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A small relaunch, small team communication, power in research

As consulting goes, we sell materially three things:

  • Teardowns
  • Research-driven optimization consulting
  • Research-driven audits & prioritized strategy

These all have names, but you don’t care, because ultimately you’re buying an outcome.

Still, the names that I gave these three things are bad. One of them is nine years old. The other is seven. They were born of an industry, and a time, that looked a lot different than things do right now, both in terms of who we serve and what we do for them.

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#39
September 20, 2022
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First principles, value-based design’s ramifications, UX as therapy

Our sponsor for this newsletter is Blink!

Blink is a specialist eCommerce SEO agency, grounded in data science. We know eCommerce – and DTC – inside out, and typically we grow organic revenue by at least 100% with 12 months for our clients. To find out more visit blinkseo.co.uk or follow us on LinkedIn.

Thank you for sponsoring our newsletter this week!


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#38
September 13, 2022
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New zine, DTC issues, the future of Draft

Our sponsor for this newsletter is Blink!

Blink is a specialist eCommerce SEO agency, grounded in data science. We know eCommerce – and DTC – inside out, and typically we grow organic revenue by at least 100% with 12 months for our clients. To find out more visit blinkseo.co.uk or follow us on LinkedIn.

Thank you for sponsoring our newsletter this week!


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#37
September 6, 2022
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Remote consultative work, mentorship, new podcast

We’ve been posting more mastheads to Applied Draft. Take a look!

And today, a big announcement: we’re the latest guest on the Unofficial Shopify Podcast, talking about all things store design & consulting. Tune in!


This week, for paid members

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#36
August 30, 2022
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Investment mindset, what’s broken in DTC, genderless design

Last week I did something that I almost never do: I got angry on the internet, and wrote a thread on a very bad website.

I think in ways that necessitate long-form communication. I craft complex arguments from basic principles. I work in systems thinking, and systems are always gnarly. My client reports routinely top 3,000 words – and they are edited down to that length. So I consider a 1,200-word thread to be on the short end of something that distills a complex idea, conveys it to the public, and proposes next steps.

Twitter is not the right place for me to exist in right relationship to the kinds of ideas that I like to convey. For that reason, while I definitely think my mailing list is the better channel for following me, I was nudged to do this by a dear friend & trusted colleague, because Twitter is going to represent a different sort of audience, and because threads appear to be the coin of the realm in DTC these days.

I invite you to take a careful look at the thread right now. It’s a 10-minute read that should hopefully shift your thinking about what design is, and how stores should invest in it.

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#35
August 23, 2022
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Mastheads, new case study, developer issues

We’ve written a lot about home page mastheads for our members over the past year, for a few reasons:

  • They are a high point of conversion, since they represent most customers’ first impressions of your business.
  • They are politically fraught, making them an important aspect of consultative work.
  • They are usually poorly executed, with generic copy, features that don’t matter to customers, etc.

So we’re going to start picking apart a few stores’ mastheads every week. Some of them are good. Most of them are not. All of them need some form of improvement.

Subscribe via RSS and you’ll learn something.

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#34
August 16, 2022
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Fighting fear to make the right decisions, hypothesis-driven design, research integration

New zine alert: I am slowly expanding on the themes in Store Design. The first installment is on heat & scroll maps. You can grab a copy of You installed a heat & scroll mapping tool on your store, signed up for a paid plan, and then never used it for some reason right now, at the bottom of this page. Go forth!


I’ve been on a few interviews lately, and every time, people ask me if I’m afraid. Afraid of the world collapsing, afraid of global conflict, afraid of the supply chain, afraid of the stupid virus, afraid of all of it. I tell them the truth every time, which is that I am not afraid.

I’m not afraid of too many things. I don’t fear death. I don’t think I fear my surroundings very much right now. I don’t know what to fear, or what comes next, and so I would rather be grateful for my conscious existence in the present moment than panic about imminent societal collapse.

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#33
August 9, 2022
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Hire us, fun accessibility, marketing budgets

As we move into the busy season, I’ve been thinking about how I’ll be spending our time at Draft, and what really matters to me in my life.

In past years, I would work really hard from August until around the second week of December, when economy shipping deadlines would hit. Then I would drop off the face of the earth from then until March.

This year will be a little different, for a few reasons:

  • The only important thing I launched this year, text, is both fun for me to make and generating a small profit. People seem to love reading it, to the point where it has become many others’ “drop everything and read this” newsletter, even though it is not a newsletter, only text, an endless & beautiful avalanche of text. I like focusing on text. I think text is worth my heartbeats.
  • I have enough money to make it through the rest of the year. If nobody pays me to do anything between now and December 31, Draft will lose a small amount of money, but ultimately we’ll be fine.
  • Society is fractally collapsing.
  • I’m tired.
  • So are you.
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#32
August 2, 2022
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200-level interviews, search query types, heuristics

The busy season is approaching. If you want to work together, please buy a teardown or get in touch.


