Kyle Coleman, CMO at Clari, and Devin Reed, Head of Content at Clari share how to reduce revenue leak with purposeful marketing strategies.
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(upbeat music)
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- Welcome to Pipeline Visionaries.
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- Thanks for having us.
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- So excited to have you both here today.
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We are live at Dreamforce.
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We're live at the Pipeline Summit
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here with beautiful qualified surrounding us.
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And I gotta say first off,
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I'm the biggest fan of what y'all are doing.
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Biggest fan of Clary and the marketing,
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what you're doing.
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It's so great.
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And I think you're clearly one of the darlings
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of B2B marketing right now.
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- I do Kyle's a darlings on LinkedIn.
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I don't know, we were darlings in the marketing.
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And I'll take it though.
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I'll take it.
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- Oh no, seriously,
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I talked to a lot of B2B marketers obviously.
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And people are always,
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like, oh, what Clary's doing is great.
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So clearly it's working.
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It's at least reaching the other marketers, right?
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- That's like least phase one,
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it's like other marketers notice.
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And then hopefully one day your target audience notices.
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But we'll get that.
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- Yeah, indeed.
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And so we'll get into obviously your marketing strategy
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and all that.
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But first, tell us what the past,
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a couple of months have been like
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with a lot of really great announcements,
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seems like a lot of excitement around Clary.
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Obviously you've been in the news a little bit.
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So what's that, what's that been like Kyle?
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- It's been incredible.
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So we are, you know, for the last year, 18 months or so,
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the market demand has been,
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we want to consolidate our tech stack.
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And a lot of the driving force of course is saving cost.
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But that's not exactly all there is to it.
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What we found is that the experience
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that so many sales reps have is so bad.
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You know, for all the right reasons
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and with the best intentions,
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their teams brought on a dozen, two dozen.
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I heard from a CRO is 39 different revenue technology tools.
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And what that means from a rep experiences,
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they're constantly swiveling between different apps.
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They spend, I think I saw a stat that was like 11 or 15%
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of reps time is spent switching between applications.
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Like, are you kidding me?
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And so we saw this market demand for consolidation.
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We saw this rep demand for simplification.
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And then we also see this AI trend,
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which is really a data trend that says
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you need unified data that's going to inform
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the revenue process.
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And so that's been in the back of our minds
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for from a company strategy standpoint
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for the last year or so, maybe more.
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And we've had a couple of different opportunities
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over the last few years to try and add,
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to accelerate the way that we're adding to our capabilities.
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So in June of last year, we acquired Wingman.
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It's our conversation intelligence product.
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It's now known as Clary Co-pilot.
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And the huge, the market adoption has been incredible.
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And now, what you're alluding to is we acquired Groove,
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a leader in sales engagement and prospecting.
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And so now we have all things RevOps,
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all things CI, all things engagement,
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and much more on a single platform,
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unifying all that data,
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powering all the machine learning and AI workflows
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and giving every revenue critical employee
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from the individual rep,
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all the way up to the CEO and the board,
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everything they need to run the revenue process.
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And that's the mission that we're on,
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starting to streamline all of that.
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And that's the wave that we're writing.
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- Yeah, and I'll share some stats here.
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30% increase in pipeline created,
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10% decrease in slip deals,
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and 24% increase in win rates for Clary,
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the uniform platform to create converting clothes.
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It's pretty incredible what you've been able to do
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also from a marketing perspective,
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getting out into market.
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I talked to a Devon about this
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that I saw those run revenue ads on LinkedIn.
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And like instantly, I just love the campaign.
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I love the targeting.
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I always love an ad campaign that's both a call to action
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and like an aspiration to be great, right?
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It's like run revenue.
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Yeah, I do do that.
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And I need to be doing more of that.
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And it just opened up that loop for me.
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It's like, what is this company?
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What are they doing?
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And so tell me what that process has been like,
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running marketing and seeing the growth so far on your end.
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- So for us, when we are out talking to analysts,
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we talk to customers, talk to prospects,
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we keep hearing the same thing over and over again
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from sea level execs.
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And what they're saying to us is,
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we can't answer the most important question
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for our business, which is,
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are we gonna meet, beat or miss on revenue?
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And we're like, wait, you have a hard time answer.
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Well, of course you do.
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You're trying to kind of create this process
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out of spreadsheets and BI tools and CRM.
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And those systems weren't necessarily purpose built
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to execute all the workflows that you need
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to run revenue.
