A New eCommerce Podcast

with Matt EdmundsonfromAurion

Matt Edmundson launches a new eCommerce podcast built on 17 years of genuine experience—including spectacular failures alongside successes. Unlike highlight-reel content, this show features honest conversations with eCommerce experts, real-time coaching calls, and documentation of the ambitious Collab Project: building 100 eCommerce sites through collaboration. Discover practical insights on competing with Amazon, sourcing profitable products, and building sustainable online businesses through authentic dialogue that shares what doesn't work alongside what does.

What would happen if someone who's been in the eCommerce trenches since 2002 started a podcast? Not just another show about tactics and hacks, but a place for genuine conversations about what actually works—and what spectacularly doesn't. Matt Edmundson launches the eCommerce Podcast with a refreshingly honest promise: some businesses succeed brilliantly, others fail completely, and both teach invaluable lessons.

After 17 years building, running, selling, and yes, shutting down eCommerce businesses, Matt brings a unique perspective shaped by both victories and failures. His track record includes multiple seven-figure operations, an eCommerce platform, a web agency called Curious, and hands-on experience with everything from beauty products to fulfilment services. But what makes this podcast different isn't his success—it's his willingness to share the failures alongside the wins, creating a learning environment grounded in reality rather than highlight reels.

The Problem with Most eCommerce Content

Before diving into what this podcast offers, we need to acknowledge what's missing in most eCommerce education. The industry overflows with content promising overnight success, revolutionary tactics, and secret formulas. Everyone shares their wins. Few discuss their losses. This creates a distorted picture where aspiring entrepreneurs expect unrealistic results and experienced ones feel isolated in their struggles.

Matt challenges this narrative from episode one: "I wish I could tell you I had the Midas touch and everything I touch turned to gold. That would be in fact a lie." This honest foundation sets the tone for everything that follows—real conversations about real business, not carefully curated success stories designed to sell courses.

The eCommerce landscape has transformed dramatically since 2002. What worked then doesn't work now. What works today won't work tomorrow. Yet the fundamental challenges remain: how do independent businesses compete against giants like Amazon? How do you source products that actually sell? How do you build systems that don't require your constant attention? These questions deserve honest answers, not marketing copy.

The Three-Conversation Framework

The eCommerce Podcast structures content around three distinct conversation types, each serving a specific purpose and audience need.

Expert Conversations feature people who've developed specialised knowledge in different aspects of online business. These aren't theoretical discussions—they're practical deep dives into what actually works. The first expert guest, Simon, runs an eCommerce business selling bee products. His perspective combines passion for the product with practical experience building an online presence.

The value lies not in revolutionary concepts but in real-world application. How does a beekeeper approach digital marketing? What challenges arise when selling perishable natural products online? These specific scenarios often reveal universal principles more effectively than abstract frameworks.

Coaching Conversations transform the traditional website review format into something far more valuable. Rather than one-way critiques, these sessions involve actual eCommerce operators working through genuine challenges in real time. Listeners hear both the questions and the reasoning behind recommendations.

Dan, featured in an upcoming coaching conversation, brings real problems requiring real solutions. This format acknowledges a fundamental truth: implementation matters more than information. Most businesses don't lack knowledge—they lack clarity on how that knowledge applies to their specific situation. Coaching conversations bridge that gap publicly, allowing everyone to learn from one person's specific challenges.

Solo and Team Conversations round out the mix with updates, lessons learned, and insights from Matt and his team. These episodes share what's happening inside actual eCommerce operations—what experiments succeeded, what failed, what surprised them. The team diversity brings multiple perspectives and accents, keeping content fresh whilst maintaining authenticity.

The Collab Project: Building 100 eCommerce Sites

Perhaps the most ambitious element launching alongside the podcast is the Collab Project—an attempt to build 100 eCommerce businesses, many through collaboration with people who have great products but need help with the digital side.

