Get ready for an hour of back-to-back masterclasses from some of the best in tech on the channels we’re all trying to perfect, hosted by B2B marketing Ian Faison.
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It's good to feel a little confident in 2023 after the last few years have been
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a little weird.
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And we know that for 2023 pipeline is going to be critical.
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And there's five things that people have been asking about all year long.
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The five things are events, digital ads, inbound, outbound, and content.
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You have to crush these five things in 2023.
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You have to. It's non-negotiable.
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So we brought in five experts, five people who know these five things inside
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and out that have
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been there and done that so they can share their playbooks with you. This is no
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fluff.
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It's the pipeline power hour. So we're going to get right into it. Grab a dumb
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bell, grab a shot glass.
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It's a power hour after all. First up, Julie Legal, former CMO of Slack.
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She's going to share her perspective on events. Pipeline power hour, Julie
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Legal.
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So excited to have you. How are you? I'm great. Thanks so much for having me
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excited to be here.
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Yeah. We are thrilled to talk events. Obviously, you have done many, many, many
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B2B events over the
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years with Slack and at Salesforce. So in your mind, how do events fit into
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pipeline generation?
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I think it's a mistake to think that it's a one size fits all answer. I do
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think events are
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usually at their most effective when they are closing and upsell events, but
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events can
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play different roles at different times in your pipeline. So going to third
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party events can be a
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great way to do prospect generation. Similarly, I've seen very high end bespoke
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experiences,
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serve that purpose with executives who may not be willing to engage with you
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but are willing to
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come to some really very special experience that you do. But a lot of the
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events that I worked on,
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especially at Salesforce that were our bread and butter, were about people that
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were further down
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the funnel who were either getting closer to ready to make a decision or
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customers who are looking to
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increase the value of the software that they had already purchased, the systems
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they were already
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using and also figure out are there additional things that they wanted to do
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with it.
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And the reason I think that can be so effective, especially in hosted events as
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opposed to third
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party events is it does require an investment on somebody else's part to come
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and spend time with
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you. So, you know, is a cold prospect and it come to, you know, a two day user
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conference and spend
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all that time with you if they don't really understand what you do yet. No, you
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're probably
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going to need something smaller and a lower investment on their part before
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they get involved.
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And so having somebody who's a little further down the funnel, I think that is
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the real sweet spot of
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what people traditionally think of, big conferences, seminars and things like
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that.
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Yeah, what you're saying there is almost more like part executive briefing
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center part
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event if you're able to bring those folks in that are, you know, to accelerate
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pipeline and
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get them to meet with a bunch of your big wigs that are all there at this event
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, which is pretty
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hard to do, you know, on a normal everyday basis. Yeah, I mean, I think the
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beauty of a big event,
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so certainly they're great spoke event, executive experiences you can do within
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the events.
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The great thing about a big event is you can bring that almost executive
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briefing outcome,
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which is a chance to interact with your product to meet people from your
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company who can explain
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your product to hear from other customers to a broader audience. So, you know,
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you might do
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an executive briefing center. Like certainly we did one at Dreamforce every
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year, we hosted
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hundreds of executive briefings. But I also like to think that a lot of the
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people out on the show
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floor who were not part of the executive briefings who maybe weren't executive
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levels,
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were at some of our smaller customer or the like got a lot of that same
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experience because they
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got to see the feature, they got to get their questions answered, they got to
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drill on topics
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that matter to them, they got to talk to customers and to like product experts
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from Salesforce. So,
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in some ways, a great event can scale that experience as well.
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How should teams measure success or outcomes when it comes to events?
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It's a great question. I think part of the question is how do you decide what
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to measure?
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And I think that goes back to what is your intention. I think one thing that
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Salesforce always did
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very well and we also were really good about that slack is like why are we
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doing this? I think there
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can be a habit, especially in the pre pandemic times of let's put on an event.
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Everybody puts
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on events, let's put on an event without really thinking about what you're
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trying to achieve. So,
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I think it's important to decide what you're trying to achieve and design those
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measures after
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that. If it is a prospect event, if it is, I'm going to go to a third party
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event because
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we're breaking into an industry where we don't have a ton of customers yet. So,
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I'm going to go to
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an industry focused event to get myself in front of those people. Then I think
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it could be about
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new names, meetings, achieve, demos given, things like that. You may not want
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to measure that
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directly to pipeline because maybe that's too high up the funnel. I know events
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that I've done
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that are a little bit further down the funnel, it's sometimes not just pipeline
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generated because
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maybe you're already touching pipeline that existed. Maybe it's did that
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pipeline closed faster,
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did it close at a higher rate? Were we able to generate upsell opportunities
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six to 12 months
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afterwards? Or if it was a customer event, did we drive multi-product adoption?
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So, I think you
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should be really intentional about that. I think it can be very easy to look at
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an event and say,
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we're going to measure scams or we're going to measure how many people came to
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these sessions.
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And those can be great and meaningful if they tie to the reason you did the
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event in the first
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place and what you were trying to achieve. So, I think you need to be really
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thoughtful and go
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in understanding what are the behaviors you're trying to drive and then decide
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how to measure
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those and what your goals will be. Yeah, it seems like you're almost advocating
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for more of a portfolio
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approach to doing events where it's big, small, medium, having senior leaders
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at certain things,
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more of the users at one level hitting the whole buying committee with
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different parts and different
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types of events. Is that fair to put words in that? In some ways, I think very
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much in my career
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and at the companies that I've worked out, that's how we looked at events.
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Salesforce is known,
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we were an events first company in many, many ways. And so, we use them in a
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lot of different
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ways and a lot of different styles and sizes. And we really did build out a
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portfolio that
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meant different needs. You might have a different type of product, you might
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have a different
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point in your marketing journey where different things are working. But if you
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find that you have
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a need that can be met with an event and there's great reasons to do it, it's a
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great way to build
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trust. If you've got a complicated product, an expensive product, buyers want
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to have that face
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to face interaction, then think about what point in the pipeline do you want to
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introduce that to?
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And I think start your portfolio from there. Certainly at Salesforce, we didn't
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start with
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the huge portfolio we had. We started small and we grew it based on the
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expanding needs that we had
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as a marketing organization as a company. Yeah, with virtual events being so
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big now,
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and in-person events being back, it almost seems like people go to those two
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things for
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almost very different reasons. Like this event versus meeting us when we did
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our qualified event
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during Dreamforce this past year, like totally different things you and I share
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to beer and
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etc. etc. So how do you think about virtual versus in-person? Yeah, I mean, I
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still remember the
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beginning of the pandemic and everyone freaking out and canceling events and
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then everything went
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virtual and it was like, this is great. I can have 10 times as many people at
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one-tenth the cost,
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like this is amazing. And of course, what we all quickly figured out is virtual
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events are amazing,
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they play their role and they also do not replace the in-person. So I think
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virtual is amazing for,
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you know, you talk about it takes an investment to come and spend time with you
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. Well, maybe people
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further up the funnel aren't willing to certainly travel to a new city or even
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take a day out of
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their office or out of their home if they're working from home and go be
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somewhere physically
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with you for three to four hours. But they might be willing to drop on a
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virtual event for a half
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hour or an hour and kind of understand what you're talking about here from a
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couple of your customers,
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see your product in action. So I think virtual events give you this amazing
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ability to scale.
