Memo: Two Sides of The Algorithm

That 15 minute delivery of shampoo and kombucha may come with a deepening divide between the classes. You are happy with your service and the service person may be happy with the opportunity but what does it mean for the role of algorithms in society? The digital has long overflowed into the physical world (your Uber ride is algorithmically chosen). But this seems different.

Convenience doesn’t come without a cost. When people are willing to pay for a fast and easy service that eliminates friction in their lives, other people become responsible for making that service happen. The spread of the 15-minute economy has given more people the option to order immediate deliveries of anything from pharmacy medications to snacks to full grocery orders. That means more people are needed to deliver to them. The result is influenced by a bifurcation of wealth and a new labor structure, where workers are separated by what side of the algorithm they’re on.

It became clear during the pandemic that there was a human cost to convenience as people began ordering same-day delivery from Instacart, Amazon Prime and Target’s Shipt in order to avoid going into grocery stores themselves. Rather than take on risk of exposure, those who could pay to do so sent couriers on their behalf, while those who needed the wages took on that risk instead. We’re no longer in a Covid-related state of emergency, but the delivery app industry isn’t slowing down.

In the feature article of No. 758 of 2PM Attack of the Snack Apps, Ajesh Patalay spoke to the rise of Europe’s suite of delivery apps, including Getir, Zapp, Weezy, Jiffy, Flink and Gorillas, all of which have swelled in size and valuation and shrunk the expected delivery time of energy drinks and ice cream from local convenience stores. Deliveroo, also in the UK, is partnering with Morrisons to promise 10-minute delivery via a new service called Hop. In the US, Gorilla has launched its 10-minute delivery, while Gopuff is building a new convenience store model based around speedy delivery. When need is taken out of the equation in favor of sheer convenience, on-demand delivery begins to look less like a positive innovation and more like a wedge-driver. Consider this prescient quote by Michael Miraflor:

The goal is to stay above the algorithm. If you fall below it, you are 10 minute delivery labor. There’s nothing wrong with that. Nothing wrong with hard work. But instead of white vs blue collar I refer to it as above/below the algorithm bc that’s what it has become.

This reminiscent of the sentiment behind the Parasite Economy, as 2PM published last December.

This is the cost of the proliferation of eCommerce. We’ve set the precedent where last-mile workers and drivers are without the benefits that the market would expect of hard workers. The growth of the online retail industry is critical to local, national, and global markets. But it does not need to be this way.

The middle class is shrinking as jobs opportunities and wages gravitate towards two poles (working class, wealth class). Many opportunities in the digital-first economy are determined by one differentiator: requesting the help of the algorithm or being commanded by it. On-demand delivery is the biggest tell. As Michael Miraflor wrote in that tweet, the algorithm is the new line of demarcation. We will begin to view the economy through the lens of the algorithm that controls our personal impressions, our information, our entertainment, and – increasingly – the service that we receive (or are commanded to provide).

By Web Smith | Art: Alex Remy | Editor: Hilary Milnes 

Editor’s Note: this is syndicated opening from Member Brief / No. 758. On occasion, I publish key insights to 2PM’s wider audience. To take full advantage of 2PM’s platform, join the membership.

Memo: The Intuit of DTC

When Assembly, the eCommerce software and data platform, announced a strategic investment from Advent International and PSG last week, it made little noise in the news. Neither did its more than $1 billion valuation, five acquisitions, 30-plus product launches, or the $55 billion in gross merchandise value that the SaaS company helped its users earn since 2019.

Assembly set out to build a system of order among over 6,000 software solutions spanning 80 categories. It’s time that we consider that the toolmakers can be just as exciting as those who mine with them. Assembly is the Intuit of direct-to-consumer, and as more brands grow beyond the walls of Shopify, BigCommerce, Commerce Cloud and WooCommerce, they will eventually encounter Assembly’s considerable influence.