The premise acknowledges a market reality: many talented product creators, makers, and suppliers struggle with eCommerce not because they lack business acumen but because digital commerce requires specific expertise they've never needed before. A brilliant beekeeper who knows everything about honey production might know nothing about conversion optimisation or digital marketing.

The Collab Project asks: what happens when you bring together product expertise and eCommerce expertise? Can you create businesses stronger than either party could build alone? The answer isn't guaranteed. Matt openly acknowledges that 100 attempts won't yield 100 successes. Some will work brilliantly. Others will fail. All will teach something.

The Collaboration Model works by identifying people with great products or ideas who are doing well in their field but struggling with eCommerce. Rather than charging consultancy fees they can't afford, Matt proposes partnership. "Let's work on this together. I'll bring my strengths to the table. You bring your strengths to the table." This creates aligned incentives—both parties benefit from success, both share the risk of failure.

The Learning Laboratory aspect means every Collab Project becomes content for the podcast. Listeners follow the journey from initial concept through launch and beyond. They see what works in health and fitness eCommerce (one of the most competitive niches). They learn why certain beauty product sites succeed whilst others don't. They watch real-time problem-solving on challenges like competing with Amazon or building traffic without massive advertising budgets.

This transparency serves everyone. Successful collaborations provide blueprints others can study and adapt. Failed projects offer equally valuable lessons about what to avoid. The combination creates a learning resource far richer than theoretical teaching.

The David vs Goliath Reality

One theme threads throughout the podcast from its first episode: how do independent eCommerce businesses compete when giants like Amazon dominate their market?

Matt frames this as the classic David versus Goliath scenario. Amazon represents Goliath—massive resources, unlimited budgets, sophisticated infrastructure, and market dominance that grows stronger daily. Independent eCommerce operators are David—smaller, nimbler, but facing overwhelming odds.

The biblical story reminds us that David won not by copying Goliath's approach but by using different tools and tactics suited to his strengths. Independent eCommerce businesses can't outspend Amazon. They can't offer faster delivery than Prime. They can't match Amazon's product range.

But they can offer:

  • Specialised expertise in specific niches Amazon serves generically
  • Personal relationships Amazon's scale makes impossible
  • Curated selections that cut through Amazon's overwhelming choice
  • Brand stories that create emotional connections beyond transactions
  • Flexible responses to market changes Amazon's complexity slows down

The podcast explores these advantages not through abstract theory but through real examples from Matt's businesses and guest experiences. How does a small operation actually compete? What specific tactics work? Where should limited resources focus? These practical questions deserve practical answers.

Why Podcasts Work for Connection

Matt identifies an unexpected benefit emerging as the podcast takes shape: meaningful connections with people he'd never otherwise meet. Simon the beekeeper represents this perfectly. Would they have connected without the podcast? Probably not. Simon seems capable and content with his Shopify setup. He's not seeking consultancy services or looking for an agency.

But the podcast creates a "point of content contact"—a reason to connect, a shared interest that transcends immediate business needs. These connections often prove more valuable than transactional relationships. They build a network of eCommerce operators learning from each other, sharing insights, and supporting one another's growth.

This community aspect emerges organically from podcast conversations. Listeners hear genuine dialogue about real challenges. They recognise their own situations in others' questions. They find validation that their struggles aren't unique. This creates belonging in what's often an isolating journey—building an eCommerce business feels lonely when you're the only one making all the decisions.

The podcast format itself encourages this connection in ways other media don't. Video requires active watching. Text requires focused reading. Podcasts accompany people during otherwise unproductive moments—commuting, exercising, doing household tasks. This intimacy, literally speaking into someone's ear during their daily routine, creates a different kind of bond than other content formats.

The Jam Jar Philosophy: Finding Products That Actually Sell

Amongst the various educational initiatives launching alongside the podcast, one deserves particular attention: the Jam Jar course about sourcing high-demand, high-converting products for eCommerce websites.