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They also give you this great way to extend your in-person events. I mean, at
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their heart,
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what events really are are experiences that are engines for content. And so if
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you're creating all
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this content for 50, 100, a thousand, 5,000 people in a room, wouldn't it also
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be amazing to have
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the people who don't have the time, the resources, maybe the interest level yet
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in your product to
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come be in that room with you to also gain something from that content. So
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doing an approach where
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you have both that in-person event and that virtual experience, I think is and
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should be the norm.
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It's certainly something we were doing even before the pandemic. But I do think
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it's hard to
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replace that in-person experience. And that is to the point of sharing a beer,
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it's the personal
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connection. It's the getting your questions answered. It's meeting up here who
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may have a similar business
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challenges as you do and figuring out if you're looking for a solution together
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, can you get
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it answered there? Is there another customer you can learn from? And all those
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sort of informal
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ways that people connect. And then of course there's also the brand experience,
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like as much as we do
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online to tell our stories and stuff, an event is a 3D immersive experience. I
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don't know, maybe
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someday we'll wear headsets and do it from home, but you can't feel, you can't
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smell, you can't see,
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you can't experience the spectacle of a live event virtually. And because of
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that, I think we'll
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always want and always have a place for that in-person experience. But I think
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it's great,
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we have both because to your point, I think they play different roles. And I
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think
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you're best served as a marketer to think about how both fit into your
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portfolio.
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Okay, we got one minute left here. I need some just quick advice on how the
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heck do we drive
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attendees? Because it's so freaking hard. You know, it's funny. That's kind of
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how I started
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an event. I wasn't like the traditional events person. I was the demand-gen
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person that was like,
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how do we fill the room? And I would say first and foremost, it requires a
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demand-gen mind.
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It's, you know, you don't build it and they will come. But you have to, just
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the way you sell,
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you know, an offer or your product, an event is another offer. So what is in it
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for them?
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Like be concrete. And we would put together, you know, for all of our events
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campaigns that were
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multi-touch. And maybe the first one was about, you know, save the date and
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sort of getting
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excitement amongst existing believers who had gone to four. But then maybe
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further on, like,
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top five things you'll learn there, or here we've announced a speaker and we
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would
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architect it out to kind of build that excitement along the way. So I think you
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need to be really
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intentional about it. You need to segment those lists. You need to think about
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who you want to be
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there. And it's not just something you, you know, throw to someone who's never
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done demand-gen
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before it's not inviting someone to your birthday party. This is a campaign
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just like any
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integrated campaign you would do. And if you don't get the people there, all
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that effort and money
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that you've put into the event won't matter. So take it seriously and resource
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for a true
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demand-gen program for your events. Anyone that you added in your career that
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jumped the
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jump the attendee list, like Bruno Mars headlining or Bechille Obama headlining
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or anybody
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come to mind? Oh my goodness, no, but I will tell you my absolute favorite
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email we ever sent was we
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announced Metallica with an early bird pricing expiration date. And Metallica
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actually, you know,
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talent has to approve these emails when they're in them. And it was like only
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five more days
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till early bird pricing goes off to Never Never Land with like a big picture of
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Metallica as the
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subhead under like Metallica announced at Dreamforce. So I can't say that that
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one jumped at the most,
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but I still, I mean, that had to have been 10 years ago. And I still think back
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to that email and
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and giggle a little bit about how cute it was. Julie, you're the best. Thanks
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again. Thanks so
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much for chatting with us. Any final thoughts? No, but it's great that Qual
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ified is doing a virtual
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event. And I hope everyone's having a great time in learning a ton during this
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power hour.
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Thanks again, Julie. You are awesome. And events are going to be so important
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in 2023. So thanks
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for sharing that stuff. Up next, I'm going to chat with Jason from metadata.
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And we're talking about
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digital advertising pipeline power hour. Jason, how the heck are doing great
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man? That sounded
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ominous, but like strong. I like it. That's that's our vibe here for the
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pipeline power hour.
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Ominous, but strong. Okay, today we're going to talk about digital advertising,
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how it fits into your broader marketing strategy. Jason, how can digital teams
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just make sense of what's going on and not not fall into the trap of vanity? Ah
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, yes, the good
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old vanity metrics. So the reason we fall into these traps of vanity metrics is
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because they are
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the easiest to measure, right? So like, it's easy for me to tell what my click-
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through rate is,
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because it's coming from the same system. And it's looking at the impressions
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and the clicks. And
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it's just, you know, it's just dividing it and giving me a percent. It's easy
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for me to understand
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cost per click, because again, it's coming from the same system. I've got my
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spend and I've got my
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clicks. And so it's very easy to tell that. But it's when you start to cross
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these systems that it
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starts to get a little bit more difficult. But that's where these non-vanity
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metrics lie. So now I need
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to know my cost per opportunity, or I need to know my cost per, you know, some
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other deeper metric,
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cost per revenue, or cost per dollar of revenue. And so now I've got to make
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sure that
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the data is very cleanly being passed from, you know, one of these systems, my
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ad system, over to
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my CRM, you know, and so that I can actually see that cost per opportunity and
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understand that and
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have it connect. But, you know, for me, it comes down to like the reason why I
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want to focus on
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non-vanity metrics, like what would we call them? Like revenue, revenue-based
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metrics is because
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I just don't want there to be any confusion at all about marketing's impact to
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the bottom line.
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And so if I stop at a more of a vanity metric, like even MQLs, like let's say I
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stop at MQL,
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and that's what I report on, there can always be this argument, conversation
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about, well,
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your MQLs don't turn into revenue. And so if I stop at MQLs, I don't really
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have that
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defense, you know, that I can say, well, no, look, this is actually how it
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impacts the bottom
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line. And so you can't really argue. And I just don't want there to be any
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confusion, any argument
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at all about our impact. And I think the reason that one of the reasons
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marketers stay in that area
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is that I think there's fear, right? There's fear that like, okay, if I move
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downstream,
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I'm going to be found out. And that's if like if my MQLs actually are shit and
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they're not great
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at turning into revenue, then I might be found out. And so I think there's some
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hesitation too,
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and moving from vanity metrics over to deeper revenue and pipeline metrics.
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But what about all those folks that are already lurking, they're on the fence,
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they're out there, they're looking at all sorts of different content, dark
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social, dark web,
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all this stuff, maybe dark web. What about all those folks engaging with your
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paid?
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So what do you mean? So it's just like what, what about them?
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Yeah, how are you making sure that those folks are tied back to revenue?
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Yeah, yeah, yeah. So I mean, most people are using cookies, UTM parameters,
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they're trying to follow them when they click in an ad or click an ad to a
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website.
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I primarily am using email address, you know, so I'm not that interested in
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having somebody sign up
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for like register for content or give me their email address for a piece of
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content,
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only when they're actually requesting a demo. And so once they request a demo,
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I've got their email address and I'm going to follow that down through the
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different systems
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and use that as a connection point, because that seems to be, well, it is
16:30
stronger than trying to
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rely on cookies and UTM's and things like that. And so, so yeah, we pretty much
16:36
try and just follow
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an email address from the time they raise their hand until they either are in a
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meeting,
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have an opportunity, you know, created, win, loss of deal, that kind of thing.
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What channel is working for you right now? Own, earn, paid media?