I had the opportunity to speak with co-founder and CEO of Assembly, Sandeep Kella and public relations lead Brynn Whitfield. I had to ask: “Does it seem as though people don’t care enough about what you’re building?” Sandeep responded to the like:

I don’t care about the notoriety, we’re here to build the tools for those who do.

This is a tale of the gold miner and the tool merchant. We can recall few failed miners during the Great Gold Rush of ’49 but several of the tool merchants remain household names to this day. Retail is shifting from offline to online and as opportunity continues to present itself for brands looking to grow in their reach and sophistication, they need tools before the head to the frontier. For Assembly, Kella, and Co-Founder Adam Crawshaw, they are building that company of tool merchants.

In March of 1848, 800 non-natives made the trip to California. By the end of 1848, that number ballooned to 20,000. And by 1849, that number reached 100,000. The gold rush was an example of the belief that the economic strength and vitality of America was tied to moving towards the frontier. Today’s frontier is digital, not physical.

Just like now, then. Out of the woodwork came investors, diggers, and tool merchants to the West. Samuel “Mark Twain” Clemens, the one failed miner that you may remember, learned first hand that the real business was in the selling of tools. After his time in Humboldt Range, he’d later write: “a mine is a hole in the ground with liars standing next to it.” You can mine for gold or you can supply the pickaxes. You know a few of the proverbial “pickaxe sellers” by name: Levi Strauss, Henry Wells, and Wells Fargo. Nearly two centuries later and digital commerce represents its own semblance of a gold rush.

At Assembly, Kella has focused on the tools and not the miners:

What aggregators have done for brands, we have been doing for software. We are singularly focused on helping eCommerce merchants grow better by bringing together software tools and combining them with valuable content. Our mission is to meet our customers’ needs at every stage of their growth.

Just because the company is making acquisitions doesn’t mean that it’s another roll-up factory. There are numerous companies looking to duplicate the value of Thrasio. Everywhere you look, holding companies are looking to acquire whatever the categorical preference is: brands, tiny businesses, even newsletters. There seems to be a market for every asset. To a lesser extent, WeCommerce is an example of a company building out a suite of creative tools. When I asked Kella about his acquisition approach and roll-up model, he was sure in his reply.

We may never acquire another company.

Notably, the recent fundraise press release cited the company’s plan to bolster the engineering team, signaling the leadership’s intent to build more of its product pipeline in-house and tie together the rest in ways that will improve cross-platform data-sharing and insights gained. Assembly is focused on making the brands that use its platforms more viable, longer-lasting, faster-growing, and more sophisticated at scale.  Every company seems to be zigging; Assembly’s path is the zag.

The more that we know, the more that we can do for our customers.

The average brand is managing 10 to 15 pieces of software to manage scale, inventory, and profitability. Kella’s theory is that this many separate software solutions can actually begin to hinder the progress of a retailer using them. The timing couldn’t be better for integrated, well-thought out marketing and inventory SaaS solutions.

A recent report by McKinsey & Company suggests that around 80 percent of CPG CEOs are looking for growth through their marketing channels. Associate partner Michelle Choi writes: “To do it, CPG companies need an AI engine, a 360-degree view of consumers, and a fit-for-purpose marketing technology stack to deliver the right message, to the right consumer, at the right moment — all the time.” The average brand owner cannot begin to manage this level of sophistication on its own. In my conversations with Kella, it is this maturing of the industry that led Assembly to build solutions that can provide these insights to customers. And if they don’t build it in-house, they acquire it. The company has acquired several companies across three performance sectors: marketplace performance, social performance, and performance analytics. They pair performance with insight via a reported 2 billion data points, content education, and a fellowship of partners made available to address the needs of merchants. Here is a selection of notable acquisitions by Assembly since its 2019 inception.