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And so we started hearing this from our customers
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and they were telling us that revenue is not just an event,
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it's not just an outcome that happens
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at the end of the quarter.
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It really is a business process.
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And importantly, it's the business process
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that matters the most.
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The CRO wants to keep her job.
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If a CEO wants to keep her job, gotta hit the number.
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You gotta guide toward the right number.
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And so that's what is informing a lot of the way
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that we think about things.
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And they've been telling us that we need
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to run revenue better.
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And so we took the word straight from our customers' mouths
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and turned it in to a marketing campaign
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that this beautiful man has brought to life.
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- Do you agree that you're beautiful?
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- That is a lose-lose question.
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- You're a darling.
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- I agree that Kyle thinks it.
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I'll agree with that.
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But no, I was on you as well as like, it was a year ago.
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It was the run revenue campaign,
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specifically the acquisition and the launch
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of the Rev.C.G. category or revenue collaboration
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of governance.
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I'm hard to impress.
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Like I don't know if I'm like mean or something.
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Like it takes a lot to impress me.
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And I was happy at my last job running the content marketing
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team and same thing I'm on LinkedIn.
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And I saw Kyle posting their narrative
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talking about launching this category,
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talking about a lot of the reframes
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that Kyle just shared as the point of view.
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And I did two things.
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The first was I slacked my team.
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My entire marketing team and I was like,
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this is really good.
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We need to be taking notice of this.
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And I was like, wow.
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The nice thing to do is probably text my friend Kyle
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and tell him that this is really good.
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And he kind of kicked my ass this week a little bit.
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So I texted him.
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I said, man, really good stuff.
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Send him the link.
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And I was like, must be that new SVP guy they got.
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She said, you just moved into marketing.
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He says, hey man, how you been?
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It's been a while.
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Why don't we catch up?
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And so we talk about dogs and kids for a few minutes.
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He goes, hey, yeah, by the way,
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I've got this head of content roll open.
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I don't know if you'd be interested.
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And so I was interested.
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It worked really well.
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And then I've been happily on the team for last year,
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bringing that to life.
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- I took the same screenshots of the Run Revenue Ads
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and sent it to my team.
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I'll literally show you my Slack later on.
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That sounds weird.
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But I did the same thing.
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Because, and part of my thing,
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this is the nerdy side of this.
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But part of the thing with your ads and the Run Revenue
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is that LinkedIn, which is extremely expensive
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to run ads on, gives you this massive ad unit.
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And if you put, we have similar ads
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that are black background, white text.
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But if you put black background, white text,
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it really pops on the platform
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and it fills your whole screen on mobile.
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And so I'm like, you can tell a perfect story
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in like a second with this ad unit.
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And I literally screenshot of those ads
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and I sent this to my team, like we gotta do ads like this.
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And we ended up running ads
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and they perform super well.
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But I wanna give Devin the mic here
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because running the campaign is important
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and evangelizing the problem is important.
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Bringing it to life,
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and this is what's been so impressive to me about Devin
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is it continue to call him beautiful and stroke.
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- It's a good take it.
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- It's the way that it's come to life.
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Not just as in the refind labs, Chris Walker terms,
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not just demand capture.
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But further up funnel, how do we create demand?
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How do we take this point of view?
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How do we take this narrative?
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And how do we evangelize this problem
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of what we call revenue leak,
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which is all the different areas across your revenue process
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that revenue is falling out of the bucket?
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This is the biggest problem that's hiding in plain sight
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for every revenue team under the sun.
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And so how do we create more demand for this problem?
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And therefore for the solution.
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And that's what I've been so impressed
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and I'll let Devin talk about how it's actually done that.
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- Yeah.
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Well, the first time, like when I show up and I'm like,
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we have this great POV.
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We've got this enemy of revenue leak.
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We have this revenue precision, which is the opposite.
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And so Kyle's kind of like, all right, what do we do now?
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And my thought is like the first thing is
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you need people to feel it.
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You need people to become familiar
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and feel the pain of revenue leak.
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So part of that is defining it.
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So like the worst thing that can happen is in six months,
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another company is known for revenue leak
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because we didn't own it.
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We created this, you know, all this great POV
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and all this stuff, but we didn't do a good enough job
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evangelizing it.
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And so a lot of that is one, increasing the volume
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of how much are you talking about it.
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And that is familiarity.
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Like when you see revenue leak, well, first of all,
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I'll say is when you hear it, like you see the words,
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I need clarity to be the next,
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like has to be in that same sentence.
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The other part was people go revenue leak,
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it's a breakdown in the revenue process.