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So when it comes to impact to revenue, it's primarily been paid media. But over
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the last
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I don't know, six months or so, we've really improved our website, we've got
17:06
our content engine
17:07
really run in, we've got a new community, our demand event. So we're seeing
17:11
almost all,
17:12
and that's a little high, but almost all of our qualified demand is coming in
17:16
via our own
17:17
channels now. And so, so much so that we're actually on a plan to voluntarily
17:23
pull back our
17:24
spend on paid ads by a pretty decent percent over the next five months, because
17:27
I just kind of want to be
17:29
more, well, just because so much of that qualified demand is coming through our
17:33
own channels,
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I want to focus more on those owned channels and use paid media in a little bit
17:37
of a different way.
17:38
And that's just kind of part of our, you know, part of our growth too, kind of
17:41
a part of our growth
17:41
strategy was to really use paid ads really heavily upfront at the same time,
17:46
get the organic content
17:49
audience community going. And then at some point, when that started to feed us
17:52
enough,
17:53
then we would pull back. And so we're kind of at that inflection point now
17:55
starting to do that.
17:58
Yeah, using that paid as a lever that you can, you know, push forward or pull
18:02
back at any time
18:03
while you're working on the other stuff. Yeah, and to do that, you got to plan
18:05
quite a bit ahead,
18:06
because it does take quite a bit of time for these other non-paid channels to
18:10
really start to
18:11
deliver, because if you expect them to deliver right away, then you're probably
18:16
going to do it
18:16
the wrong way. Or if you have like these really high goals around, well, I need
18:19
my organic content
18:20
to start performing in the next two to three months against revenue, you're
18:24
already too late.
18:25
And so, so yeah, having that long game thinking and then using paid as like you
18:31
said, as a wedge or
18:31
lever until you get to that point, that that was that was our strategy. And we
18:35
spend a lot on paid
18:36
today. And so probably more than most companies of our size, I would probably I
18:41
would guess. And I
18:42
kind of know that because a lot of our customers are our size are a little bit
18:45
bigger.
18:45
Wedge based marketing brought you by Jason. So where the heck should people be
18:51
spending their
18:52
money? Where are you spending money? You doing LinkedIn, Facebook, doing TikTok
18:56
? What's working?
18:58
Yeah, I mean, we're so B2B, we're mostly on LinkedIn. We're on Facebook quite a
19:05
bit, but that's
19:05
because we have our own platform to help us target there. So, but they still
19:10
seems to be even folks
19:11
that don't have like a B2B targeting for Facebook seem to still spend quite a
19:14
bit of money on Facebook
19:15
too. Yeah, that honestly for us, that's really a majority of our $1. We don't
19:22
really
19:22
spend much anywhere else. We don't do a lot of Google search. Sometimes we kind
19:25
of dabble in it a
19:26
little bit. I'm seeing some of our customers though, if they're a little bit
19:30
more experimental,
19:31
some of our customers are trying out channels like Reddit and Quora. And they
19:36
're having success
19:37
there. Like a lot of our customers have been pretty good success on Quora,
19:40
honestly. More
19:42
like the IT, you know, like the maybe the deeper IT cybersecurity folks maybe
19:47
might have more success
19:48
there. And Reddit of course takes a very specific style to work on Reddit. But
19:52
if you know that
19:53
style, then you can get that to work. And TikTok, yeah, I'm seeing, I haven't
19:58
seen a lot of B2B ads
20:01
directed to me on TikTok yet, but I'm seeing a lot of B2B content on TikTok. So
20:05
my guess is,
20:06
you know, they're starting there and then they're going to start to do ads
20:08
after they maybe build
20:09
up their profile a little bit. But yeah, I don't know. I don't know how TikTok
20:13
works yet. I just
20:14
not a watch TikTok. Yeah, I mean, that's that's kind of how I feel with like
20:19
LinkedIn video right now,
20:21
where it's like, it's if you're if you're publishing videos on LinkedIn and it
20:25
's, you know, reaching,
20:26
you know, hundreds and thousands of people and all that stuff, it's like, why
20:30
pay for those ads
20:30
when you can make them for free. And I think that that's kind of the same sort
20:32
of thing with TikTok
20:33
right now is people are making the content for free. And so kind of thinking
20:38
like, why am I
20:39
paying for it when I can make it for free right this second? Yeah. And you know
20:42
, one of our, one of
20:43
our strategies as we're pulling back on spend is we use LinkedIn organic,
20:50
maniacally, I don't know,
20:52
that's probably not the right word, but we use it a lot internally. And our
20:56
strategy is to,
20:57
we're marketers selling to marketers. So it makes it easy for us to connect. I
21:01
can just have a target
21:02
account list that we're trying to sell to. I can just take that over to
21:05
LinkedIn. I can just
21:06
start to connect with the marketers over there. And they'll connect with me
21:10
because, oh, hey, it's a
21:11
VP of marketing, just like me. So sounds good. And then we distribute, then we
21:16
end up just using
21:17
that as a content distribution mechanism. And so we don't do a lot of salesy
21:20
stuff. We do maybe
21:21
10, 15% of our posts would be about the product, the rest are how tos, how am I
21:29
doing this? What
21:30
happened over there? We try not to do too much like, oh, sappy stuff, I guess,
21:36
a little bit, but just
21:37
more useful content. And that'll be a bigger, a bigger part of our strategy
21:42
going forward as well.
21:43
Yeah, a little 80 20 rule there for, for value ad versus sales, sales, sales,
21:51
or sales type.
21:52
Yep. Yep. Exactly. Some, some gifts before I get it. Jason.
21:55
Yeah, exactly. Someone wrote about that one time. All right, we got one minute
22:01
left. Any final
22:02
thoughts or advice on, on, on digital advertising? No, I just think I'll just
22:07
touch on targeting
22:08
real quick. I think, you know, think, really, really think about targeting. It
22:13
all starts with
22:13
targeting, right? So if you really want to waste the least amount of, we're all
22:16
wasting money on ads.
22:18
If you want to waste the least amount of money, you got to get really good with
22:20
targeting. And so
22:21
my suggestion there and what I do is I try and go outside the bounds of what
22:25
everybody else uses
22:26
to target. So if I'm using industry and job title and all these basic things,
22:30
that's the exact same
22:31
data that my competitors are using. And so I can't expect to be really any
22:35
better
22:36
at targeting than they are. And so I tend to create my own signals, my own
22:40
targeting data,
22:41
really, by combining data from a lot of different sources. And so I just
22:44
recommend any company that
22:46
really wants to win on targeting, which is an easy way to win. Really double
22:51
down on that. Find
22:51
your unique data points that really help describe your best customers and go
22:55
find a way to get that
22:56
data because it's probably not readily available. And that can actually be a
23:00
competitive differentiator
23:01
for you. Quick example, quick example for myself. I wrote a program that goes
23:07
in Scrapes LinkedIn
23:08
and counts the number of ads every company has out there. And I use as a proxy
23:12
for how much money
23:13
they spend on advertising, because we have a minimum ad spend threshold in our
23:17
platform for you to be
23:18
well, for it to make sense even. And so I can really curate and reduce my list.
23:24
Otherwise,
23:24
it's all B2B companies will that are advertising. Well, that's probably not
23:27
great. So yeah, I use
23:30
that built out about a year and a half ago. Thanks again, Jason. Always great
23:34
chatting with you.
23:35
Next up, we're going to be talking with qualified zone Sarah McConnell to talk
23:40
all things inbound.
23:42
Pipeline power hour inbound marketing. Sarah, how are you? I'm good, Ian. How
23:49
are you doing?
