Add To Cart: Australia’s eCommerce Show

Nathan Bush

Add To Cart is Australia's leading ecommerce and retail podcast, hosted by Nathan Bush. Over 600 conversations with the founders, operators and digital leaders building Australian ecommerce. Episodes cover ecommerce strategy, DTC brand building, omnichannel retail, email and SMS marketing, performance marketing, fulfilment, and the tech stack decisions that shape how retail brands actually sell online. Free community, newsletter and resources at addtocart.com.au. Proudly supported by Shopify and Klaviyo.

  1. Doesn't Cost You Anything to Do Good: Rohan McCloskey on Building GoGenerosity | #641

    -19 h

    Doesn't Cost You Anything to Do Good: Rohan McCloskey on Building GoGenerosity | #641

    Rohan McCloskey refunded $350,000 in donations, gave up his salary for a year, and nearly lost everything. He's still building GoGenerosity. And he'd do it again. That kind of conviction usually comes from one of two places: delusion or proof. In Rohan's case it's the latter. One in six customers at his best-performing store donate every single time they shop. Ninety-eight percent of mystery shoppers said they were more likely to return to a brand running GoGenerosity than a competitor selling the same product. Only one merchant in his ideal customer profile has ever churned, and that was because the merchant's business hit financial difficulty, not because the product failed. Rohan is Founder and CEO of GoGenerosity, a Shopify app that turns small customer contributions at checkout into real goods delivered to charity partners. The model is cleaner than it sounds: a customer adds a $2 or $3 donation at checkout, those donations pool, and the charity receives a gift card at full retail value redeemed in-store. One hundred percent goes through. GoGenerosity charges merchants a monthly SaaS fee on top. Before all of this, Rohan ran three restaurants in Mount Maunganui through COVID, survived, and then decided to start a tech company instead. Today, we're discussing: How the GoGenerosity checkout model works in practice and why 100% of customer donations reach charity partners [05:03]The Hume mystery shopping data: 98% of shoppers were more likely to return to a brand running GoGenerosity than a direct competitor [15:26]Why one in six customers at Rohan's best-performing store donates $5 every single visit, and what two years of that data actually proves [18:07]The no-login product philosophy: why GoGenerosity deliberately has no merchant portal and sends monthly reports by email instead [28:38]Why raising capital too early nearly killed the business and what a two-year enterprise sales cycle actually costs a startup [47:35]What Rohan's psychologist told him on Christmas Day 2023 and how he kept building through a serious burnout [44:16]Connect with Rohan McCloskey | Explore GoGenerosity | Connect with Rosa Willis | Connect with Nathan Bush Subscribe to the Add To Cart newsletter  SMS us to Suggest a Guest Connect with Nathan Bush Join the Add To Cart Community

    1 h 6 min
  2. How to Ask for Help Before You Need It | #640

    -3 j

    How to Ask for Help Before You Need It | #640

    Ecommerce is still a young industry, and it's moving faster than anyone in ecommerce can keep up with. Nobody has all the answers, and the pressure to act as if you do can leave you in a precarious position. The ecommerce leaders who go furthest aren't the ones who faked it. They're the ones who asked for help early, while they were still learning, and kept doing it the whole way along. The asking was never the weak part of the story, it's what makes them the leaders they are today. The best operators do three things differently when it comes to asking for help. In this playbook, based on the most honest conversation we've had on the show with Grant Arnott, who built Power Retail and Click Frenzy, we cover three things ecommerce operators need to know about asking for help before they need it: Ask while you're still learning, not just when something has already brokenBuild the network in the calm, because the worst time to find your people is the moment the problem is on fireTreat asking for help as a leadership move, because ego is what is holding you back, not the questionThis episode touches on depression and some dark moments. If anything here is close to home, Lifeline is on 13 11 14 and Beyond Blue is on 1300 22 4636. This episode is supported by Shippit. 38% of shoppers buy more with an accurate delivery estimate, yet most retailers fail to deliver on that promise at checkout. Shippit's State of Shipping Report shows you how to fix it. Click here to find the Shippit report. Connect with Grant Arnott Explore Power Retail | Click Frenzy, Subscribe to the Add To Cart newsletter  SMS us to Suggest a Guest Connect with Nathan Bush Join the Add To Cart Community

    16 min
  3. The Unicorn Rule: Why The Lad Collective Publishes 15,000 Ads to Find 10 That Work | #639

    28 juin

    The Unicorn Rule: Why The Lad Collective Publishes 15,000 Ads to Find 10 That Work | #639

    The Lad Collective has shipped roughly 15,000 ads in four years. Around 10 of those have been unicorns. Mark Broadhead, Head of Creative and Growth, runs the Meta engine behind one of Australia's fastest-growing bedding brands, now 200,000 customers deep and expanding into North America. Mark joined as the founders' first employee, moving from his own vintage clothing business into the warehouse in Logan that The Lad Collective was running out of at the time. Four years later, he sits across creative, paid media and the brand's creative testing system. He's also one of the few people in ecommerce posting honest thinking on Meta account structures and AI in production on LinkedIn, which is what made him a must-have guest on the show. This episode picks up from The Lad Collective Story with founders Bill and Ed Ovenden in episode 160.  Today, we're discussing: Why Mark doesn't study other bedding brands for inspiration [11:50]The Unicorn Rule: 15,000 ads, 10 hits [27:3]How The Lad Collective uses content pillars to scale one idea across many formats [36:20]205 live ads, 260 campaigns, and the move toward 1,000 live creatives [18:08]The customer-driven UGC pipeline that feeds itself [40:39]The role of AI in ad production with Higgsfield and Kive [46:46]The Robert Irwin partnership and what it means for the US push [44:48]Working with Shelley Craft and how big partnerships balance the lo-fi brand [42:30]Why Mark will put almost any piece of content into the ad account [41:18]Read the full Showpo case study from our partners at Convert Digital → convertdigital.com.au/showpocasestudy Use the code from our partners → 🛍️ Shopify | 📧 Klaviyo Connect with Mark Broadhead | Explore The Lad Collective Subscribe to the Add To Cart newsletter  SMS us to Suggest a Guest Connect with Nathan Bush Join the Add To Cart Community