  • Led by Bojan Gajic, Helium 10 assists brands that look to improve processes around product research, sales trends, profitability estimation, customer insights, keyword optimization, inventory allotment protection, market tracking, and search term analytics.
  • Led by Ben Aldern, the Preztozone story begins with two former Amazon sellers who decided to turn their proven, internal tools for keyword bid optimization into its own company. They note that their platform was built from “the ground up for Amazon sellers by Amazon sellers.” The company boasts a best-in-class display for pay-per-click (PPC) data and a proprietary algorithm for bid optimization.
  • Led by Krystyn Harrison, OrderMetrics connects to a brand’s income and cost centers to help its leader understand existing and potential profitability. They do this by tying into programs like Shopify, Google Analytics, and Facebook. It’s a clear view  of a brand’s financial health.
  • Led by Alex Markov, Refersion manages the promotional networks of brands. What began as a beta product evolved into a platform that managed the affiliate and influencer marketing relationships for a reported 16,000+ brands and nearly 600,000 affiliates.

While the general media is typically focused on the brand side of the industry, history tells us that we are more likely to remember the tool makers than we are the gold miners. There’d be no Levi’s denim, Wells Fargo bank or writings of Mark Twain without the gold rush.

The eCommerce industry is in a period of gold rush-like intensity with new obstacles coming about each day. The number of merchants, marketplaces, and gross merchandising volume is rising by the week. The opportunity is there, so are the obstacles. One week it’s iOS 14.5’s damage to Facebook’s ad pixel, then it’s supply chain struggles, then it’s the costs of logistics or labor.

It may not seem exciting to the average industry observer, but for this audience, a cohort of builders is looking to identify opportunity and scale to meet them. Arbitrage opportunities can change the trajectory of a business’ fortune. To find them, you need the right tools and insights just like the gold miners did.

What Intuit is to finance, Assembly is looking to become for DTC. It will be exciting to see where Assembly goes next as omnichannel growth becomes the path forward for a growing class of modern brands.

By Web Smith | Editor: Hilary Milnes 

Memo: New York, Los Angeles, and Columbus

One line from a book written 130 years ago would influence marketing and branding for ages to come. In his novel Five Hundred Dollars, Horatio Alger writes: “I don’t know but I can wait two or three weeks,” he said slowly, “if you are sure we shall play at Peoria.” This line gave the advertising industry “Will it play in Peoria?”, an old adage that is traditionally used to question whether a product, person or theme will appeal to the average person in middle America. It’s a question that answers a product’s potential role in the lives of a broader demographic or psychographic. In today’s digital age, for brand owners, Peoria is worth your time and here is why.

The Trope

The trope was meant to characterize the Midwest as somewhat of a lesser-than place where uniformity, simplicity, and a resistance to modernity reigned supreme. Don Marine, a professor of theater at Illinois State University once said:

The widespread appeal of this verbal maligning by comics, actors and other performers suggests Peoria as a paramount example of the dull, banal, and provincial theatrical road stop. But the popularity of the “put down” suggests as well that the city possesses a theatrical heritage of considerable longevity.

If you close your eyes, you can imagine Don Draper sitting in his office on Madison Avenue, asking, “Will it play in Peoria?” as he decides between models for a new Dodge ad. Today, the concept of a test city is more likened to Columbus, Ohio – the city where I choose to live despite my deep love for the pace and promise of cities like New York, Los Angeles, and San Francisco.

Sometimes, a city can fail to understand its own power. Columbus is affectionately (yet restrictively) known as “Test City, USA” because it accomplished what Peoria only did in America’s 19th and 20th century imagination. A 2012 CBS News report says it well:

With Ohio State and dozens of other colleges, the student population here is massive, and there’s a strong international presence. It all adds up to a near-perfect cross-section of the country’s consumers. It’s Middle America – but that doesn’t mean it’s average.

The perfect mix of consumers and the perfect volume of them has collectively reassured corporate brands that they are ready for market expansion. I grew up believing I needed to be in New York, Los Angeles, or San Francisco to succeed. If you were a child from the South or the Midwest, unless you were well-traveled, you believed that your success would rely on your proximity to the centers of the world. In reality, you are always at your own center – especially now. This is beginning to reflect in certain circles: technology companies are thriving in Miami, Tampa, Austin, and Atlanta. But for the most part, product brand development still lags behind. There are exceptions of course: Outdoor Voices (Austin), Summersalt (St. Louis), Mizzen + Main (Dallas), and Jeni’s Ice Creams (Columbus).