The name captures the philosophy perfectly. Jam jars are simple, practical, and proven. They work. The course applies this thinking to product selection—teaching straightforward research methods that actually work rather than complicated frameworks that look impressive but deliver little.

Product selection represents perhaps the most critical decision for any eCommerce business. Get it right, and everything else becomes easier. Get it wrong, and no amount of marketing skill or technical excellence compensates. Yet most people approach it backwards—they find a product they like, build a website around it, and hope it sells. This "Field of Dreams" approach ("if you build it, they will come") rarely succeeds.

The Jam Jar course reverses this logic: start by identifying demand, then find products that meet that demand, then build the business around proven market need. This dramatically improves success odds because you're not gambling that people want what you're selling—you already know they do.

The 30-Day Challenge: Getting Started

Following Jam Jar, another course launches focused on the 30-day challenge: getting an eCommerce business set up and started from scratch in one month. This addresses a different audience—people who haven't yet launched their first online store but feel overwhelmed by where to begin.

Thirty days provides enough time to build something meaningful but not so much time that planning becomes procrastination. The structure forces decisions and action. It acknowledges that perfect planning is the enemy of getting started. Better to launch something imperfect and learn from real market feedback than spend months perfecting a business plan for a product nobody wants.

The challenge format creates accountability. Participants aren't passively consuming information—they're actively building alongside structured guidance. This dramatically improves completion rates and, more importantly, launch rates. The goal isn't just finishing a course; it's having a functioning eCommerce business at the end.

What Makes This Different

Hundreds of eCommerce podcasts exist. Thousands of eCommerce courses fill the market. What makes this approach worth your attention?

Active Operation means Matt isn't teaching from past experience or theoretical knowledge. He currently runs multiple eCommerce businesses, faces current market conditions, and solves today's problems. The advice isn't what worked five years ago—it's what's working now.

Multiple Business Models provide diverse perspectives. Running his own eCommerce stores teaches different lessons than operating an agency serving clients or coaching other businesses. Each model reveals different truths. The combination creates more complete understanding than any single vantage point could.

Honest Failure Discussion separates this from highlight-reel content. Matt explicitly commits to sharing what doesn't work alongside what does. When Collab Project sites fail, listeners will hear why. When experiments backfire, episodes will dissect the lessons. This honesty creates trust and provides more valuable learning than success stories alone.

Practical Implementation Focus acknowledges that most businesses don't lack information—they lack clarity on implementation. Coaching conversations, real-time problem-solving, and specific tactical discussions address this gap. The question isn't just "what works?" but "how do I actually do this in my specific situation?"

Your Next Steps

The eCommerce Podcast isn't passive entertainment—it's an invitation to active learning and community participation.

Subscribe wherever you get podcasts. The show releases regularly with expert conversations, coaching calls, and solo episodes covering various aspects of eCommerce success. Subscribing ensures you don't miss valuable insights that might directly apply to your situation.

Reach Out if you'd like to suggest topics, appear as an expert guest, or request a coaching conversation. Matt actively seeks both eCommerce experts with valuable knowledge to share and operators with genuine challenges to work through publicly. Connect via mattedmondson.com or Instagram @mattedmondson.

Follow the Collab Project as 100 eCommerce sites launch, grow, succeed, or fail. These real-world experiments provide invaluable learning regardless of your specific niche or product category. The principles revealed through specific examples apply broadly across eCommerce.

Implement One Thing from each episode rather than consuming content passively. Knowledge without action creates no value. After each episode, identify one specific takeaway relevant to your business and implement it. This transforms the podcast from interesting listening into actual business growth.

The Journey Ahead

This first episode represents a beginning, not a finished product. The show will evolve based on listener feedback, guest availability, and lessons learned. Matt's commitment is simple: provide genuine value, share honest experiences, and create a space where eCommerce operators can learn from each other's successes and failures.