    58 min
  4. How to Find the Profit That's Already in Your Inventory | #636

    18 juin

    How to Find the Profit That's Already in Your Inventory | #636

    Most businesses struggling with profitability aren't spending too much on ads. They're holding too much stock. The wrong stock. Stock bought on gut feel six months ago, sitting in a warehouse, tying up cash that could be doing something useful. Talea Bader is the co-founder of SKUTOPIA, an Australian fulfilment operation that's been building its own AI and robotics platform for eight years. He runs fulfilment for hundreds of businesses, from early-stage brands all the way through to enterprise, which gives him a view of what's actually happening inside these businesses rather than the version operators tell themselves. He's seen a business turning over $700 million move from significant losses to tens of millions in profit. Not by changing their marketing. Not by redesigning their website. By changing the way they managed inventory. Today, we're discussing: Why inventory is your biggest P&L lever, and most businesses go looking for profit in the wrong placeThe difference between gross margin and delivered margin, and why most buying decisions are made off the wrong numberWhy inventory reordering is still super manual, spreadsheet based, and driven by ego instead of scienceHow to know your weeks on hand before it becomes a crisisThe $700 million business that moved from significant losses to tens of millions in profit through better inventory management aloneConnect with Talea Bader | Explore SKUTOPIA Subscribe to the Add To Cart newsletter  SMS us to Suggest a Guest Connect with Nathan Bush Join the Add To Cart Community

    11 min
  5. Inside I.AM.GIA's Global Playbook: Dom Moretti on Running Two Fashion Brands With One Team | #635

    14 juin

    Inside I.AM.GIA's Global Playbook: Dom Moretti on Running Two Fashion Brands With One Team | #635

    Dominique Moretti rebuilt the I.AM.GIA website from scratch in 12 weeks. Open rates sit above 50%. The re-engagement flow beats the welcome flow. And 90% of I.AM.GIA's revenue comes from the US. This is how she runs two global fashion brands with one lean team. Dom is Head of Ecommerce and Digital at A&S Labels, the Melbourne company behind Tiger Mist and I.AM.GIA. She started there as a graphic design intern twelve years ago, grew with the business, left for a stint at Calibre, and came back in a bigger role. She's also a Klaviyo Champion 2026. Nathan sat down with her at K:SYD in Sydney before the doors opened, the third of three conversations recorded there. Today, we're discussing: How Dom scrapped an I.AM.GIA website project mid-build, changed agencies and rebuilt in 12 weeks [12:09]Why she moved from headless to Shopify Native and what drove that decision [13:13]The re-engagement flow with no discount that's now outperforming the welcome flow [28:33]How to maintain 50-60% open rates for two fashion brands in 2026 [30:46]The app strategy: push notifications, Tapcart AI flows, and why apps beat SMS long-term [00:00]What TikTok Shop in the US actually requires in terms of product data, SLAs and live consistency [43:09]How Dom is using Claude and Klaviyo MCP for weekly reporting across all channels [37:29]Use the code ADDTOCART20 for 20% off storewide at tigermist.com.au and au.iamgia.com/  (excludes EV x TM Collection). Connect with Dominique Moretti | Explore Tiger Mist | Explore I.AM.GIA  Subscribe to the Add To Cart newsletter  SMS us to Suggest a Guest Connect with Nathan Bush Join the Add To Cart Community

    57 min
  6. How to Plan for a Product Recall Before You Need One | #634

    11 juin

    How to Plan for a Product Recall Before You Need One | #634

    Most product businesses don't have a recall plan. Not because they've decided against it. Just because the moment hasn't arrived yet. Melanie Nolan built Naternal Vitamins to eight million dollars in four years without running a paid ad for the first two. She built it on trust. Then in April last year, a manufacturing error created iodine variability across fifteen thousand units of her prenatal supplement. The TGA required a full voluntary recall. She refunded nearly three hundred thousand dollars in a single month. And came out the other side still growing, with 95% of her customers still there. That outcome is not accidental. In this Playbook episode, Nathan unpacks three things every physical product business should do before a recall arrives, not during one. Today, we're discussing: Why recall infrastructure fails when you build it inside the crisis rather than before it [lesson one]The four systems Naternal built after the recall: recalls@ email, Google Drive docs, batch tracking, fillable forms [lesson one]Why going first on transparency is the commercial move, not just the ethical one [lesson two]How 95% of customers stayed after a $300K refund month because of how Mel communicated [lesson two]Why the brands that come through a crisis are the ones that move toward the problem [lesson three]The $22,000 recall insurance policy that was worth every cent [lesson one]Explore Naternal Vitamins | Connect with Melanie Nolan | Hear EP620 Subscribe to the Add To Cart newsletter  SMS us to Suggest a Guest Connect with Nathan Bush Join the Add To Cart Community

    15 min

À propos

Add To Cart is Australia's leading ecommerce and retail podcast, hosted by Nathan Bush. Over 600 conversations with the founders, operators and digital leaders building Australian ecommerce. Episodes cover ecommerce strategy, DTC brand building, omnichannel retail, email and SMS marketing, performance marketing, fulfilment, and the tech stack decisions that shape how retail brands actually sell online. Free community, newsletter and resources at addtocart.com.au. Proudly supported by Shopify and Klaviyo.

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