23:49
Excited to chat inbound with you and everything that's going on, qualified and
23:55
all the amazing
23:56
demand that you all are creating. How do you define inbound marketing? Inbound
24:00
marketing is
24:01
anytime someone comes to us and is expressing interest. So anything marketing
24:04
is doing that's
24:05
helping drive pipeline and prospects are coming to us. They found out about us,
24:09
they know about us,
24:10
and they're interested. So I think a lot of times it gets tied to marketing for
24:15
a good reason.
24:15
It's a lot of the effort that marketing is doing to drive awareness and demand.
24:21
And what's your strategy to identify your ideal customer profile and think
24:25
about persona?
24:26
I think it's changed a little bit over time. When I first joined the company
24:30
and we were much
24:30
smaller, it was really just looking at very small sample sizes and saying like,
24:35
who's buying from
24:35
us right now? And that was sort of our general idea. I think as we've grown
24:39
larger and we're talking
24:40
about how to refine our ICP or our personas, we start looking at closed one
24:45
revenue now that we
24:46
have a bigger sample size. And we're trying to identify out of our deal cycles,
24:50
what's the most
24:51
common titles that are in there? Or can we find any commonalities between the
24:55
champions and those
24:55
programs? And are there any trends that we're seeing? So we're looking at if we
25:00
see certain things
25:01
about our champions, are the deal sizes bigger? Are they moving at a faster
25:04
rate? Are they closing
25:06
at a higher rate? And then we're going to spend a lot more of our time budget
25:09
and effort in
25:10
marketing, focusing on those personas. In our case, a lot of times it's titles,
25:14
but it can be
25:14
different at every company, because we've seen from a revenue perspective that
25:18
they're the most
25:19
impactful in buying cycles and deal size. Yeah, like a good one would be like,
25:25
people who just
25:26
raised 50 million bucks or more. Right. It's like, if you just raised series C,
25:30
then like,
25:31
that could be someone who's in your persona. And I think that that's one of the
25:34
things that has
25:35
really evolved over the years to think about not just, hey, fortune 100 or
25:41
global 2000, but like,
25:43
what are the mechanisms that sort of drive that ideal customer? And everyone's
25:49
that's different. Like for us, it's technographic. So we don't sell to you
25:52
unless you have sales
25:53
horse and you have to have a certain amount of website traffic and we know
25:56
titles are better.
25:57
So there's a whole lot of things going into our personas. And typically, we
26:01
have a pretty good
26:02
idea, but we come back to it frequently to refine, look at reports and see if
26:05
we should make any
26:06
tweaks on where we're focusing our time. And then that buying committee, you
26:11
know, there's all sorts
26:12
of different folks in these modern B2B buying committees. Sometimes that's like
26:15
10, 15 people.
26:17
How do you think about that? Yeah, so typically we try to push our team really
26:22
hard for good data
26:23
hygiene when we look at buying committees. We obviously want to be able to
26:25
measure as much as we
26:26
can. So if we have a large buying committee, we want to put an annotation to
26:29
who they are in the
26:30
buying committee. So we've got our champions, we've got our decision makers,
26:33
our budget holders,
26:35
our influencers. And that helps us from a marketing perspective. If we have all
26:39
of that data and we
26:40
start to understand, are there certain things about our ICP that impact where
26:44
they're at in our buying
26:46
committee? And again, it just helps us refine our marketing, our effort, our
26:49
audience and our
26:49
segmentation. So I think as the buying committees get bigger, having the best
26:55
data hygiene possible.
26:56
So you can identify who all those people are and what role that they're playing
26:59
in your deals,
27:00
it's just only going to help your marketing get better. How do you think about
27:03
personalization?
27:06
So I think as personally, personalization is huge. I think people have just
27:10
become so accustomed to
27:11
having personalized buyer journeys. B2C teaches us a lot about what to expect,
27:14
whether we know it or
27:15
not. It just sets the expectation for us. So for us, personalization, I'm going
27:20
to make a little
27:20
pitch for qualified, but we use a lot of our own product or experiences in chat
27:24
bots that pop up to
27:25
drive some sort of personalization, whether you are on a specific page we can
27:28
reference, you click
27:29
through a specific campaign or an outbound email. But I think even bigger than
27:34
that and what we've
27:34
learned from our own product is personalization is just a lot more than
27:38
throwing in a dynamic
27:39
field and saying, "Hi Ian, welcome to our website." When it's great, but it's
27:43
kind of just
27:44
table stakes now and two, when you get it wrong, it creates a really bad
27:47
experience. We've actually
27:48
found in our own way that we call digital body language is like, what are
27:52
people doing? What
27:53
are they showing from an intent perspective? What are they interested in? What
27:56
are they doing
27:57
actively on your website? That's probably a better indicator of what they care
28:01
about in that moment.
28:02
And if you use that in your personalization, in your messaging, when you're
28:05
talking to them,
28:06
it's probably going to have a lot higher impact than just saying like, "Hey Ian
28:09
, welcome to our
28:10
site today," or something like that. So that digital body language and intent,
28:13
I think, is a huge
28:14
component to how you can do better personalization. And it's what we really
28:18
focus on from a personalization
28:19
standpoint. Yeah, and it seems like one of the ways that you all have done
28:23
personalization so well
28:24
is with your content. I call this the edutainment portfolio, but these B2B
28:29
content portfolios that
28:31
personalize by series, by persona, how do you all think about that and how do
28:36
you think about doing
28:37
it? Yeah, similar to the first question is going through our ICP and
28:40
understanding who's involved in
28:41
our buying process. So for us, it's marketing, revenue operations, we're really
28:45
deep into sales
28:46
force. So we started to create content around those personas. So how can we
28:49
reach them? How can we just
28:50
keep our brand in front of them? And not always a salesy way. They're going to
28:53
be somewhere different
28:54
in their buyer's journey, but just because they're not looking to buy from us
28:56
right now, doesn't mean
28:58
we shouldn't give them something personalized and important to them. So working
29:01
those personas and
29:02
having those be the driving audience for our content creation is how we came up
29:05
with our
29:06
demand and visionaries podcast and our rise of revenue podcast. It's really the
29:11
content we know
29:12
our personas want to hear about. And it really helps us in that personalization
29:16
journey.
29:16
Yeah, and I think it's so cool because people always get worried about how do
29:23
you start, right?
29:24
But I think sometimes people lose sight of the fact of like what happens when
29:28
you're there.
29:29
Like DGV has 100 episodes, you know, rise of rev ops has, I think we're at
29:33
whatever 20 plus
29:34
episodes inside the Ohana has a bunch of episodes out there. And when you start
29:39
to look at these
29:40
series, as you've done iteration after iteration, like they become these fully
29:45
fledged little media
29:46
properties just for that persona. And there's so much power in that.
29:51
Totally. And I love the way you put that. I think thinking about personal
29:54
ization as more than just
29:55
a tactical thing of like throwing a dynamic field somewhere or personalizing
29:59
based on company,
29:59
your name, there's more to personalization. That's also just meeting your
30:03
buyers where they're at
30:04
and giving them relevant content to what we think they're interested in. So I
30:08
think personalization
30:08
is just a bigger topic than sometimes we just shove it into populate dynamic
30:13
fields and emails.
30:15
And that's what we think of when we think personalization.
30:17
Yeah. And I think another part of this is the types of content that people, I
30:22
hear a lot like,
30:22
Oh, we need a podcast or we need a blog post on this thing or a video. And I
30:30
think that what we're
30:31
seeing now is that what type of content, what type is it a news show? Is it a
30:36
personality driven
30:37
show? Is it, you know, two hosts, one host? Like, how do you do those things?