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Makes complete sense.
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But we hadn't defined it at the like when I'm at work,
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when I'm running revenue, where that's not just a slip deal,
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that's revenue leak, right?
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That's on a break off in your AESD or hand off,
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that's revenue leak.
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And so the next part is getting them to see it,
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like literally see it and then feel the pain of revenue leaks.
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Hey, this isn't just the way it is.
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This isn't just status quo.
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This is revenue leak.
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Here's the impact.
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And of course, because we're talking about the problem
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of evangelizing it, we have the solution,
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both from a strategic lens, which is like our IP,
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we have this revenue cadence playbook
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and you can follow that, even if you don't use Clary.
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But of course, it's much easier if you just also buy Clary
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and that's the solution for it as well.
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- It's funny, I smiled when you said revenue leak
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'cause I forgot until you said that out,
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oh yeah, that's right, I've seen that a million times
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in the ads.
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And I love what you said there about how you wanna put that
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in their mind and then have your brand immediately
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associated with it.
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And I feel that way about run revenue
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and I feel that way about revenue leak.
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Zooming out here for a second,
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tell us a little bit about your persona,
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who you're selling to and the types of customers.
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- So we have a few personas,
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so we call them revenue pros.
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And as Kyle says, like reps to execs.
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And so the challenge is that's a lot of different people
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from different industries.
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But really the type three folks were going for,
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CROs, RevOps, and what we call the practitioners
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or frontline managers/individual contributors.
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Because the product and the products we've acquired
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kinda speak to those different personas at different times.
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- And so how complex is it crafting
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the individualized persona, those content and marketing
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for those people that care about a lot of different stuff?
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- Should we tell them about the marketing leadership
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when I was a pain and I kept making it?
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So we had a marketing leadership.
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I'm like, am I safe to talk about this?
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Marketing leadership, offsite, what,
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four months ago, five months ago.
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We're on day two and we're like,
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we're gonna plan Q3.
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Give me honesty, I've been known to embellish
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a story or two.
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And it's like, all right, we're gonna break down to groups
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and we're gonna figure out what we're gonna do in Q3.
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And like raise my hand, I'm like,
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hey, like what quickly, who exactly is like, all right?
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So who are the personas we're going for?
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And like Kyle, like, it's this and this
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and someone over here is like,
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well, what about this persona?
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Over here, what about this persona?
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What about this?
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And then 20 minutes later, everyone's talking.
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I think this is it.
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Raise my hand again.
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I'm like, no, that's not really like specific enough.
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I think it was like a two and a half hour conversation
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with probably 15 marketing leaders.
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And it was like a little painful,
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but it was really helpful because one,
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the team has, the way we've scaled was like acquisitions
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and just like, you know, kind of like, you know,
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teams joining other teams.
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And so it was interesting to hear like,
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our whole marketing team has different perspectives
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of who it is we sell through.
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And so this kind of like, I hate you don't want to love
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the phrase coming to Jesus moment was like,
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hey, we all kind of put our cars and table,
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healthily debated and then said, all right,
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these are the three personas.
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This is what we're doing.
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And then the last part was when you have multiple personas,
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you have to allocate a percentage of time and budget
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that we're going to put to them to which at first,
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so I think it was 33, 33, 33, 33.
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And I went, no, if they're all the same,
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then you know, there's just no leader.
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So we ended up kind of going about it that way.
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I love that you had that, the debate,
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which I think we've all had about the personas.
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And if you haven't, you probably need to go have
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that conversation right now.
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It's like Einstein said that if you have an hour to solve
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a problem, you need to spend first 58 minutes
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diagramming it, then two minutes solving it.
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But I think that that is a common problem.
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Like when we sit down with our customers,
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of which like the vast majority are big B2B companies
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and you have that same exercise like,
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hey, we're going to create a video podcast series for y'all
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and who should we make this for?
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And you have a bunch of different answers.
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You're like, yeah, well, what accounts are the biggest,
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what accounts do you need the most acceleration on
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or whatever?
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And you sit down and have that exercise.
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And a lot of times it's a lot of different answers.
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And you say, okay, well, if we did do this persona,
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how does attribution work for that persona versus that one?
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It's like, oh, we have an attribution strategy
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that does XYZ.
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It's like, that doesn't really make sense.
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If the attribute for your end user is the same
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for a C-suite executive, it doesn't make any sense at all.
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And so like you get into the devil in the details
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and then they're like, what's the pipeline stage for this?