After 17 years in eCommerce, one truth remains constant: the landscape keeps changing. What worked yesterday doesn't work tomorrow. Success requires continuous learning, adaptation, and willingness to experiment. This podcast documents that journey in real time, with all its victories and defeats.

Whether you're considering your first eCommerce venture, struggling to scale an existing business, or simply curious about what actually works in online retail, the eCommerce Podcast offers something valuable: honest conversation with someone who's genuinely still in the trenches, not teaching from a beachside laptop about businesses they exited years ago.

The invitation is simple: join the conversation. Subscribe to the show. Connect with the community. Share your challenges. Learn from others' experiences. And most importantly, keep building—because the world needs more independent eCommerce businesses willing to take on Goliath, one clever stone at a time.


Full Episode Transcript

Read the complete, unedited conversation between Matt and Matt Edmundson from Aurion. This transcript provides the full context and details discussed in the episode.

Speaker A
00:00:00.160 - 00:00:00.400
Foreign.

Speaker B
00:00:08.000 - 00:00:19.200
Welcome to the Curiosity Podcast, a show about everything e commerce and digital business. The aim is simple, to help you thrive online. And now your host, Matt Edmondson.

Speaker A
00:00:24.000 - 00:20:16.160
Hello and welcome, my fellow e commerce entrepreneurs. Welcome to the Curiosity Podcast, the show that is for the curious amongst us about how to get better at e commerce.

And this is the first podcast in this new podcast. Yes, this is episode number 001.

We are right at the beginning of the show and I thought what I would do in this show is just give you the background as to why we're doing this podcast. What's going to happen, what's coming, maybe a little bit about my story, the sort of stuff that we're going to cover.

A project that I'm excited to be a part of called the Collab Project. We're going to get into all of that today. So you know what's coming up. We've got some amazing guests coming up on the show.

I'm going to talk to you a bit about that as well. Yes, it's going on and let me tell you, it's been a while in the making getting this podcast ready.

I knew that I wanted to do a podcast about e commerce. I've known it for a while. We've tried a couple of times to get one up and running and the timing never really seemed right, if I'm honest.

But, you know, it seems like that way now. And I'm really, really stoked, really excited to be here and finally doing it. I have to be honest with you, it's not my first podcast.

I've done quite a few podcasts actually over the years, but never one which has just been around the topic of e commerce. We've used podcasts in some of my e commerce companies to help connect with our audience and that's been super, super successful.

And so we've taken that learning. We now have the Curiosity Podcast and I'm your host, Matt Edmondson. And it is an absolute pleasure to be talking to you today.

Today and wherever you are in the world listening to this show.

I hope life is good for you and you're enjoying, you're enjoying where you're at and you know, we're going to get into e commerce a lot in this show and how to get better at e commerce because I myself like you, I'm an e commerce entrepreneur first and foremost. That's what I am, that's what I do. I've been around the world of e Commerce since 2002, which in digital terms, a piggin long time.

Let Me tell you, it is a really, really, really long time in digital years. You know, like that thing they do with dogs, you know, where you have dog years and dog years, one dog year is the equivalent of.

Is it seven, seven years? Is it, I don't know, something. Anyway, it feels a little bit, a little bit like that with digital and, and certainly with E commerce.

And I've been around it a while and we've learned a lot, let me tell you.

I've set up and run goodness knows how many e commerce businesses over the years, some of which I've sold, some of which I still run, some of which actually just totally failed. I wish I could tell you I had the Midas touch and everything I touch turned to gold. That would be in fact a lie.

We've got some great experiences and so we're gonna get into ecommerce. I'm curious about it. I want to know more about it. So one of the cool things that I really wanted to do with this show was to get guests on it. So.

So we won't have them in every show, but in a lot of shows we're going to get guests and sometimes those guests will know a lot about e commerce and we can, you know, draw out of them all kinds of really cool stuff. Like in the next show we have Simon. He's going to be on there. He's our guest. He's a beekeeper who runs an e commerce website.