30:42
And at the end of the
30:42
day, like some people like Marvel movies, some people like to watch 60 minutes.
30:46
And like how you
30:47
personalize the content is so important. Absolutely. Any mistakes that you've
30:53
seen as it relates to
30:54
inbound? I think mistakes I've seen when it relates to inbound is just making
30:59
it harder for your buyers
31:00
to buy from you. And I think that comes in, you know, sometimes we talk about
31:03
forms. I don't think
31:04
it's just forms. I think if your buyers are showing interest in you, meet them
31:08
where they're at,
31:09
like don't make them jump through hoops to get there because it's so easy. Now
31:11
people have short
31:12
attention span, they can just drop and move on to something else. So I think
31:15
when it comes to inbound,
31:17
if you've put in all the legwork, the budget, the time to drive awareness,
31:20
someone's interested,
31:22
they're on your site, and they want to have a conversation with you. However,
31:25
you can make it
31:26
easier, less fields, live conversations, video calls, whatever it is, meet them
31:31
there and answer
31:32
their questions and get them through the buying journey faster, because you'll
31:36
see it come out in
31:36
revenue. If you can meet them there and answer their questions when they're
31:39
most interested,
31:40
they're going to get more pipeline and you're going to get more revenue. So
31:42
just don't make
31:43
your buyers jump through hoops. Try to keep that as frictionless as possible.
31:46
Yeah, I mean, if it
31:48
takes more than five minutes to respond to a lead, like stop what you're doing
31:54
right now and like
31:55
go fix that process before anything else in your entire marketing stack. Just
31:59
have such a short
32:00
attention span. Like, I don't know, I lose attention before I even finish
32:03
filling out a form. So I
32:04
just think, yeah, to your point, Ian, keeping that process as concise and tight
32:09
and short as
32:09
possible is just going to benefit so much in your inbound pipeline. Yeah, any
32:14
other final thoughts on
32:16
on conversational marketing? Obviously, you know, you're the queen of convers
32:19
ational as the VP of
32:21
demand, Jenna qualified. Yeah, I think I've spent a lot of time in convers
32:24
ational marketing. I
32:26
do think it is a way to transform your website into driving more pipeline. I
32:29
think we talked about it.
32:30
It takes personalization beyond just throwing in company names and first names
32:35
and it can really
32:36
help you talk to your buyers in a way that is relevant to what they're doing in
32:39
that moment,
32:40
how they're browsing your site, what they're looking at, all of that intent
32:43
that they're giving
32:44
you. So, you know, if you're considering conversational marketing, think about
32:47
where you would want to
32:48
see improvements in your inbound marketing. If that's pipeline, which I think
32:51
is everyone,
32:51
because they're at pipeline power hour, personalization, doing more with less.
32:55
I think that's where
32:56
conversational marketing is really going to help people out, especially during
33:00
this time that we're
33:01
in. Yeah, convert the people that are that you're already working so hard to
33:05
get. And I think that
33:06
that's going to be the name of the game in Q4 and for sure in 2023. Absolutely.
33:10
Sarah, thanks again
33:11
for joining me today. Next up on the pipeline power hour, Lauren Vaccarello
33:17
here to discuss
33:18
outbound marketing. Lauren, how are you? I'm good. How are you? Excited to have
33:24
you on here today
33:26
and we're going to be talking about outbound, which you know all too well. So,
33:30
you just came into the
33:32
role at Salesloft not too long ago. Tell us about outbound and how those
33:40
marketers out there can
33:41
take their outdated tech infrastructure and recharge it. Awesome. Great
33:46
question. So, I am
33:48
about five months into my role of CMO at Salesloft and it's been super, super
33:53
fun. So, I think a lot
33:55
about, and as marketers, we think a lot about inbound marketing, we think a lot
33:58
about outbound.
33:59
And it's so easy for marketers to focus just on, here's the leads that come in
34:04
the door. What do I
34:05
do? I'm going to work with my SDR team. I'm going to build, I'm going to build
34:09
cadences. We'll figure
34:11
out how to really optimize that funnel. But there's so much opportunity working
34:15
with your outbound reps
34:16
whether they're your outbound SDRs or even your AEs on how do you build that,
34:22
sort of how do you
34:23
build that cadence? How do you build that system process technology? So, things
34:28
that we do are
34:29
anytime you can align intent data with your outbound prospecting, you're going
34:36
to have a
34:36
material impact on what your conversion rates look like. So, if you can pull in
34:41
intent data
34:42
whether through using something like qualified or G2 and saying, not just this
34:47
company, but this
34:48
person is in market right now. Great, great lead to kick over to your sales
34:53
team and say, now is the
34:54
time to do that outbound outreach. And as marketers, we shouldn't just stop
35:00
there. What can we do
35:02
to set up some sort of automation, whether it's, here's the content that you
35:05
should have,
35:06
here's a sequence, here's a cadence that you should start using just to make
35:10
the whole process easier.
35:11
And who's sending that stuff? Is that stuff coming from marketing? Is it coming
35:15
from your SDRs?
35:16
Is it coming from BDRs? Who's sending that stuff? It should come from your BDRs
35:23
whether you're called BDRs or SDRs, but you're going to have a higher impact
35:28
when you get those
35:28
personalized one-to-one communications as marketing. It's our responsibility to
35:33
build the outlines and build some of the templates to give to the BDR team, but
35:39
you'll get better
35:40
results when your BDRs are the ones going out and actually setting that
35:43
personalized communication.
35:46
Yeah, and how personalized should we be? More than most, to be perfectly honest
35:53
, the idea of,
35:54
I'm just going to copy and paste this template. Your audience, no matter how
35:59
interested they are,
36:01
are going to be a lot less likely to respond. So the sort of sweet spot is
36:06
personalized about 20%
36:08
of your email, and by having that 20% personalization, you're going to get a
36:12
better result.
36:14
Do you find that, I mean, again, it kind of seems like it's basic, but
36:20
obviously most folks
36:23
aren't doing it when it comes to personalization plus intent data for outbound.
36:28
Why aren't people
36:30
doing it or what mistakes are they making? I think a lot of it is, it's a new
36:34
motion,
36:34
it's a new muscle. We'll give everyone the benefit of the doubt of once you
36:38
know someone is interested,
36:40
how do you do that? But part of it is, it's that little bit of extra time and
36:44
work, and I know
36:45
sellers are under so much pressure right now. The world has changed, the
36:49
economy has shifted,
36:51
it is harder every single day to make your number. So a lot of sellers are just
36:56
sort of in that mindset
36:57
of, I just have to keep going, I need to do the volume game, I need to get as
37:01
much out as possible.
37:02
And that's almost the part of the downside of it is you're so focused on
37:08
getting as much out
37:09
if you take that extra time, pause, focus on personalization. Technically, you
37:14
're not getting
37:15
as much out the door, but the quality is going to be higher and you'll get a
37:18
better result.
37:19
Yeah, less is more, right? I mean, it seems that way, but I just feel like we
37:26
get so much crap in
37:27
our inbox all the time. Like, how do you not just be noisy? How do you not just
37:32
be annoying?
