The UnNoticed Entrepreneur

Why distribution is more important than product in digital content marketing.

February 22, 2024 Jim James
The UnNoticed Entrepreneur
Why distribution is more important than product in digital content marketing.
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Show Notes Transcript
Creating epic blog posts, videos, and podcasts is hard work. But getting eyeballs on that content is even harder. Cody Schneider, founder of AI content repurposing platform Swell, shares his distribution-over-product philosophy.

Learn Cody's set-it-and-forget-it system to effortlessly turn a single podcast episode into a cascade of social snippets, tweets, and more. Hear how one client leveraged AI-generated newsletters to snag leads and recognition. Find out the critical moment Cody missed to double down on an online ad arbitrage.

If you pour your soul into content only to see tumbleweeds roll by, don't miss this episode. Let Cody inspire you to take distribution as seriously as ideation. Applying his podcasting workflows will amplify your message and save you from unseen entrepreneurial pitfalls.


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Jim James (00:02.606)
Hello and welcome to this episode of the unnoticed entrepreneur with me here in the UK. Jim James, your host. And if you are building a brand, especially in the B2B space, you may be creating a lot of content, but really struggling to get traction because distribution of your content is actually the lion's share of the work and actually where it really lands with the customers, potential customers.

We're really lucky that today, Cody Schneider, our guest who's in Boulder, Colorado, in, sorry, say that again. I've got Boulder in my mind. I'll do that again. It's quicker than editing it.

Hello, welcome to this episode of The Unnoticed Entrepreneur with me, Jim James, your host here in the UK. And as always, we're gonna try and solve a problem that you're facing in your business. And if you're creating content, which we've all been told to do, especially if you're creating maybe long form or audio and video content, you probably know that creating the content is difficult, but not nearly as difficult as the distribution and getting that to engage and to land with your target audience. And my guest today,

has a theory that actually your distribution is more important than your product. And he has a new business that he's gonna tell us about called Swell AI. He's an entrepreneur, serial entrepreneur, and Cody Schneider is his name, he's joining us from Denver in Colorado. Cody, welcome to the show.

Cody Schneider (01:33.04)
Tim, thanks for having me. Super excited to be here.

Jim James (01:35.394)
Well, I'm excited to have you here because we're going to talk about AI and the problem that most people have with creating content is distribution. And I find this even with my own show that creating the content isn't necessarily the hardest part, but getting distribution, getting downloads and engagements and click throughs through to a call to action is really the pain point. You've got a solution for that. We're also going to have you to give us a case study for one of your clients, one of your customers, at Swell AI.

You managed to use your platform to generate a large number of leads, I think in the insurance business. And you're also going to talk to us about a mistake that you've made as you've been building your business and how you've maybe missed an opportunity to arbitrage online ads, and then you're also going to give us some advice on what we can do to get noticed. So Cody, explain about your theory that distribution is more important than product.

Cody Schneider (02:34.192)
Yeah, happy to. So this is my core thesis, right? And so just for context, my background was in early stage startups and people build great products all the time, right? But they don't see the light of day and they get no traction. This is a classic thing that happens, especially with first time entrepreneurs. There's that old trope that like, first time entrepreneurs focus on product, second time entrepreneurs focus on distribution, third time entrepreneurs focus on like leverage, right? Or like, and so for...

with distribution is more important than product. This is really kind of talking about this idea that like we have to think about distribution as the same side of the coin or one of the sides of a coin of business, right? So those two sides are like, I have a product that people wanna buy and like I have a way to sell it. So distribution is that way to sell it. So content marketing is this like classic way for people to create distribution and really create brands like zero to one brand.

But just making content, it does nothing. Like you're just talking about, right? Like if nobody sees it and nobody interacts with it, nobody consumes it, it does nothing for your company. You're gonna see no revenue, you know, like impact based on, you know, just it existing. And I used to, actually I started my career in a B2B marketing agency and we saw this all the time. We did a lot of work with Fortune 500 companies. And for them, like it was the classic thing where they built this like, you know, article or a white paper or whatever.

