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👋 New here? Start thinking like a growth operator
🎯 Your Quick Start Checklist: □ Post your intro in the "👋 Introduce Yourself" category □ Head to Classroom → Start the Explore course □ Download the Skool app for mobile notifications Complete these in your first week to get the most out of GEM Academy!
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Finding Your Next Big Test
One of the hardest parts of the G.E.M. framework is the Explore phase. Not because of a lack of ideas, but because most tests start too close to the solution. One of my favorite ways to uncover your next multiplier test is to slow down and ask a few simple (but uncomfortable) questions: • What’s keeping you up at night (or your boss)? • What’s the most strategically important thing right now? • If you could wave a magic wand and change one thing, what would it be? Then keep asking “why?”Over and over. Until the answer turns into something you can actually experiment on. That experiment shouldn’t just tweak a page; it should help you answer a real question or validate a decision that gives you more confidence to explore further. When Cameron from Bare Bones and I first started talking, his initial idea was straightforward: Remove flavor options from the PDP to reduce decision fatigue. Great idea. But… why? As we kept digging, the real question surfaced: Why do Amazon buyers behave so differently from Shopify buyers? That insight completely changed the direction of the test. Instead of a narrowly defined PDP cleanup, we ran a theme test: One theme with a traditional Add to CartOne theme with a “Buy on Amazon” CTA alongside it. What started as a UX test turned into something much bigger. It helped Cam: • Better understand the post-ad buyer journey • Invest more confidently into Meta acquisition • Make a strategic decision with real signal behind it I’ve attached the full conversation so you can watch how that exploration actually unfolded. And here’s the follow-up discussion if you want to go deeper:https://youtu.be/PUpCc4GEaOE?si=IGFHvl5gvuaRpUV7 This is a great example of how asking better questions in Explore leads to better experiments — and much bigger outcomes.
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To discount or not to discount
Every time I test discounts I'm reminded of how hard it actually is to make discounts make sense and overcome the loss in margin. We're testing not having an offer, vs 15% off here. It increased CVR a bunch, but barely any profit gained. We'll keep testing it for longer, but just a reminder for us to be stingy when it comes to giving away margin
To discount or not to discount
I want to hear from the GEM community...
What's the most impactful or interesting test you all are running currently?
Re-thinking why I run headline tests
Couple headline tests that have RIPPED for me lately, and kinda made me re-think my approach to testing. For the first time ever, I wrote headlines with specific intentions, deeper than just "make more money" ... On the first test here, I wrote specifically to increase CVR, the headline was geared at convincing more people on our website that our products were good enough quality and worth more to them than the price we offer it for... That's usually how I write... But now that I'm at a supplements brand, I took a swing at writing headlines that would persuade people to subscribe, rather than one-time-purchase our supps. The headline & subtext is more about how our products already fit it to their daily routines and how it can improve them. CVR and Rev Per Session were basically flat on that test, but the Sub % rate was WAYYY higher, so that's a huge win for us. Anyone else have examples of content tests designed to move specific metrics like this?
Re-thinking why I run headline tests
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