37:33
It is, and it's like, how do you stand out in these situations? And it's one of
37:37
the things I
37:38
actually love about Qualified is the outbound prospecting that you can do on
37:43
the website
37:44
with the Qualified chat. So if you know that, you know, Caspian Studios is on
37:50
your website and they
37:52
are a massive, massive prospect to you to have your outbound SDR or have your
37:58
AC that Caspian,
37:59
that Ian from Caspian's on the website, have that initial sort of outreach come
38:05
up on the website,
38:06
have that communication. So you get intent, you get the timeliness, and then
38:10
you take Ian from
38:12
Caspian, you drop them into a sequence in your sales engagement tool. So you
38:16
just keep going and
38:17
keep that conversation going. That's how you're going to stand out because you
38:21
're going to capture
38:22
them the moment that they're interested and you're going to keep that
38:25
conversation going.
38:30
Is there something that you're doing to make sure that the pipeline is high
38:36
quality? I mean,
38:37
you mentioned obviously intent data being like a huge part of that. That's
38:41
going to definitely
38:42
filter a ton. Anything else that you're doing for high quality pipe?
38:45
So we've actually aligned the entire organization around this idea value use
38:51
cases. So what are the,
38:53
what's the real value that we're driving? So it's not about it's this feature
38:58
it is about this is
38:59
the value and we are aligned all the way from our brand awareness, our demand
39:03
gen programs and
39:04
marketing to the cadences that our SDRs are using to how the sales people are
39:10
selling,
39:11
to what our sales engineering and value engineering teams are talking about and
39:15
how they're building
39:15
everything is all aligned to these use cases. And then we pull that all the way
39:19
into the delivery
39:21
arm. So it's about you're capturing pipeline with the right message, you're
39:25
moving it through the
39:26
funnel and everyone's completely aligned. And the magic to that is what becomes
39:31
time to deliver.
39:32
You are saying the exact same thing that you said in the beginning.
39:36
What about channels? Like how do you combine the right channels for outbound so
39:44
that again,
39:44
you're not just spamming the same thing over and over and over again?
39:48
That's a great question. Honestly, a lot of this goes back to the data that you
39:53
the data that you collect and how do you start to optimize. We can put best
39:57
practices together and
39:58
say, no, for an outbound cadence, it's going to take 12 touches and you need
40:03
three phone calls and
40:05
two voicemails and you have these best practices start there, but you're going
40:11
to get so much
40:12
information in real time and be willing to test to optimize and to say, you
40:17
know what in this
40:18
segment or in this geo or in this vertical, people respond to LinkedIn better.
40:23
Let's focus there.
40:25
So be willing to test to try new things and to optimize as you go.
40:30
Yeah, I had someone reach out to me the other day that was like, hey, I just
40:35
left a five-star
40:35
review on on-demand gen visionaries. Can I talk to you about etc, etc, etc. And
40:40
I thought they
40:41
commented on some posts too. And it's like, those are the sort of touches that
40:45
I think adds so much
40:46
value to the person. 100% because it shows that you actually engaged, you care,
40:52
you're part of the
40:53
process versus I'm going to click this button, I'm not going to actually really
40:59
care. I'm just
41:00
going to go through the motion. So I love that they did that. And I bet that
41:03
made you say, all right,
41:04
I'm going to pick up the phone or I'm going to respond to this email. Yeah, at
41:08
least I'm going to
41:08
read it, right? And I'm not going to just like archive the thread. The other
41:12
thing,
41:15
these sequences that are all pre-made in the lab somewhere that seem so stale,
41:21
that are super long.
41:22
And I mean, I can't stand long emails. I think a lot of executives feel the
41:26
same way,
41:26
where I just would rather have like a single question or someone has something
41:31
of me.
41:32
Any best practices you're seeing there in terms of what you should actually be
41:36
putting in your
41:36
outbound? Great, great question. I think one of the biggest mistakes people
41:41
make is 100%
41:43
templatized. This is what no offense to marketers out there, but this is 100%
41:49
marketing put together. And maybe the marketing team never actually talked to
41:55
the sales team about
41:56
it or got that sort of field communication. It can't be 100% templatized. We
42:02
all can spot that a
42:03
mile away and no one really spawns well to it. So for best practice, again,
42:07
personalize at least
42:09
20%. Do that a little bit of research. And then it goes to know your audience.
42:14
If you're reaching
42:15
out to an executive, executives aren't going to read 20 pages on anything or 20
42:21
sentences. It is
42:22
what is the most relevant information that is solving a problem for them today?
42:28
So if you're
42:29
solving a problem today or if this is a, I know you care about this right now.
42:34
So that's the thing
42:35
that I'm going to mention. Those will start to get you that at least the
42:39
likelihood that they're
42:41
going to read it. Another great best practice is if you have any sort of mutual
42:46
connection.
42:47
So if someone sends me a note and says, "Hey, I'm really good friends with Ian.
42:52
He speaks really
42:54
highly of you. Just want to touch base. You at least guarantee I'm going to
42:59
read that email.
43:01
Hopefully I'll reply, but you'll at least guarantee I'm going to read it."
43:04
Yeah. Final thing before we get out of here too. For executives, find the
43:09
channel that they have
43:10
the least followers on social media. If they have 15,000 followers on LinkedIn
43:14
and 400 on Twitter,
43:16
hit them in the DMs on Twitter. It's like, find the path of least resistance.
43:20
Learn any final thoughts?
43:22
Again, go back to know your audience as much as you can. Spend a little bit of
43:28
time. If you were
43:29
going to do an outbound campaign to someone, figure out who they are. Do a
43:34
little bit of research
43:35
upfront to make it personalized, to really connect with them. If there's any
43:39
way to capture that
43:42
person in the moment of interest, that is when you're going to have the best
43:45
possible results.
43:46
Thanks again, Lauren. Awesome insights. Talking outbound. Next up, last person,
43:54
Nick Bennett,
43:55
talking about content and brand, my personal favorite. Pipeline, power, our
44:00
guest, Nick Bennett.
44:02
So excited to have you on the show. A mega superstar influencer on LinkedIn.
44:07
Amazing content,
44:08
amazing brand building. That's what we're going to talk about today.
44:11
I'm good. How are you doing?
44:12
I'm doing great, excited to talk about Alice and all the things that you know
44:18
about content
44:19
that you want to share with our audience today. Let's start off. What's your
44:22
framework for content?
44:24
Yeah. I think when creating content, it's important to consider how relevant it
44:27
is to
44:28
your target audience. For us, we sell to other marketers, people exactly like
44:33
me. I've been
44:34
having these pain points that the people were looking to solve for for the last
44:38
10 years.
44:38
So I feel like I'm at a bit of an advantage here. And so when we create our
44:44
framework and what we
44:45
want our content to be, how we want our brand to come across, which is a fun,
44:50
loving, kind of like
44:52
out there, somewhat edgy type of brand, we try to really relay that back into a
44:58
lot of the
44:58
framework that we do. And so the first thing that we consider is the context of
45:03
the content.
45:04
So is it timely? Is it relevant to what's happening in the industry or the
45:08
world at large?
45:09
If it's not, it may be not worth pursuing. And so we look at a lot of different
45:13
things. For us,
45:14
we're coming up on the holiday time. And that's one of our busiest seasons
45:19
because so many people
45:20
are trying to figure out ways to one close pipeline at the end of Q4, but also
45:25
start to build pipeline
45:26
as we move into Q1. So, you know, the context there is incredibly important.
45:31
The second piece is
45:32
considering your audience. Who are you trying to reach with this content? What
45:36
are their needs and
45:37
wants? If the content isn't tailored to them, it's probably not going to be
45:41
successful. And so we
45:43
try to, again, it's easier when you have subject matter experts that have lived
45:46
and breathed this
45:48
for the last 10 years or so. We can really step in and feel like we know that
45:52
we're walking in their
45:53
shoes. And we really focus on that. The last thing that I would say is consider
45:58
your goals.