And then they're like, cool, like this exists now. Like they check their, you know, that box on their list and it's like, you have done 20% of the work, right? Uh, the only thing that actually makes impact, um, is now we have to get that out in front of our target customer and we have to get it, them to consume that. And so, um, yeah, that's kind of the core thesis is that, yeah. And like an example of this as well is like NetSuite. I always use them because like they're a terrible CRM, right? Like they are like, but tons of people use them for email marketing.

Jim James (04:08.206)
Yeah.

Cody Schneider (04:29.66)
And we see this all the time where it's like they had built out this distribution engine that was more powerful than their competitors and they can win based on that. And so that's kind of the core idea when you break it down.

Jim James (04:41.542)
Yeah. Well, I think Cody, you're absolutely right. And one of the CEOs of Sony said that, you know, of a successful business, 1% is the idea, 10% is the product and 100% is the marketing, right? And I guess when we saw with Microsoft OS that really, whilst it wasn't the best operating system, Gates managed to get it on every IBM based computer, right? It was the distribution that established that, you know, and I thought you were going to mention Netscape actually,

Cody Schneider (05:06.756)
100%.

Jim James (05:11.398)
which of course died with the Windows browsers instead. So Cody, one of the challenges for companies and entrepreneurs is that the content creation actually takes quite a lot of time. And so they kind of run out of time to do the marketing, which is why so much effort is spent on building content where there's articles, videos, podcasts, and then the distribution

often gets kind of short shrift, doesn't it? Or maybe just gets put up and there isn't really the quality of content and management of that distribution. How are you helping with that, Cody, with Swell AI?

Cody Schneider (05:57.816)
Yeah, yeah. And so I think the best way to kind of go through this is the workflows that we're seeing people do that are really effective. So kind of the biggest opportunity is like making, like, and this isn't a new idea, right? It's like, I make this anchor piece of content, which is the long form, you know, it can be a fireside chat, it can be a webinar, it can be a podcast like this.

And then I take that long form piece of content and I chop it up into all these different forms. I repurpose it into all these different forms that feel native to each platform. Right? So, um, the, an example of this would then be, okay, I take that podcast episode. I've turned it into clips for Instagram reels for YouTube shorts for TikTok. Um, I also then, uh, like take the transcript and I write tweets based off of the, uh, the key takeaways or the core ideas, the insights I write LinkedIn posts based off of those insights as well.

I could then also write a newsletter that includes all those insights that I send out to my list that's promoting the episode or just its own standalone piece of educational content based on the ideas that were brought up by that conversation. So it's kind of endless what I can do with that single piece. On the time that it takes to do this, so previously I worked at this company

called Rupa Health, I think it was employee six or seven there. And my job, one of my jobs was basically I had a zero to one, the media arm of the company. And so what that looked like was we like hired this whole team to come in and then we hired contractors to do all that, like help us with the video production and all the post-production processes. And, you know, at the end of it, it's like, you know, 10 plus people that are all working on this content production inside.

Um, and now like what AI is changing is it's basically like, I can build these automations that are doing a lot of that heavy lifting, you know, 80% of that legwork for that production can be done now with this. Um, but the, when I am talking to like other founders, I, and we, I have these conversations all the time though. Okay. I'm trying to figure out how do I do personal brand like podcasting or just weekly fireside chats with industry, like industry experts that are in your industry is one of the most high leverage things that you can do. Um.

Cody Schneider (08:14.828)
And it's not a lot of mental energy for you, right? So it's like, I, as a founder can sit it down for an hour a week. I have a conversation with an industry expert. We take that recorded video. Now all of a sudden I have all of these clips that I can distribute across all of my social profiles. I can write all these posts. I can write long form articles. Um, and that process that again, I used to have, I used to have to have a team of maybe five plus people to accomplish that can all be done with as a so, you know, a single individual. And.

