the customer can’t change the original rating. Any thoughts?

 

Henson  1:00:40  

That’s interesting. Usually they can change the rating, because if they go back to the original review link where they left a review, it does allow you to update the review. So I’m wondering why that was a problem. I don’t know it could be a technical issue on Amazon. But I definitely know that you can delete your review or update it. 

 

Kelsey 1:01:03  

Okay and then our last one is from Marina. Can you tell us more about Feedback Whiz? Do you have templates?

 

Henson  1:01:12  

Yeah, so Feedback Whiz. The main tool when we first launched was the email mediation part buyer, seller messaging, emails, a lot of functionality around it. But with these new communication policies  things have toned down a lot. However, we have to provide sellers some updates. Some of the things that they’ve been unclear about. So we have to provide a 17 digit order ID number inside emails, right, we have to detect the buyer’s preferred language. So these are all things that we’re doing right now to update our software to be compliant by November 3rd. As in templates? Yeah, we have a bunch of templates that we’re currently working on. I think by next week, we’ll have an update with templates that we think are going to be hundred percent TOS compliant? I do you speak with Amazon, like internally asking questions that are kind of vague about communication policies. So we have pretty good insight on how much we can stretch. Some of these rules, right. To a way where you’re not gonna get in trouble. However, you still want to be effective. Right? So yeah, I think by next week, we have pre built templates, we’ll have language translation for right now we have 13 different marketplaces. I think maybe only like six or seven of them have different languages, but we’ll have the translated languages as well. So and yeah, with feedbackwhiz you can automate everything right? You can choose if you want to use buyer seller messaging, or if you want to use the review quest button, right. We can trigger the review question automatically in Seller Central. So you don’t need a Chrome extension. It’s done directly through Amazon API. You can schedule different timings for different products, right. So if you had toys, like I said, you could say, hey, send out a review request five days after or send out 30 days after for supplements, right? Via product instructions with attachments, you can use buyer seller messaging to send that out first after shipment. You have ways to exclude products, right. So returns, refunds, like we get all that data. So for all the data of all your orders, we have all that information, whether it was feedback, whether or not they use a coupon code, promotion, all that information we can use to help you guys maximize your conversions for reviews.

 

Norman  1:03:43  

Okay, very good. So, how do people find your app?

 

Henson  1:03:49  

Just go to www.feedbackwhiz.com

 

Norman  1:03:54  

Okay. Oh, yeah, I just see Kelsey put it in the comments as well. Alright. I think I took up a lot more time than what we agreed on, Henson. Anyways, how do people get a hold of you?

 

Henson  1:04:09  

You could just email me, Henson, H E N S O N @feedbackwhiz.com. 

 

Norman 1:04:15

Very good. 

 

Henson 1:04:16

If you have any questions, just email me. If you have questions about the app itself or support related questions, just email support@feedbackwhiz.com and if you have questions about how to use the app, you can go to support.feedbackwhiz.com and we have all the guides and videos on all the questions you might have on setting things up or how to do things so.

 

Norman  1:04:41  

Okay, very good. So Henson, I really appreciate you coming on the podcast today. There was a lot more to this and I thought, learnt a lot from the new communication policy. So thank you so much for being on.

 

Henson  1:04:56  

Yeah, absolutely. Thank you so much for having me.

 

Norman  1:04:59  

Oh, you’re very welcome. Alright everybody. So I hope you enjoyed the podcast today. Remember, we’re going to be posting this episode, along with other content and other video clips on Norman Farrar, a.k.a. The Beard Guy and also if you want to see the visual, the video, YouTube channel, go to Norman Farrar, where we not only have the full episodes, but we also have a bunch of repurposed content, exactly like Hani Mourra said on the last episode. But you can check that out on our YouTube channel. Kelsey.

 

Kelsey 1:05:37  

Alright. I’m here. Hello, everyone. I hope everyone enjoyed the show. So yeah, as Norm said, if you are interested, if you maybe missed out on the first half of the episode, you can always go to YouTube. Our channel is just Norman Farrar and you can find all of the latest, every single episode that’s that we’ve ever done. Going back to, I think, April. But for clips, are there we release shortened clips and if you haven’t already, please like and share this. We’re also on Apple podcasts and Spotify. So you just search Lunch With Norm and you’ll be able to find us and I see. Marina, thank you for watching. We have Scott, great insights and reviews and what has changed and it’s currently possible. Thanks, guys. 

 

Norman 1:06:29

Thanks, Scott. 

 

Kelsey 1:06:30

Dr. Koz, Norm and Kelsey, great job. Awesome. Thanks. Thank you for watching. We appreciate you coming back and tuning in. Also, I didn’t run this past you Norm

 

Norman 1:06:41

Oh God, what are you gonna do?

 

Kelsey 1:06:43

I was thinking that we should have a little name for fans of Lunch With Norm. So to the audience, if you have any suggestions for a name for you guys, and that we can call you.

 

Norman 1:06:54

A name for a community?

 

Kelsey 1:06:55

A name for a community. Let us know in the comments. I think it’d be fun and if you have any questions or comments about the show, you can always email me I’ll throw my email in.

 

Norman  1:07:06  

What about a name for Kelsey. How’s that?

 

Kelsey 1:07:11  

But if you have any feedback you guys want to give us or advice. We’d love to hear. So I’ll throw my email into the comments here, k@lunchwithnorm.com and Victor, thank you for tuning in and I think that’s it for me. 

 

Norman 1:07:28

Alright.

 

Kelsey 1:07:29

Did I squeeze soon enough? 

 

Norman  1:07:31  

You squeezed it enough. Alright. So on Monday, we’re going to be talking to my business partner on Honu Worldwide, Afolabi Oyerokun, and he’s going to be discussing the fourth quarter. What you can do, some low cost three PL solutions and let me see. I think that is absolutely it. There we go. So stay tuned for Lunch With Norm every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at noon, Eastern Standard Time. I don’t think there’s any Thursday episodes scheduled. We’re back to Monday, Wednesdays and Fridays. So everybody, thanks again. I really appreciate you joining us today on Lunch With Norm