And we had a really great conversation. It was great to chat to him.

He's got some really great cool nuggets coming your way and so I love it when we get to talk to these guys and draw stuff. I learn a lot as well, you know, and put this stuff into practice in my own e commerce businesses.

And so it's really great to get these kind of guys on the show. The second type of guest we're going to have on the show are what I call coaching clients.

Now this podcast is actually, actually came out of a series that I did on YouTube where we did free reviews of people's e commerce websites. Right.

So you submitted your e commerce website and we did a review for it online and we were inundated actually with requests and we did a few of them and whilst they were fairly straightforward to do, I just thought, I don't know if this is the right medium. I know video is helpful because you can see things on video, but there's just something quite nice about the podcast medium.

And the other thing that I didn't quite feel worked right was it was just me and a camera and a computer talking about your website. I bounce off much better when I actually can talk to people. So we're going to do it where we have guests like Dan in a couple weeks.

He's on the show where he runs an E commerce business and has a bunch of questions. And so I do a coaching call with him and we record that calling. You get to hear that call.

So you get to hear about the issues is having and what we can do to try and get around those issues. So that's going to be cool as well. So we have got people who are experts and we have got people who are up and coming experts.

Just want a little bit of coaching. Both conversations just bring something different to the table, I think, to the podcast and. And I quite like that.

You know, the conversations are great. It's great to get people involved.

And then in some podcasts it may just be me just giving you an update on where things are at or lessons that I've learned. And also I want to get the team involved.

I've got a great team and some of those guys will come onto the podcast and you'll get to know them as well over the coming weeks because you know, we've got all kinds of mixture of accents and people and so on and so forth and why not? They've all got something worth saying, right? So we'll get those guys on the show as well. So that's what's come. That's kind of the idea.

That's the sort of where we've got to it. Why did I name the show the Curiosity Podcast? Well, that is a very good question. Curious, spelt with a K is actually the name of my web agency.

So I am the managing director of an E commerce web agency called Curious and we have some super talented people who work in that agency and they have the cureious. They've created the Curious digital platform, which is the E commerce platform that I use on all my websites.

It's the platform that we use on the Colab project. I'm going to get into all of that later on down the line. And so I thought actually it's a bit of a play on words. We've got the Curious Agency.

We could have the Curiosity podcast because you will hear me say at the start that this show is actually sponsored by Curious and Curious Digital and they do sponsor the show. You know, they sort of free me up to do this sort of stuff, which is great. And they're one of the key sponsors of the show.

So do check out the Curious digital platform. Just head on over to Curious Agency and have a look at the thing that we use.

It's not technically up yet, but there is going to be very soon the ability for us to create demo sites for you so you can play on that yourself and, and have a look at that for your own e commerce projects. But that is where the name Curiosity comes from. Spelled with a K. Why do we call it Curiosity Podcast? Well, it's just come out of curious.

I quite like the word. And also because actually I am really, really curious, probably spelled correctly with a C. About E commerce.

I just as a medium and a tool for doing an online business, I've yet to come across anything that works like it. It's just an amazing thing.

You know, I, I often say to people I always wake up richer than when I go to sleep because you guarantee whilst I'm asleep, somebody somewhere in the world is on one of my websites buying one of the products that I'm selling whilst I'm asleep. I and I think that's actually quite brilliant if I'm honest. I quite enjoy that as an idea and as a concept.

And so I think E commerce is such a force for good. I think with digital and technology the way that it is now, it makes sense for people to do e commerce businesses.

I wish I could sit here and say to you, listen, I've got a foolproof method that, you know, if you follow it, it's cast iron guaranteed with inside of six days to get you a 10 million pound a year business. I just would be lying. So we keep the fluff and the nonsense out of it. E commerce is great, but it is hard work.

There's a lot going on and because the nature of technology, it is constantly changing and so we have to stay up to date with what's going on. What's a fad, what's something we should do, what's something that we should forget, you know, all those kind of things.