Like we're seeing, like my friends built this podcast. It's like in the, I think it's a top, you know, 20 podcasts now in the UK in the marketing category. And for them, like it's two dudes, they sit down, they have an interesting person on, they talk to them about whatever it is that they're doing, and then they built this workflow where it's like they record in Riverside, they put it into the scripts to create the studio sound effect and remove all the ums, ahs, and then also, uh, like make it so that it's like higher quality.

Uh, they didn't take that they export it. They put it into Swell and Swell writes all of their, uh, like, you know, tweets, newsletters, blog posts for their website, all of that media. They basically have built these cup, you know, customized prebuilt templates within Swell so that it produces that media anytime they give that raw material to the, to the software. And within, you know, two hours a week, they can basically create all of the media that they could need for both of their like

personal brands, right? And they work as like C-suite individuals at different companies. But for them, it does two things, right? Like it gives them leverage within the organization that they're at, but it also gives them leverage. Like if they're trying to go and like, you know, start their own thing, or they're trying to go and work for another company, suddenly it's like, if you have this audience where it's 50,000, you know, followers on LinkedIn, as an example,

Jim James (10:00.097)
Yeah.

Cody Schneider (10:05.096)
that creates this opportunity for you to basically use that in the negotiations for salary or for like, you know, even when you're doing cold outreach or talking to like potential customers if you go and you found a company. So a lot done back there. But yeah, that's kind of the high level of how we're seeing this all done.

Jim James (10:10.848)
Yeah.

Jim James (10:18.138)
Yeah, no, that's great. And someone, you know, I record in Riverside and then currently we use the Riverside platform because they have a, you know, a magic clips section. Then you have to download that and put it into Descript, for example, and then take that and put that into Anthropic Claude or into ChatGP to write it. And then I had to go to VAs because you end up

with kind of an avalanche of content. So Cody, I think that's absolutely fantastic. I see on your website as well on swellai.com that you can build chatbots for podcast episodes as well. So that AI is going to liberate smaller business owners to generate content is a big part of my thesis actually that it will democratize competition, right? Smaller companies can take on bigger companies

by being swift and new to about content creation, but also distribution here. I will ask you the question about quality control because you've mentioned about repurposing. So LinkedIn has one audience, but one format and the AI, their algorithms reward certain kind of content. Facebook, another, Instagram obviously is more pictures. YouTube is different to TikTok. So can you just tell us

does Swell.ai, if you like, take into account the platform or does it just make the content, if you like, landscape or different letterbox and, you know, different duration? Because that's the key that I haven't understood yet, an AI platform that really manages the nature of the content at an intrinsic level, rather than just reformatting it from a production level.

Cody Schneider (12:09.008)
Totally, totally. So two things there. What we found is that the LLM has general knowledge of what each platform, what the piece of content for each platform should look and feel like. And so we can specify, like, hey, this is going to be a LinkedIn post, it's long format, and it's gonna write, maybe it's like three sentences per paragraph type of thing. What we've suggested and what we have people do most often though, is give it an example of the output that they're looking for.

And like in a templated format, right? Like it's like, I want it line by line with a ton of white space so that it's really readable. And you see that like on LinkedIn, that's a great way. I can, so then, you know, from a user standpoint I can just give the AI an example of what I'm wanting it to write and tell it, hey, now make a piece of content like this, but based on, you know, this transcript that I provided, right, that the AI generated for us. And I can then, you know,

Jim James (12:53.773)
Right.

Cody Schneider (13:06.424)
we call it prompt chaining, but I can chain these prompts together to create these complex outputs. So as an example, I can say something like, list the tone, style and voice of this episode. It defines that tone, style and voice. I can then say, okay, now list five LinkedIn posts ideas that are related to marketing from this episode. It lists those five ideas. And then I can chain another prompt where at the end, it's like, okay, now write five LinkedIn posts about

this episode or about each of those five, the ideas listed above, but write it in the tone, style and voice that I had the AI like define in that previous part of the chat. And that can all be saved, that whole prompt chain can be saved as a template so that anytime I provided raw materials, it creates that output that I'm looking for, right? And this is where we see kind of like the app, everybody's trying to create like,

Jim James (13:44.949)
Okay.

Jim James (13:54.451)
Okay.