Line up 10 brands and you will see similar attributes driven, alone, by their geography. There are the internal similarities: design agencies, performance marketing agencies, product development consultants, public relations firms, the same industry events, newsletters, Discord servers read, and degrees had from Wharton or Columbia. And there are the external similarities: product packaging, copywriting styles, typefaces, front-end design, and distribution strategies. In fact, when new ideas come along, they are well-rewarded simply because they are fresh. Snaxshot is like a breath of fresh air because Andrea Hernández is different, Ruby’s marketing strategy woke up the blands, and Parade’s sex-positive marketing strategy broke open a boring underwear industry. But these are mere exceptions.

If you query 1,000 people interested in DTC culture, the majority of them will know several millionaires and Ivy League graduates. It’s a very coastal, affluent club of people with (or nearing) lots of money had. If you ask 100 founders where they will be this weekend, 70 of them will say Los Angeles or New York. As a whole, the disruptors have fallen in line, savoring the laws of best practices and oldened rules of perceived aspiration. If you want a pop-up, why else would you choose a neighborhood away from Soho, Atwater Village, or Fillmore Street? The DTC industry is a club and clubs have rules made to be broken. The first rule to break?

Build for New Yorkers, San Franciscans, and Los Angelenos.

Modern brands must understand that there are consumers outside of major coastal cities. And it is the spaces outside of these comfort zones that may end up determining the long-term viability of the brands themselves. Of course, some of the industry’s pioneers understood just that.

The Reality

Warby Parker launched one of its earliest DTC brick-and-mortar retail experiments in history. They chose a small corner of the Columbus, Ohio neighborhood known as the “Short North.” Dave Gilboa and Neil Blumenthal of Warby Parker sought to understand whether it “played in Peoria.” The showroom was a success. Today, the official Warby Parker store sits just steps away from its original 20-square-foot Ohio showroom. The company recently filed an S-1 for their IPO.

Observing this early Warby attempt (in addition to co-founding Mizzen+Main with Kevin Lavelle on the same street) was my inspiration for helping Tenfold agency CEO Rachel Friedman with her latest project, Tenspace. It’s the latest retail experiment to cater to the DTC industry, located just down the street from that first Warby Parker showroom and the original Mizzen + Main flagship store.

Tenspace is an ever-changing, brick-and-mortar store in the Short North that will share stories of rising online brands with the public in an interactive, experiential format. Every two months, the space is transformed to immerse customers with new brands. Web Smith, founder of 2PM, a subscription-driven media and e-commerce company, was integral in the Tenspace launch. [1]

The process was not kind to Friedman. Over the course of months, several New York and San Francisco-based retailers inched towards the finish line before cancelling or stalling their decisions to engage altogether. A few, worried about stepping outside of the DTC playbook, cited things like, “…Not New York…” or “…I am so busy….” or “…we have another pop-up in Santa Monica….” But the irony is that in no way was any labor expectation placed on any of the brand partners. In a way, they said no out of underestimation of Friedman. I began to take it personally, for her sake! The premise was simple: take a brand and editorialize it through physical expression, retail installment, and a multi-media depiction of the brand’s roots. In this way, she is using real estate as media, not as the retail format that we are accustomed to. And I am comfortable suggesting that there are few if any operators in modern retail who are as talented as she.

Friedman, a forum mate of mine in Entrepreneur’s Organization, committed a reported hundreds of thousands of her own capital to bring the first show to life. I stood by as a late-night ear at times while she coped with her investment. I’ve been there. Her two-pronged strategy was failproof, in my opinion. The comfort that I provided, if any, was grounded in my confidence in: the idea, her execution, and market timing. Her strategy for recouping that investment is two-pronged:

  1. Show brands her storytelling capability and they will flock to her for the experience.
  2. Provide data around visibility to potential sponsors like Shopify, BigCommerce, Yotpo, Loop, Klarna, Lumi, or Lightspeed Venture Partners and await their interest.