46:00
What do you hope to achieve with the content? And if it doesn't align to your
46:03
overall marketing
46:04
goals, it's also probably not worth pursuing, you know, content that's relevant
46:08
to your target
46:09
audience, timely, relevant to your industry and aligned with your marketing
46:13
goals is more likely
46:14
to be successful. And so we try to keep this framework in mind when creating
46:18
content. And we feel like
46:20
if we do it in a way that we've done it and we plan to execute probably about
46:24
70 new pieces of
46:25
content this year, we really feel like we can hit the mark. Interesting. 70. So
46:32
why that number?
46:33
We did a lot of research. We actually, we brought on someone that manages our
46:38
content engine right
46:39
now as well as SEO. And we did a lot of research, customer research, just
46:44
industry research.
46:46
And so we've been focusing on doubling down both on like the social content on
46:51
the blogs. We have
46:53
we put a big piece out every year called state of gifting. And what we do is we
46:57
analyze
46:58
hundreds of thousands of data points from our actual product and what people
47:02
are using the product
47:03
for. And then we ungate that for the world to see because I feel like there's a
47:08
lack of education
47:10
in the market and whatever we can do to contribute to that, whether they're
47:14
using us or using someone
47:16
else, we just want people to use gifting. And we feel like we're trying to stay
47:22
non biased in a lot
47:23
of these reports. We're also on top of that creating the first ever industry
47:28
research report
47:29
that is 100%. Why would you use gifting in 2022? Like what's what's the benefit
47:35
of it? And we think
47:36
that's going to be a it's going to be a gigantic report that we're putting out
47:40
like it's probably
47:41
about 60 pages long. But it's going to be really phenomenal data driven
47:47
tactical. And we hope
47:48
people are going to learn something. And then I'd imagine you're taking that
47:53
report and breaking
47:54
it into all sorts of micro content for social and otherwise over the course.
47:58
Exactly. Yep,
47:59
breaking up. We run a lot of paid ads and both organic. We have that type of
48:04
brand that people
48:05
want to interact with. It's it's something that we've worked hard over the
48:09
years to build. And even
48:10
our corporate handles people when we don't just say, Hey, you know, come join
48:14
this event or here's a
48:15
piece of content. We tried to make it inviting, try to deliver value. And you'd
48:20
be surprised at
48:21
the amount of people that are commenting on our stuff on social that are
48:25
engaging with it.
48:26
Target accounts, the people that we want to actually sell to, they're just
48:30
jumping in and giving us
48:32
all these additional insights without us even asking for it. Yeah, you know,
48:39
and you mentioned
48:40
the timeliness of both the year for you at the end of the year, Q4 trying to
48:46
figure out how to close
48:47
the the year strong, how corporate gifting plays into that. I just want to know
48:53
for everyone listening,
48:54
if you're selling into cast me in studios, like, please feel free as many gifts
48:58
as you want. We're
48:59
taking it. Go to Alice.com, you know, sign up for it. Figure that stuff out.
49:05
Because we're here for
49:07
it all day every day. But it is very timely and it is very relevant. How do you
49:12
kind of focus on the
49:13
stuff that is a little bit more evergreen versus the stuff that is more like
49:18
right here right now?
49:19
This is this is immediately this week, this month. This is critical. Yeah,
49:22
there's always,
49:23
there's always going to be pieces of content that are incredibly important that
49:26
we put out there. I
49:27
mean, take international, for example, or compliancy, like GDPR, like all these
49:32
things,
49:33
it's so incredibly important that people are constantly going through through
49:37
the year. And
49:38
they don't know how to gift. If you're in the US and you want to gift to say AP
49:42
AC or UK,
49:43
like there's so many different regulations and traditions and things like that
49:49
that if you send
49:50
the wrong thing, you could come across as a vendor that no one would ever want
49:53
to deal with. And so
49:54
we've put out additional, you know, blog reports around that and just different
50:00
pieces of content
50:01
that are really touched on those things. But we really try to give away, and
50:06
this is something
50:06
that we've done really well, we try to give away the frameworks of how to build
50:10
a campaign.
50:11
Again, whether you're using us or not, we'll give you the exact template to use
50:16
when you're sending
50:17
out your email, the type of gifts that you should be sending, the follow up
50:21
emails that you should
50:22
be sending. So this is literally handing it off to someone again, ungated and
50:26
just saying, hey,
50:28
if you're going to go run a gifting program or gifting campaign, here is how to
50:32
do it, start to
50:33
finish. And we are literally giving it to you word for word. And the amount of
50:37
people that have said,
50:38
thank you so much. And the amount of people that have actually converted from
50:42
that, because they
50:43
say you're just giving away all this information for free, I figured I'd have
50:47
to take a demo at that
50:48
point. Yeah, I love that. Always, always great when when folks are saying like,
50:55
I figured I'd have
50:56
to get a demo to get all this information. That's that's usually a good sign.
50:59
Is that tracked in
51:02
your metrics? Like, is that is that one of your your KPIs people who are
51:08
overwhelmed with how much
51:10
love you get it? Yeah, it definitely is. And so we I would say last year,
51:15
probably a year from
51:16
a year ago, from from now, we switched to the the how did you hear about us on
51:20
our demo form. And
51:22
the amount of insights that we get are incredible, because as marketers, we
51:26
love to put people in
51:27
boxes. And you go to a demo form, you click the drop down, how did you hear
51:32
about us? Google,
51:33
like everyone's going to put that. And so, but the amount of insights that we
51:37
're getting now,
51:38
where they're specifically calling out, like my content on LinkedIn, additional
51:42
employees,
51:43
content, specific blogs they wrote or podcasts or events, we can start to map
51:48
that entire journey.
51:50
It's not just like, you know, first touch, last touch is cool. But what about
51:54
everything that
51:54
happens in the middle of that journey? That's where the goal is. And that's
51:58
where you start to
51:59
capture a lot of these pieces that then develop future pieces of content as
52:03
well.
52:05
Yeah, and I think that they're really meaningful touches. I think that that's
52:08
part of why content
52:09
marketing is so critical is that it means more, right? Clicking on a number of
52:15
ads is, you know,
52:16
13, you know, impressions equal sale, right? If you see those 13 ads, that's
52:20
one thing.
52:21
But if you read a report, 60 page report, that's a totally different
52:25
waiting than, you know, clicking on a on a Google ad, right? If you listen to
52:32
an hour of someone's
52:34
podcast, like an hour of someone speaking, what is that worth? What is it worth
52:39
to have, you know,
52:41
someone that used a tool, you know, to get a promotion or to figure out
52:47
something new and
52:49
they go and tell their spouse like, Oh my gosh, I found this, this, this how to
52:53
that Alice has on
52:54
their website. And like, I ran this awesome campaign, I literally got promoted,
52:58
like, what is that
52:59
stuff worth? And I think that that's where in content marketing, we struggle a
53:02
little bit to
53:03
capture the value that we're creating. How do you think about that?