Cody Schneider (14:00.144)
they're like, how do I make AI sound like me? And this is one of those ways that you can do that really effectively is basically providing it like that context of like, here's my tone style voice. And then also saying like, here's the output example. And just to give you like a specific, we have a client that they're like, hey, we're trying to do mid roll ads to promote previous episodes of the podcast. And so they give us an example, like they give the AI an example of the mid roll ad that they're doing currently like the script. And then we just say, hey, AI, like make a mid roll ad that's

like the one that we provided you, but for this episode, for this transcript that's provided. Right. And so then it does like an almost perfect output. And for them, it's like they have like 400 plus shows that they're doing this for. Right. And they're publishing a show a week. So that's 1200 mid-roll ads that they, you know, previously a team member was having to write. And suddenly it's now that whole process is like automated. All they do is they come over the top and that,

that creative person, like that marketer, what they were really turned into now is they are a, like they're a curator rather than like the ideator, right? So like when we think about content production, traditionally it's like, you know, find an interesting idea. I then like have to ideate how do I expand on that idea? And then I then, you know, have the curator, which is that copy editor that's coming over the top, et cetera, and making sure that it fits brand tone, you know, whatever those requirements are.

Now that AI, it's really good at finding that core idea. It's really good at writing that first draft. And really that person, like all they're focusing on is like, what are those final touches that I can add to this? Um, so, and what I always am trying to emphasize with people is like, this is just another tool within that production tool belt, like 10% of the inputs and like 10% of the outputs is what the humans are focusing on that 80%, all that heavy lifting of like going through an hour long transcript as an example.

That can be done by the AI in seconds. So let's give that heavy, that kind of time consuming work to this tool rather than traditionally again, using off the, using VAs, using a group of VAs, et cetera, to accomplish that.

Jim James (15:57.3)
Yeah.

Jim James (16:06.735)
Yeah, you know, Cody, that's fantastic. And we were drawing the analogy the other day about having like a sous chef and that the AI is like a sous chef, right? But you can be the head chef and all the chopping is done by the AI. You get to check the taste and so on. Can you give us a case study, Cody? You've talked about some of the principles and some of the workflows. Can you give us a case study of a business that's used Swell AI

to some effect.

Cody Schneider (16:35.832)
Yeah, absolutely. So we worked with this client. This is actually the origin of Swell. I was doing some consulting for this company. They were an insurance CRM for insurance agents. And very traditional industry. It's all like, kind of, it's old school and it's like handshakes and that kind of style of industry. And for them, they're like, okay, how do we get trust within this industry that's super competitive?

And so, um, like what we found is that a podcast could be a really easy vehicle for that, the CEO of the company, the co-founder, she could sit down and have a conversation with their target customers. Um, you know, sit down for an hour a week and record this episode. We then took that episode and, um, they're, they took that episode and they chopped it up into social media clips for all the channels that their target audience was on, which was LinkedIn, um, and Facebook.

And so then they did, they basically used this social media scheduling app to schedule those posts out. So they did like one a day across all those channels. And then they ended up bumping it up to two a day, just because they saw the impression reach was like, you know, it was so large and it was making such a high impact for their brand and organization. But then they would then take that conversation, they turn it into articles. But the big thing that they ended up doing was they scraped all of the

target customers email addresses. And they just basically added them to a newsletter over time. Like they would sequence in like 200 people per day to a newsletter and they would email them out this podcast like every week. And that audience like, you know, within 12 months that this company didn't exist. And then they go to a conference and the CEO is like recognized by voice. People are like, oh, you're Sarah. You know, I listen to your podcast every week.

I love your content, I'd like to learn a tongue from it. And that gives them all this negotiation leverage and an ability to create inbound leads, right? So there's kind of all of these effects that are happening and just to list off a few, it like gives an excuse for CEO to get in relationship with target customers. It creates content that they can repurpose for all the channels they need to do distribution through. It can then, it also like creates this

Cody Schneider (18:52.196)
vehicle for them to create inbound leads as well. Right. Like if I have this entire community, like I have 500 people that are listening to my podcast every week, like that's not a huge number, right. And the grand scheme of things, but that's easily a 10 million ARR company. If I, if it's a B2B, right. And they're, you know, high value into like high value car customers. And so that's kind of the, the tactical and examples that we're seeing this employed and that are super effective, especially to early stage companies.

