『Retail is Detail Podcast』のカバーアート

Retail is Detail Podcast

Retail is Detail Podcast

著者: Jamie Hamer
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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Deep dive conversations with industry leaders exploring the latest trends, technologies, and strategies shaping the future of retail. Hosted by entrepreneur and sales leader Jamie Hamer (Co-Founder, Loxa).Retail is Detail Podcast, Hosted by Jamie Hamer, Powered by Loxa Ltd マネジメント・リーダーシップ リーダーシップ 経済学
エピソード
  • Anthony Joshua, James Watt and a £2.8M Raise: Laura Fullerton on Building Monk, the World's First Smart Ice Bath
    2026/05/05

    Anthony Joshua and James Watt backed her, she has raised £2.8M, and Laura Fullerton is building Monk, the world's first smart ice bath. Laura is a former Saatchi & Saatchi copywriter turned serial hardware founder who spotted a gap in the market that nobody else was willing to fill, built a 3,000 person waitlist with almost no ad spend, and created a product that has been described as the love child of Apple and Dyson. What started with a midnight break-in at Hampstead Heath ponds and a Facebook group of 60,000 people converting chest freezers into DIY ice baths has become one of the most talked about brands in the UK wellness space, with luxury partners, wearable integrations and a product family built to meet the market at every level.

    In this episode, Jamie sits down with Laura to talk about what it really takes to build a premium connected hardware brand from scratch as a solo founder. They cover the production nightmares, the 300 investor conversations it took to close her raise, how she got two of the most recognisable names in sport and business across the line, and the deliberate brand and product decisions that turned Monk into something that feels genuinely different in a crowded market.

    They also get into the harder parts of the journey that do not often make it into founder interviews. Laura is refreshingly honest about what fundraising looks like as a solo female founder, the moments of real risk that go well beyond the financial, and why she thinks the wellness industry is only just getting started. If you are building a physical product, thinking about premium DTC brand strategy, or want to hear one of the more candid accounts of what hardware founding actually looks like, this one is worth your time.

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    48 分
  • Zsuzsa Kecsmar Reveals Why Loyal Customers Spend 7x More and How to Keep Them
    2026/04/27

    Zsuzsa Kecsmar didn't set out to build a software company. She set out to be a journalist. She won Young Journalist of the Year in Hungary, hosted her own radio show, and spent five years honing her craft before quietly concluding she had hit her ceiling and should do something else entirely. That pivot led to co-founding Antavo in London's Silicon Roundabout, writing the business plan as her university thesis, and building what is now one of the world's leading AI loyalty technology platforms. Twelve years on, Antavo powers programmes for KFC, Benefit Cosmetics, Scandic Hotels, Skims, and Calvin Klein, and Zsuzsa has spent every year since pushing the industry to take loyalty seriously as a board-level priority rather than a marketing afterthought.

    In this episode, Jamie sits down with Zsuzsa to get into the numbers, the mechanics, and the uncomfortable truths behind how loyalty programmes actually work. The Global Customer Loyalty Report 2026 is built from analysis of 500 million loyalty member actions, a 3,000-person marketer panel, and a 10,000-person consumer panel, making it the most rigorous benchmark the industry has. What it reveals is striking. A third of consumers are more likely to join a loyalty programme this year than last, loyal customers spend four to seven times more than one-time buyers, and a well-run loyalty programme is now the single best source of consented first-party data for any retailer heading into an AI transformation. Yet most retailers still treat it as a discount mechanism and leave the real value untouched.

    They get into the stories behind the stats. How Flying Tiger launched across six countries in six weeks and now generates 60% of revenue from loyalty members. How Bergzeit integrated Garmin so customers think of the brand every time they go hiking. How BMW converted its entire events budget into a loyalty programme during the pandemic and retained company car drivers for years afterwards. How Skims scaled so fast that Antavo had to rebuild its infrastructure just to keep up. Zsuzsa also talks honestly about what it is like to run a company with your husband, why an investor once called their marriage a threat to the business, and what she needs to prove before Antavo's Series B.

    If you work in retail, e-commerce, or customer experience and you are still thinking about loyalty as just a points scheme, this conversation will change how you see your entire post-purchase strategy.

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    51 分
  • Keiran Hewkin on Building a £32M Furniture Business from a Single Sofa
    2026/04/20

    Keiran Hewkin did not come from retail. He came from oil rigs, petrochemical plants and automotive production lines where getting a tolerance wrong means someone gets hurt. When he walked into furniture manufacturing and discovered that plus or minus five centimetres was considered acceptable precision, he saw an industry that had tolerated unnecessary friction for decades simply because nobody with the right instincts had bothered to fix it. The question he asked was simple: why is someone waiting eight weeks for something that takes eight hours to make? Swyft was built to answer it.

    In this episode Jamie and Keiran get into the operational realities that most furniture brands would rather not talk about. How do you build a business on inventory you have not sold yet? What nearly killed Swyft when post-COVID demand fell off a cliff? And why does a returns rate drop from seven percent online to under one percent in store? Keiran is forensically honest about the decisions that built the business, including one so small it sounds almost embarrassing that now drives over half of Swyft's revenue. He also shares the leadership lesson he learned the hard way aged nineteen on a factory night shift that shaped everything that came after.

    There is also a genuinely contrarian take on where retail is heading that most people in the industry will not want to hear, and a surprisingly simple argument for why building something physical right now might be the smartest move any founder can make. This is an episode for anyone who has ever wondered whether the unglamorous work is actually worth it. It is.

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    42 分
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