This week, for paid members

  • This month’s deep-dive presentation covers four different 201-level interview techniques that work especially well during global recession & societal collapse. Timely!
  • Our weekly paid lesson talks about how to research, execute, and adapt to major changes in your store’s positioning. Sometimes you need to serve a different sort of customer, or solve a different sort of problem!
  • Our design of the week tracks a very subtle free shipping threshold. Did you miss it?
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#31
July 26, 2022
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Optimization & development, pricing pages, text

People have been enjoying text lately. If you’ve been around these parts for a while and you want more writing about life stuff, you might want to join us.


This week, for paid members

  • Our fortnightly teardown is for new camera brand Hung Supply.
  • Our weekly paid lesson is all about the relationship between optimization & development. In what ways do they connect with one another, and in what ways can they work together to improve executional velocity?
  • And finally, our design of the week covers an interesting add-to-cart button. That’s it! That’s all I’m telling you about it. If you want to know more, you know what to do.
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#30
July 19, 2022
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BI dashboards, project management, apparel sizing

Limited copies of Store Design are still available.


This week, for paid members

  • Our design of the week is for the funniest pagination we’ve ever seen. Should pagination be funny? The answer is no.
  • And our weekly paid lesson is a big one, talking about BI dashboards and what they can teach us. Dashboard maintenance is effectively a full-time role – making sure the data is clean, and providing actionable insights with it. We used to do this as a standalone offering, but we found that it really requires a solid 40 hours per week of work, and so we think internal resourcing is the way to go. Nonetheless, stores have a need for this, and they want to know where to start. So let’s talk about it!
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#29
July 12, 2022
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LAUNCH: Store Design, a new zine

Today, I’m thrilled to announce a new text on how to get started with design for your store. It’s called Store Design, and it’s out now.

You are never “done” designing your store. There’s always new customer insights to gather, new things to fix, new issues to uncover. This is the most exciting part of design! Once you’re done fixing all the low-hanging fruit, that’s when your job gets really interesting.

At the same time, we’ve found that most people don’t know how to peel back these layers. They think design is just the surface layer of the store. Maybe more sophisticated store owners think design is the layout of the buy box, or the placement & treatment of upsells.

We take a more expansive view of design – because after a decade of hands-on experience, we’ve come to realize that “design” is often the right answer to the question. Store Design gets you in the right mindset – by redefining what you think “design” is, making the case for a clear design process in any store, and providing some clear next steps for you to take.

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#28
July 5, 2022
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Why “CRO” is an outdated term, case studies, teardown improvements

Last week, we mentioned an improvement to teardowns for store owners. Here it is: if you’re a store owner, buying a teardown also gets you a half-hour strategy call for free. That also means: if you buy a teardown on behalf of a store owner, they get a half-hour strategy call for free.

That’s it. Please clap.


This week, for paid members

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#27
June 28, 2022
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Value-based design mindset, system fonts, common consultative issues

For those of you who subscribed because I wrote about a sandwich eight years ago, I have written about a sandwich again. You may wish to subscribe to text to read it.

On the Draft front, we’re improving our teardowns. More on that shortly. Reply if you’re interested in being a beta tester.


This week, for paid members

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#26
June 21, 2022
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High-impact segments, new HIG, mobile benchmarks

This week, for paid members

  • Our paid lesson takes a brief shift away from mindset issues and talks about segmentation. How do you figure out what segments are likely to have an impact on your conversion strategy, and how can you thoughtfully research for them?
  • And our design of the week discusses the weirdest use case we’ve ever seen on a product detail page.

Want in? Join us now – now named one of the best ecommerce communities going on the web.


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#25
June 14, 2022
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Resourcing, tap targets, continuous variables

This week, for paid members

  • Our fortnightly teardown is for clean beauty brand Elate.
  • Our design of the week is all about an, uh, interesting link target from a home page masthead.
  • This week’s paid lesson discusses when & how to resource for new initiatives. What does communication look like? How about turnaround? What would a home run look like when hiring for your business?

Want in? Join us now – now named one of the best ecommerce communities going on the web.


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#24
June 7, 2022
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Long-term strategy, developer critiques, price display

Our sponsor for this newsletter is The Current!

So many ecommerce news sites, so little time 😥. In 5 minutes or less, The Daily Current will fill you in on the top stories that matter most every day in the world of ecommerce. Subscribe here.

Thank you for sponsoring our newsletter this week!


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#23
May 31, 2022
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How to refer new work to Draft, long-term thinking, Markdown publishing

Our sponsor for this newsletter is The Current!

So many ecommerce news sites, so little time 😥. In 5 minutes or less, The Daily Current will fill you in on the top stories that matter most every day in the world of ecommerce. Subscribe here.

Thank you for sponsoring our newsletter this week!


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#22
May 24, 2022
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Mindset, text, line length, text, text, accessible yellow, text

Our sponsor for this newsletter is The Current!

So many ecommerce news sites, so little time 😥. In 5 minutes or less, The Daily Current will fill you in on the top stories that matter most every day in the world of ecommerce. Subscribe here.

Thank you for sponsoring our newsletter this week!


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#21
May 17, 2022
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Even splits, content design, weird mobile nav

Our sponsor for this newsletter is The Current!

So many ecommerce news sites, so little time 😥. In 5 minutes or less, The Daily Current will fill you in on the top stories that matter most every day in the world of ecommerce. Subscribe here.

Thank you for sponsoring our newsletter this week!


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#20
May 10, 2022
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