Jim James (19:16.738)
Yeah.

Cody Schneider (19:20.772)
But you can do this in enterprise. You can do this at any scale. It's just like taking like a microset, like an example would be like if I was HP, like HPE enterprise, I go and I make a podcast about AI. And this is exactly what they did, right? So here's this new wave of like technology. HPE wants to be a thought leader in that space. They have an AI experts that talk about that process. And suddenly like they have this piece of owned media that they can then use, you know, across all, like all of their marketing

strategies. And that's how these larger corporations can do the exact same thing. But rather than doing one show, okay, let's do 10 different shows that are all focused on different aspects of business. Maybe it's AI in finance or AI in customer experience or whatever. And it's the same tactics and strategy, but just used over and over again for the different departments or the different angles that you can come at your target customer with.

Jim James (20:19.662)
Yeah, Cody, that's wonderful. Wonderful and seeing podcasters really, both the audio and the video as kind of the head end really, because everyone can chat and guests love to come on to shows or to be a guest as well. It creates such a wonderfully rich source of content. Now, as an entrepreneur yourself though, Cody, let's just switch gears slightly. Swell AI, can you just tell us, you know, what have you been doing to build the brand? I'm going to ask you about what you've been doing to build the brand and then...

And then one mistake that you'd share with me that, you know, you wouldn't recommend that I try myself. So what about building the brand of Swell AI? Tell us first about that. How you've been doing that? Because it's been very successful very quickly, hasn't it?

Cody Schneider (21:02.252)
Yeah. So we started Swell in October of 2022. We were kind of on that early wave. So we were positioned really well when, you know, chat GPT hit in December and January, everybody was trying to figure out how do I do this. And so we kind of built this whole content production pipeline from like generating transcripts to now I'm repurposing it into this, this content that I'm using across these channels. But on the brand building side, like what

I am seeing like the large opportunity for currently is like personal brands by the CEOs of these companies. Um, we're seeing like more and more agencies actually spin up in this space. And so if you're like, what company do I start in 2024? This is something that is like just low hanging fruit for any entrepreneur that wants to start an agent agency business. Uh, but basically what they do is they like, you know, they find, they asked the CEO, like what, who are your target customers? Okay. Let's get them scheduled on this podcast.

They come on, they have this conversation for 30 minutes, and then they distribute that across all, their LinkedIn, their Twitter, any place else that they're trying to get distribution and reach that could be TikTok, Instagram Reels, et cetera. And so we're just taking the same strategy that I'm preaching and just applying that to Swill. For us, some of the tactical things that we did that were really effective in the early days is, I like, I scraped every podcasters email in the US that we could find.

So there's like massive public databases that you can get access to all this, all their websites, like their URLs. We took those and then we used a tool called Hunter IO or Snowve to basically go and find all the emails that are associated with those companies. And then we extract those emails, we validate them with an email validator, and then we use a tool like instantly.ai to do cold email. And so in the early days, we were sending out like 500,000, sorry, I think last year we did 500,000 cold emails.

At the peak, it was like 100,000 a month that we were sending. Now we've become like way more targeted because we're focused on more of these enterprise, like larger clients. And that's where, but you know, to get those first 500 customers, that's a really easy way for you to do that. Right. It's just like bulk cold email, get, get time on your calendar schedule, have a VA live in your inbox and work those, those leads. So we did that. But then the other component of is we took those emails and then we did a customer match within

Cody Schneider (23:24.244)
all of the distribution channels, so Facebook ads, Google ads, LinkedIn ads. And then we basically would run ads to those same people that were cold emailing. Right? So like, when we think about the user, like, or the customer, the target customer experience, like maybe I get served an ad that's talking about Swell, and then I get a cold email from the CEO that's like, Hey, I built this tool, right? So you're just creating as many touch points as you can for that same audience as possible, and then going even further down the chain, we then ended up doing like