So I'm going to try and keep the fluff and nonsense out of it. It's going to be real world stuff.

For those of you like me, who are curious about E commerce and the sheer brilliance of, of what it is now, there has been, if I'm honest with you in the first episode, some side benefits which I wasn't expecting to record this podcast, right? There's been some side benefits to recording this podcast. Now I, you know, I obviously batch record some of these podcasts, right?

So the interview that's coming up next Week with Simon has done. The coaching call with Dan has been done. We've got Casey coming up that's been recorded and they're just working that out now.

And so I kind of know sort of three or four weeks in advance what's coming up because I've already recorded that information and what I found, even just after doing a few episodes.

Podcasts are a great way to connect with people, you know, great way to meet people and network with people who maybe I wouldn't ordinarily get to meet and network with. So you take next week's guest, Simon. I don't know if I'd have bumped into him if I'd have had a conversation with him.

He is a big Shopify fan, so he certainly wouldn't have called me over e commerce websites. Maybe he would have called me about the e commerce coaching and consulting that I do.

But, you know, he seems pretty happy with what's going on and pretty capable, if I'm honest with you. But because we've got the podcast around E commerce, there's a point of content contact there which is just brilliant and allows me to meet people.

And that's just, you know, I'll keep you updated on that because that is just an unexpected side benefit of doing the podcast is I get to meet some really cool people, which is why I think I'm super motivated to keep it up and keep on doing it. So big thumbs up to that.

So to give you a little bit of backstory about who I am and why you, you know, why you really are listening to a podcast by a guy who's sat in Liverpool, England, has in a studio recording this podcast right now. Why, why, why is that important? And what is the Colab Project? And that's what I'm going to introduce you to you today.

So as I said a few minutes ago, I started an E Commerce back in 2002. I've done e commerce since then. I have bought, sold and done all kinds of things with e commerce businesses during the 17 years I've been doing it.

Holy cow. And as things currently stand, I have three companies that I own and run.

I have my own e commerce group of companies where we have E commerce websites which we run, which also does things like e commerce fulfillment and customer service for other companies. And that's great and it's wonderful. I have, like I said, the Curious Agency, which is my. I'm the MD of that e commerce agency.

We've got our own e commerce platform which is just totally amazing. And then on Top of that, I have a sort of a coaching e commerce coaching company where I do coaching calls and mentoring and masterminds.

And we've got some digital courses coming out soon which are just great stuff. We're recording one at the moment called Jam Jar which is all about how to find brilliant products to sell on your website.

How do I do that personally? What are some of the research methods that I use?

How do I sort of give myself a better chance of being able to sell stuff online as opposed to just throwing up a website and putting any old stuff on there and hoping it sells? That tends not to work in my experience.

And so we've got this great course called Jamjar coming out which is going to cover the process to get products to source products, high demand, high converting products for your E commerce website. That'll be the first course. We've got another course coming out after that, the 30 day challenge.

30 days to get your e commerce business set up and started. If you've not done one yet, we've got all that kind of stuff coming on the website. So there's some really great stuff coming in.

The digital courses all designed to help people get better at E commerce, right? Get better. We just want to get better.

Especially when, you know, you're faced in the market with people like Amazon who is just, you know, it's great if you sell on Amazon and know how Amazon works, but quite often Amazon is your main competitor and it is just eating up the market. How do we deal with that? How do we, how do we act like David when facing Goliath and win all that good stuff we are going to be talking about.

I've definitely got some experience with that and one of the things that is going to be talked about a lot on the podcast, I've mentioned it a couple of times, is something called the COLAB project.

Now this collab just being short for collaboration, this is a brainwave that I had a few months ago and I thought this would be a really interesting challenge because I've got my own e commerce businesses, I've got an e commerce consulting and coaching company and I've got an E commerce web agency.