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And they're like, I think we might have to go back to like,
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you know, our RevOps team and talk about pipeline stages
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because that brought up like, oh,
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how do we engage like recycle accounts with like a podcast?
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It's like a play that we run.
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Oh, how do we look at recycle accounts?
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And so like it adds all these additional questions
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when you try to figure out personas.
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And it's kind of like the core of what marketing is,
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is like figure out who you're talking to before you talk to them.
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- Yeah.
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And the usefulness here is not just to create
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that new opportunities to create new pipeline.
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Mapping all of this out and understanding
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who your personas are across the entire buying group,
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it has to be done so that marketers can have more of a seat
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at the table for deal acceleration on or so.
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And that playbook is non-existent at most companies.
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And most marketing teams are strictly focused on topofunnel,
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more often than not, they're focused on MQLs.
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Yep, they're not really considering
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how the buyer journey has changed over the last few years.
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And so doing this mapping exercise that we had
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about who are our personas,
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what channels can we engage them in,
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what kind of messaging is appropriate for them?
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It's not just so that we can run beautiful ads
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that you see on LinkedIn.
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It's also so that when we have that first meeting
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and it becomes qualified,
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we have the playbook now to go and engage the entire buying group
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and take pressure off the rep.
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So we can't put it all on the rep to educate,
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to evangelize, to do everything they need to do
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across the 10, 15, 20, 50 different people
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that are involved in a buying decision.
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We as the marketing team need to hold ourselves accountable
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to that and if we do that,
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we're gonna increase conversion rates,
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we're gonna increase win rates
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and we're gonna take pressure up what we need to do
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at the tip top of the funnel.
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And that's the perspective that I think a lot
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of marketing teams don't have, that you need to have.
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It's not just about creating pipelines,
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it's not creating revenue.
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And you're a critical part of the revenue process
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and you need to be fully engaged with your sales team
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and be working hand in hand to make that happen.
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- Yeah, I mean, I think the notion of this like,
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well, we're driving top of funnel awareness
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and this not or whatever.
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And like what that actually means is that,
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eh, I've seen your stuff everywhere
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and like, I've got to the tipping point
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that 13 impressions or whatever it is
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and like, I gotta figure out what the heck these people do.
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Right?
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And then you go to the website and then qualified meetings
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pops up and then you can book a qualified
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or a rep with your qualified person right there.
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- Shout out to qualified for presenting this entire event.
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But like that is the crux of it, right?
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It's like, hey, Ian had seen run revenue,
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however many times that I've been certain those apps
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as I had seen revenue leak, I identified like,
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hey, is cast been leaving revenue?
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I took a screenshot of it and it's a,
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our dimension person, hey, this is pretty cool.
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And then I decide, oh, I should just go like,
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see what's up with this company.
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And then I go to the website.
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And I think that for a lot of people,
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you're right for marketing, we just focus on that part of it.
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But then once they get to that stage,
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we need to accelerate it from there.
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And again, like that's where there's a lot of revenue leak.
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- Yeah.
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And a lot of what Devin has done is a lot
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in the thought leadership realm.
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In areas that are really hard to track
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from a literal attribution standpoint.
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So the way that we show up on LinkedIn as a company,
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as individuals, as executives, all that thing is,
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all that strategy is largely Devin and Nahal
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is in the crowd here.
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But also creating a new thought leadership website
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called run revenue.pro, which has nothing to do with Clary
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and entirely do with best practices on how to run
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the revenue process.
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But in tandem with that, we launched a new podcast called
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Run Revenue.
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- Oh, I know.
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- And so we have all these things and now it's hard
17:06
to shine a light on the dark funnel
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to know what kind of impact these things are making
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from an awareness standpoint.
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What's gonna make Ian finally raise his hand
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and come to us, wait, it's hard.
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But what we do know is that when a rep is engaged
17:20
with an account, they're using those podcast episodes.
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They're using that thought leadership content.
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They're sending those things proactively
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to engage the account in tandem with the place
17:29
that the deal acceleration plays
17:30
that we're running from a marketing standpoint.
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So all of this content and the way that we think
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about thought leadership is it's different, I think,
17:37
and more operationalized than many other companies do.
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And the impact is incredible.
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We see it.
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When more buyers, when we have more engaged buyers
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at accounts, when rates skyrocket, like they triple,
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when you have 10 people engaged instead of five.
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And we have all of this data around it.
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Now we have all these strategies and playbooks
17:56
to go and run the marketing place we need to run,
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equip the field with the right thing to do
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and say after each meeting and run an effective,
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standardized, governed process
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that adds a lot more predictability.