LinkedIn, like direct messages, we did direct messages on Twitter, et cetera. Again, just combining all of these layers, but it's the same group of people that I'm going after, right. And then just hitting that core like offering like we automate, you know, our piece in the beginning was like automate writing show notes, social posts, uh, and clips for your podcast. Right. And that's how we got it off, off the ground. Um, and then it's just like, be in front of those people and definitely for all of time. Right. And that's how content is this like

great vehicle for this is I'm basically just going and I'm just showing them new ideas that are related to the industry that they're in over and over again, day after day. And so that's really the whole process that we're going through.

Jim James (24:37.582)
Cody, that's amazing. And you're really there looking at the whole sort of customer journey, as you say, from the customer side, but also that it's not just distribution that beats product. It's repetition, isn't it? It's kind of taking distribution and keeping the pipeline open and having that content flowing through it consistently over time to the same people. Cody, if there's

something that you've done that you say to me, Jim, don't try this, this doesn't work. Would you mind sharing something that you'd remind me not to try?

Cody Schneider (25:17.832)
Yeah. So I don't know if I, I think when you're an early stage company, like try everything. But I think the mistake that a lot of people make is they don't cut the fat early enough. Like most companies can get to a million ARR with two channels, right? Like again, with cold email and Facebook ads, as an example. And the challenge is like not spreading yourself too thin. Like we have limited resources in marketing, right? It's time, money, and mental energy.

Every company, depending on where they are and their lifespan, has different amounts of those resources. When you're early, you have a lot more time and a lot more mental energy, but less capital, right? That's typically how it goes. And when you're a more established company, like you have more money, you have less time, you have less mental energy. And so then it's like figuring out, okay, what is the combination, what's my portfolio of resources look like and how do I allocate them based on that.

So I think that's kind of the high level thing. Like an example of this that was like very specific to us is like in the early days we were getting signups at like one to $2 and through Google ads. We saw it to be like just an incredible channel for us. The CPC was super small. And, you know, fast forward now it's 12 months later and the CPC is like 10 X. Uh, luckily like we optimize the ads so that like our cost per signup is, is like not 10 X what it was previously.

Even though it's like close, it's like right now around, you know, it's a higher number. But anyway, the kind of key takeaway there is that like when you find a marketing arbitrage opportunity, it's like double down on all of your, like everything you can like allocate to that. Like you should have, right? And I should have done that in that point in time, like where it's like, we're going to deploy as much capital as we possibly can to this arbitrage that we found.

Just because we know that it's going to go away and this is how companies are built, right? Like wish.com as an example, like they became a billion dollar company because they got Facebook ads at one cent clicks, right? Like this was back in like 2014 or whatever. And if they tried to do that same thing now, there's a zero percent chance that they could do it on Facebook, right? Because just this it's just become way more competitive. The CPC has increased.

Jim James (27:35.113)
Yeah.

Cody Schneider (27:35.948)
With that said though, it's kind of funny. I have some friends that are building companies that are focusing on the Asian markets, specifically the Philippines and Vietnam, and all of these developing economic zones. And what they're seeing is what we saw in 2014 with Facebook ads, right? Incredibly cheap CPCs, a really receptive audience. And so again, there's arbitrage. It just goes in waves in all these places. But as soon as you find one, it's like,

Okay, how do I exploit this as aggressively as I can? And kind of the analogy I use is like, it's like having it, you know, an ATM where I put a dollar in and $5 comes out, right? I'm going to go to that ATM for forever until it stops giving me like a higher amount of money back. And so taking that same kind of mental framework and then applying it to that your marketing activities is something that, uh, you know, I always try to emphasize when I'm talking to like other founders that are more like product focused and like trying to learn the marketing side.

Jim James (28:07.134)
You mean...

Jim James (28:15.468)
Yeah.

Cody Schneider (28:32.172)
And just a reminder for myself as a marketer, like, hey, this is the most impactful thing that I can do right now. So.