53:06
Yeah, I agree with you 100%. And there's so many of those. And that's why, like
53:10
, for me,
53:11
I've always been under the impression in a lot of what I try to do is 80% of
53:15
what I do is directly
53:17
tied to revenue. It's, I mean, obviously, leadership would like to see ahead
53:21
100%. But 80% of what I
53:23
do is focused on revenue, where you can directly attribute that to revenue. The
53:28
other 20%, I call
53:29
it brand experimental. What can we do to get people to talk about us excited,
53:35
maybe social
53:36
media engagement going is going up website traffic is going up. And so I like
53:41
to really focus on,
53:42
in the majority of my job specifically, I focus on that that 20%, because I
53:48
like to experiment with
53:49
different pieces of content, whether it's through the corporate side of it,
53:53
through it's my own
53:54
personal content, whether it's blog posts, whether it's joining podcast,
54:00
because that's
54:00
that's the thing that goes unnoticed. Like, I've done probably about 80
54:04
podcasts in the last year
54:06
and a half as a guest. And so the amount of people on our inbound demo request
54:11
form that
54:11
mentioned they heard me about a podcast with Chris Walker or someone else. And
54:16
it's, it's,
54:18
it's that evergreen content that's always going to be out there. And it's like,
54:21
it was so easy to do.
54:22
It's just video that then I'm taking that raw file and I'm chopping it up if
54:27
they don't chop it up
54:28
for me. And I'm distributing it on LinkedIn, TikTok, Rails, YouTube shorts,
54:34
which I mean,
54:35
we could get down into that later, because I think those are going to be huge,
54:38
huge pieces for
54:40
B2B moving forward. But yeah, you know, it's, I feel like a lot of times the
54:46
goal is to increase
54:47
brand awareness. And so in that case, you're going to look at like that website
54:50
traffic, SEO,
54:51
like, is social media engagement going up? How often is your brand mentioned
54:56
online?
54:56
That's an interesting one because the amount of people that tagged Alice on
55:01
LinkedIn,
55:01
we run a monthly, like, meeting where we see how many people actually have
55:08
tagged Alice
55:09
in the amount of impressions that it could have driven and the amount of impact
55:12
that it could have
55:12
done. And there was, there was one month where we got tagged about 175 times
55:18
from different people,
55:19
brands, individuals. And that was just, that's just all free traffic at the end
55:24
of the day.
55:24
Is there a most surprising thing that you've learned in the past year with
55:31
content?
55:31
I think it's, it's just being able to really just focus on, on delivering value
55:37
and not making
55:37
it fluffy. That's, that's another thing. Like marketers love to make fluffy
55:41
stuff and like,
55:42
I'm doing something about project right now internally where I'm trying to redo
55:47
our,
55:47
our customer stories and I'm trying to make them into playbooks and tactical
55:51
playbooks
55:52
because any marketer that reads a case study, no one's going to write a bad
55:55
case study, let's
55:56
be honest, they're going to make it sound all nice and awesome, but it's
56:00
probably fluffy,
56:01
to a certain degree, but I, but what if you read a playbook of a customer that
56:05
said, hey,
56:07
I got a 537% ROI increase and here's the 10 things I did using Alice to get
56:13
there.
56:14
I think that's a game changer at that point. Not only is that going to help on
56:18
the retention
56:18
side of the business, it's also going to help on the acquisition side of the
56:22
business.
56:22
You mentioned social, um, you know, we've seen that organic social, uh,
56:31
specifically LinkedIn,
56:32
publishing from people's individual accounts rather than brand accounts,
56:37
publishing video specifically on the platform has absolutely crushed, um, over
56:42
the past year.
56:43
What are your thoughts on how people should be thinking about social, how
56:46
should people be
56:47
thinking about TikTok and, uh, and Instagram? Yeah, uh, it's such a good
56:51
question and I, I, I,
56:53
I was always not afraid of video, but I was just never big into video and I
56:58
would always be that
56:58
person that would write a text, text post on LinkedIn. And I said, you know
57:02
what, like, I see
57:03
all these people posting video and they're doing really well and like, I was
57:07
using clips from my
57:08
own podcast and I would post that and like those would do well. But what about
57:12
like diving deeper
57:13
and just other things? And so we started to on an individual basis, leverage
57:19
more video and it is
57:21
doing extremely well. And what I'm noticing is maybe it's not getting as many
57:25
impressions as a
57:26
text post, but it is getting far more engagement. And ultimately, I think that
57:30
's what matters.
57:32
I would much rather take a 5% engagement rate than 100,000 views on a post and
57:41
with a 1%
57:42
engagement rate because that's where the actual conversations are going to
57:46
happen. That's where
57:47
the business starts to happen. That's where DMs happen, where people are
57:51
interested in your company.
57:52
And what I've started to do is take my LinkedIn post and I'm still writing a
57:57
good amount of them
57:58
in text. But I'm then recording myself talking about that LinkedIn post and
58:03
putting it on TikTok.
58:04
And then I'm putting it on Rails. And then I'm putting it on YouTube short. And
58:08
so I'm taking
58:09
all these things and it's just one piece of content, but I'm just, I'm putting,
58:13
I'm really
58:14
just scaling it out into all these other mediums. And it's been really, really
58:19
well. And what I'll
58:20
do as well is repurpose that content maybe six months down the road where I'll
58:25
take that TikTok video.
58:27
And then I'll post the video directly to LinkedIn. And even though it was a
58:30
text post that I did six
58:31
months ago, probably only 5 to 10% of your audience saw it. So it's a fresh way
58:37
to come at it from a
58:38
content perspective. And I mean, I've been putting content on LinkedIn for two
58:42
and a half years now.
58:44
And I think it's going to definitely be a game changer for B2B, especially if B
58:48
2B companies start
58:49
to think of themselves as a media company versus just a traditional B2B company
58:55
And the final thing I'd say on that is that people always think about content
59:01
as like blog,
59:02
video, podcast, like that's the wrong way of thinking about it. It's like
59:08
thinking of all of
59:08
those things as the utility of what it is. It's a how to, it's, you know, an
59:13
interview. It's, you know,
59:15
something that is a guide or a resource or whatever. And then doing them in
59:23
video podcast,
59:25
social, like those formats, like people just got it wrong. Like I have a
59:30
podcast or a video or
59:32
whatever. Like that's not how it is. It's, it's go utility first and then the
59:36
platform and the format
59:38
that it's supposed to be in. Yep. And another thing on top of that is now that
59:41
in-person events
59:42
are back, I can't tell like my whole strategy. I think I think trade shows are
59:46
useless. However,
59:47
I think that going with a content plan to shoot content at trade shows is going
59:54
to deliver way
59:54
higher ROI than sitting on a booth that's probably next to the bathroom.
59:59
Nick, this has been awesome. Thanks again for your time. Any final thoughts?
01:00:06
No, I think that, you know, just, just think of ways that you can use content
01:00:09
and don't be boring
01:00:10
with it. Don't be fluffy, deliver value, and you'd be surprised at what it can
01:00:15
do for your audience.
01:00:16
Awesome. Take care. Thank you.
01:00:20
Thank you for joining us at the pipeline power hour. I feel like I'm drunk with
01:00:25
ideas.
01:00:25
My final thought for 2023 is you're doing your planning is you got to make
01:00:30
something remarkable.
01:00:32
Our budgets might get smaller. There's a lot of uncertainty. We don't know what
01:00:35
the future's
01:00:36
going to hold, but you as a marketer need to rise above the noise. And to do
01:00:41
that, you have to
01:00:42
create something remarkable. Thanks again for watching. Thanks to our visionary
01:00:46
pipeline leaders.
01:00:47
And next up, after a quick break, you're going to hear from Kristen Horsant, VP
01:00:52
of
01:00:52
Marketing at Groove, as she spills her tech stack secrets.