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- Yeah, with our podcast, we, in terms of direct attribution,
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21% of the people that come on our shows close.
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And that's just like direct.
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That's not like all the inventory.
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- You've been warned.
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- No kidding, Jesus.
18:20
- Yeah, no.
18:21
Step it up, Kyle.
18:22
- Do I have to sign a contract?
18:23
- It does.
18:24
- He's gonna buy from you.
18:25
- Oh yeah, that's right.
18:26
- That's right.
18:27
- What do you take?
18:28
- The interview doesn't end 'til one of a size.
18:29
(laughing)
18:30
- Lots of doors.
18:31
- Oh, you didn't sign that.
18:33
- I didn't read the fine print on the contract yet.
18:34
- We take your fingerprints off the Aquafina model.
18:36
But I think that those sort of things,
18:39
the dark funnel looking at attribution,
18:41
looking at those creative things,
18:42
like that is where marketing is headed.
18:45
And it's also where marketing, where there is value, right?
18:47
It's like every single person can run paid ads
18:50
and you can run it better or you can run,
18:53
you know, Google ads better or you can run,
18:55
you know, LinkedIn's ads better,
18:57
where you can have like cooler creative and stuff like that.
18:59
But in all of those dark places
19:02
is where you can create extra value
19:04
that actually drives your business past your competitors.
19:08
And they don't necessarily know that you're doing it.
19:10
- Well, you're saying marketing's going there.
19:12
That's 'cause our consumption is already there.
19:14
That's actually how we hear about anything from software
19:17
to movies and everything between is conversations,
19:19
word of mouth, social media, organically.
19:22
I don't know the last time.
19:23
Like, I know we talked about the dark funnel
19:25
and depth in our paid ads yesterday a lot.
19:27
I don't know if you click ads
19:29
and like on LinkedIn to buy software.
19:31
- No, of course.
19:32
- I'm not saying they have no value,
19:34
but like a lot of times the things in marketing,
19:36
like unless it's clearly attributable,
19:38
like this click or this form fill,
19:40
like we're not gonna do the other stuff, right?
19:41
The dark funnel stuff that you can't attribute as well.
19:44
But the truth is I've always ran towards that direction.
19:47
I joke with Kyle, like I built my career
19:49
on leap of faith marketing.
19:50
- Yeah.
19:51
- Like I'm gonna show you brand growth and audience growth.
19:53
Then there's the damn dark funnel or whatever you call it.
19:56
And then at the end of the day,
19:57
it's like, how do I know I'm doing my job?
19:58
If inbound is going up and if direct web traffic is going up,
20:01
we must be doing something right,
20:02
even if you can't directly attribute it.
20:04
- Yeah, so what I think there and the tools,
20:08
I think are catching up to this a little bit.
20:10
And obviously tools like Clarion qualified
20:14
really help with this.
20:15
But I think what's happening is like so much of sort of
20:20
like that old style, like, well, I'm gonna go with my gut
20:23
and I'm gonna do what I think should happen.
20:25
And then it moved into data being very data driven.
20:28
And then now there's a little bit more towards like,
20:30
with the content specifically,
20:32
of like, I think that this needs to exist in the world.
20:35
And I feel conviction that if we serve our customers
20:39
and our prospects with things that they actually do want,
20:42
based off of information that we've pulled from them
20:45
by talking to them about what they actually want.
20:47
And then we go create that,
20:49
then we know we're in the right.
20:51
And I think that, so for us, what we do in terms of framework
20:55
for our customers is like, there's four ways that we do that.
20:58
There's like peer led content.
20:59
So it's like your peers, learning from your peers,
21:02
being persona driven, so like hyper focus on a persona.
21:05
I say serialized content is even in the world
21:08
to like being serialized.
21:09
So serialized content that people binge,
21:11
just like how everybody binge is stuff.
21:13
And then the fourth thing is multi-channel, multi-format.
21:17
Like you have to be in multiple channels,
21:18
you have to be multi-format.
21:19
And like, if you do those four things in your marketing,
21:22
not just in your content,
21:24
then like that is how people consume that stuff.
21:26
And I think that for so many people,
21:28
that is way more work because their team is not built
21:32
to do any of that stuff.
21:33
It's like, what's your peer driven co-creation content strategies?
21:37
Like, fine, does that even mean?
21:38
- Don't get any ideas, don't ask me that.