What would happen, right, if I just got a hold of some people who couldn't afford necessarily the curious digital platform who had a great idea or a great product and did really well in what they were doing, but at E commerce they were just struggling a little bit and needed a bit of help. What would happen if I partnered with those guys and thought, you know what, let's work on this together. I'll bring my strengths to the table.

You bring your strengths to the table.

Can we create an e commerce business together that actually is a lot stronger and better than if you were just trying to create it, you know, by yourself? And so that was, that was an interesting sort of discussion and we've sort of thrown around the idea, do we try and create 100 websites?

How long would it take to create 100 new e commerce websites all selling different things? And some of those will be collaboration projects, some of them will just be me going, oh this is a great product. Let's create a website around this.

Now, for example, one of the things that we're talking about at the moment is I have beauty websites that sell obviously beauty products, but do I create a website that does say health and fitness products, which is, I mean probably one of the most competitive industries in the world at the moment. But could I do something there that would gain some traction and start to create a worthwhile business? So the Colab project is all about this idea.

It's this website challenge, this how long is it going to take me to create these hundred businesses, most of which I'm going to have to collaborate with other people to do because there's no way I can create 100 of my own businesses, certainly not in the time frame that I'm hoping to do it in.

And I think it'll be quite fun to partner with folks and so you will get to hear about those projects and see how we do it and some of the things that happens and how we get things started worked up as we go through it. So there's a lot coming. I mean there is a lot coming in this show.

Like I say, we're going to do a lot of conversations with e commerce experts and soon to be E commerce experts that just need a little bit of coaching. There's going to be me just sort of talking about various things with my team or maybe like this show where I'm just by myself.

But also we're going to be featuring a lot The Collab Project 600 website project idea where I'll talk to you about the new websites up and coming, what we're doing, how we're doing it and you can follow the journey of those that succeed and those that actually fail as well. If I'm honest with you, if I set up 100 sites, there is no way 100 of them are going to work. That is just going to be an obvious statement to make.

So there'll be some which we stop and we'll talk about why we stopped them and so on and so forth. So it's going to be a great journey. So I hope that's giving you a little bit of background information into the podcast.

Who I am, why I'm doing it and what sort of things you are expected to hear. There are a couple of things to think about.

Number one, first and foremost, if you want to find if you are curious about e commerce, subscribe wherever you get podcasts from and we'll try and make sure that this podcast is in that place. Subscribe to it because like I say, there's some really, really great stuff coming out.

Number two, if there's anything you would like to cover, like me to cover in the podcast, reach out, just get in touch and let me know and you can connect with me at my website mattedmondson.com or find me on instagram@instagram.com mattedmondson I like to do Instagram more than the other social networks. I have got a Facebook page as well, Matt Edmondson co where you can connect with me if you're. If you prefer Facebook.

But just reach out to me, let me know what kind of topics you'd want to create.

If you are an e commerce expert and you think actually it'd be really cool to go on the show, I like the kind of guests they've got on there and I think I've got a few tips that would really, really benefit people. Do get in touch and let me know. And also if you want to be featured on like some of the coaching calls again, just get in touch.

All you got to do is head on over to the website mattedmondson.com and or just search the Curiosity Podcast and hopefully we will come up and you can get in touch through my page on the website. It would be absolutely fantastic to hear from you. But fundamentally make sure you subscribe because it is going to be fun. At least that is my plan.

And if it's not, just let me know. Maybe I should, you know, go and sell umbrellas somewhere. I don't know. Anyway, thanks for listening.

Do stay connected, do get in touch, do subscribe and I will speak to you in the next podcast where we get to talk to the amazing Simon and his and find out all about his bees. Bees are remarkable things and it's going to be a great show. So do join us in that show.

Speaker B
00:20:19.760 - 00:20:29.150
You'Ve been listening to the Curiosity Podcast with Matt edm. Subscribe and join us next time as we carry on conversations about all things ecommerce and digital business.

Meet your expert

Matt Edmundson

Matt Edmundson

Aurion

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