Jim James (28:38.306)
Yeah, to focus in on that. Cody, switching topics slightly, I'm going to ask you as we come to the end of our interview, can you recommend a book or a podcast that you have found to be inspirational for you as a founder?

Cody Schneider (28:59.288)
Totally, yeah. I've been reading a lot of science fiction again lately, and I just reread the foundation by Isaac Asimov. It's a trilogy. But a lot of it just talks about psychology, which I think is interesting. It was a good reminder of how do I interact with huge groups of people. And I think it's always great to just, as a founder, especially when you're into the technology space, like reading

old sci-fi and how they thought the future was going to be is kind of interesting to see like where we ended up being and also plants these new ideas of like, how is AI going to be implemented in like what were they thinking about AI as in those previous times? Um, so that's kind of a book I would suggest for people to, you know, you could read it in a weekend and then, uh, the other podcast that I've been pretty excited about is actually my friend's podcast, it's called In Growth, We Trust.

Um, it's a top marketing podcast in the UK now. They started it in like February of last year, and then just basically they're the two, uh, the two co-hosts are both, uh, like, you know, growth people is that way I would describe them. They're, they're focuses on, uh, DTC. That's their backgrounds. Um, but like one of the, my friend, Yone, who's I'm more close with on, on that podcast, uh, he was the, uh,

the head of growth at Deliveroo, at Depop, and now at Nude, which is like this next app that he's working on. It's a financial app. But Deliveroo and Depop are now billion dollar companies. So you hear all their stories that they're basically that they've done to grow these organizations, but also they have on these guests that are super interesting that are, as an example, how are we working with a thousand different TikTok influencers simultaneously?

And like, that was an episode of like, here's how we even like organize that and coordinate that. And also the arbitrage that exists when it's like, this kid is 20 and in college, if you tell them, Hey, like if you make a video a day for us, we'll pay you a grand a month, right? And they're like, of course I'll do that. Right? Like that's the easy, you know, easy money for them. And that's this arbitrage that they found for growing, uh, like specifically DTC apps. Um, so anyway, yeah, there's things like that on it, which are super valuable.

Jim James (31:06.581)
Right.

Jim James (31:10.082)
Great, we'll put both of those in the show notes. And you've been super valuable, Cody Schneider, if you want to find out more about you and swellai.com, which incidentally people can use for free as a starter option. So, Cody, where can people find out about you if they want to get in touch with you and hear more wisdom from you?

Cody Schneider (31:27.992)
Yeah, yeah. So I'm most active on Twitter and LinkedIn. Just reach out to me there. You can also email me at cody@swellai.com and get access to me there as well. So yeah, however we can help. And again, I love early stage companies and talking to founders about their companies or like anybody that's starting businesses. So however I can be helpful, reach out.

Jim James (31:52.478)
Wonderful, well thank you for agreeing to come on the show to share both energy and insights, Cody. Thank you so much, Cody Schneider, the founder of a company called Swell AI. Thank you so much for coming on the show.

Cody Schneider (32:04.24)
Thanks for having me, Jim.

Jim James (32:06.126)
It's been brilliant. So we've been listening to Cody Schneider and of course, we'll put his details in the show notes. And a couple of takeaways, you know, one is that this idea that distribution is more important than product. I think for all of us that have built something and then being disappointed by the results, it'll resonate really what Cody's saying that it doesn't matter what you build if no one knows about it. We've all got to lean more into the marketing distribution than maybe we've done in the past. And also this idea that there are arbitrage opportunities.

I personally think that podcasting is one of those at the moment. If you're an entrepreneur or a CEO, the cost of podcasting is very low and the impact is very great. So that's why I run this show. And if you're not involved in podcasting as a guest or as a host, really, really encourage you to consider it. It's a great opportunity. And my name is Jim James. Thanks for joining me, the Unnoticed Entrepreneur today on this episode. And if you've enjoyed it, please do review it and rate it. Cause it really helps me know what you think of the show. And until we meet again, just encourage you to

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