They are flocking and they are interested. By all accounts, this strategy is playing out just as anticipated. She has outside interest and a growing book of potential sponsors and brands. But to get to this stage, she needed her first brand partner. And heading into the early months of summer, I was short on DTC contacts who understood retail markets outside of Los Angeles and New York. Five well known DTC brands turned down the opportunity to work with Friedman and each were based in New York, the Bay Area, or Los Angeles.

As I stood watching our daughters play in a tense soccer match, I recalled that there was a brand that may have the appropriate context to understand the opportunity after all. I didn’t have to call, tweet, or text anyone. I looked over to my left at Ohio State wrestling legend and former National Team wrestler Tommy Rowlands, and told him: “I have an idea for you and I need you to say yes.” Tommy, a stoic and imposing friend of mine listened intently and quipped, “Sure, let me talk to her.” The her was Friedman.

Rudis social growth

Rowlands and his partner Jesse Leng are co-founders of Rudis, a brand that is on the precipice of leaving behind the niche of wrestling apparel thanks to savvy sponsorship of high-profile Olympic athletes like Kyle Snyder and Tamyra Mensah-Stock, the first African-American woman to win a wrestling gold, plus a timely partnership with Authentic Brands Group to market products with the licenses of Muhammad Ali, Jesse Owens, “Rocky” Balboa, and Vince Lombardi. With these forces working in its favor, Rudis launched as the first Tenspace partner just eight weeks after the sideline soccer match presented the opportunity. Over those weeks, Friedman and team developed, fabricated, and stocked the brand’s show. The reception has been extraordinary, quantifiably and qualitatively. The retailer’s social channels have grown, sales have reflected new interest, and the media from within the walls of the Tenspace installation have amplified the brand to the far ends of the internet.

I’d never suggest that a retail exhibit of Tenspace’s caliber is superior because it is located in Columbus, Ohio. But what I will say is that we live in a digital-first society now. Drake’s Certified Lover Boy album release featured billboards in places all over the world. They each made their way to Twitter, Reddit, and Instagram. Physical billboards became digital fodder. Such retail opportunities should no longer be looked at merely through the lens of geography. Part of the reason why the social shareability of Tenspace is such a sure bet is precisely because the project isn’t based in a place like Los Angeles or New York, where art and retail are so common that they become background noise.

The actual space

For the retailers with the courage to think outside of the box, opportunities to breakthrough can be found far outside the cities and strategies of the status quo. Of them, Tenspace has raced to the top of those options. Friedman and her team did an extraordinary job of meeting media and brands at its point of linear commerce, and she did so in a way that has to be seen for one’s self. There are no comparisons. And as for Rudis, the wrestling brand for hardened athletes and the warrior minded, it has begun to show that it has the crossover appeal required by any sporting brand who may want to change the world.

Last week, Jeni Britton Bauer was hosted at Tenspace for a virtual and in-person hybrid talk with a number of executives in the 2PM ecosystem, including Loop founder Jonathan Poma, Kat Cole, Nugget co-founder Ryan Cocca, Tenspace founder Rachel Friedman, Kelly Vaughn, myself, and a few dozen others. She left with a Rudis “Ali” jacket and a new appreciation for the wrestling brand and its retail partner. A wrestling brand turned a DTC ice cream pioneer into a fan. Her appreciation for the product was later noted before her Instagram following of 150,000.

Cities like Columbus can seem secondary to the coastal retail ecosystem, it’s time to reassess the opportunities beyond the borders of America’s top metropolitan areas. To avoid doing so is limiting. It’s early days for the level of execution seen within the walls of Tenspace so the first actors will still earn the greatest return on investment. Don’t worry, your brand will play in Peoria.

By Web Smith | Editor: Hilary Milnes | Art: Alex Remy and Christina Williams