21:40
- But I think that that's really challenging
21:43
for the modern marketer to be like, wait,
21:46
but I don't have that.
21:47
I have a beta, it's team that I could put more money into it.
21:51
But that's what all your competitors also have.
21:54
- Right. - Yeah.
21:57
For your customers, what's the size and the scale customers
22:00
that you're targeting?
22:01
- We serve now that we have our conversation intelligence
22:07
product, now that we have our sales engagement product.
22:08
Of course, we have RevOps and forecasting.
22:11
We can sell anybody, any industry.
22:14
If you would have asked me this question 18 months ago,
22:16
I would have said, "Add, you know, tech companies,
22:19
"200 to 5,000 is kind of the sweet spot,
22:21
"but we have exceptions on both sides of that."
22:24
Now we have Fortune 50 companies,
22:26
we have five person SMB companies and everybody in between.
22:30
And are they all gonna be on the full Clary platform?
22:33
No, but there's a journey for them to get there
22:36
if and when we can help them operationalize their growth.
22:38
So, you know, we're selling, as Devin said,
22:41
to CROs, heads of RevOps and practitioners
22:45
at any company, any industry.
22:47
- It's really exciting, but also probably a way bigger
22:52
challenge from a strategy perspective.
22:54
How do you think about the marketing strategy
22:56
as it relates to now that anyone can be a customer?
22:59
- I mean, every time Kyle buys a company,
23:01
my job just gets harder.
23:02
So it's like, man, new personas, new to it.
23:04
I do like it though, because I think it's like,
23:07
it does give us more like place to play.
23:10
And by the mean is like, you know,
23:11
if thing of all the accounts, like, you know,
23:13
we're primarily SaaS, like you said,
23:14
it's like, you know, 12, 18 months ago,
23:17
there's one CRO at those companies
23:19
and there's one head of RevOps
23:21
and pending the size of that RevOps seems
23:22
a few kind of folks there.
23:23
And obviously there's influential people.
23:24
- Sure.
23:25
- And once you, you know, as we started kind of going
23:27
down the practitioner trail, it was like,
23:29
now there's more people that we can influence a deal.
23:32
So I'm not just worried about,
23:33
can I get the right ad in front of the decision maker
23:35
or the right event only in front of the decision maker?
23:37
But as we started to expand the product lines
23:39
and therefore the users, therefore the market audience,
23:42
it gives us a lot of people that we can influence.
23:44
And having been, I mean, you've been in it too,
23:46
but I've been a sales rep selling sales tech
23:49
to salespeople for a few years,
23:50
it's kind of inception.
23:52
I've been in those deals and in internal meetings
23:55
where, you know, Kyle, you know, the leader could come in
23:57
and say, hey, we're looking at, you know, this tech,
24:00
anybody like have you heard of anything?
24:01
I want people to say, yeah, we gotta check out Clary.
24:04
And those reps, as we all know, those salespeople are,
24:07
they're loud, they know what they want
24:09
and they're opinionated and they know what they don't want
24:11
and they're opinionated.
24:12
And so a lot of to me, like for at least my lens is like,
24:14
how do I get as many people here
24:15
that are running that meeting
24:16
in that meeting or influencing a deal to say,
24:19
hey, I know like and trust Clary,
24:22
because those closed door rooms are how,
24:24
in my opinion, someone actually decides
24:26
to go ahead and request a demo.
24:27
It starts there first and I wanna be the first person
24:30
and hopefully the first company named
24:33
and hopefully the only one named.
24:34
But so all that's right, we're doing, you know,
24:36
it's time to start, you know, recording calls,
24:37
using CI, upgrading our sales engagement platform.
24:40
I want Clary to be in the same sentence.
24:42
And so long, long-winded answer is like,
24:44
I like it, it gives us more room to play.
24:51
I also think that marketing the term like actual engagement
24:56
in terms of like, hey, they engage with our content
24:58
or they engage with an ad or whatever is very fraught
25:01
with lots of noisy data there.
25:04
It's like, what is, do they listen to a 45 minute podcast?
25:06
Did they come to a live event?
25:08
Did they do this stuff?
25:08
So obviously that part being critical.
25:11
But then once you talk about the different personas
25:14
and then the different size organizations where it's like,
25:17
okay, the CMO of a 100% company.
25:20
And it's like, it gets extremely difficult.
25:21
How do you sort of deal with that complexity?
25:24
- The way that we're starting to figure this out
25:26
and we don't have a perfect answer yet.
25:28
- My answer is like, we don't have to figure that out.
25:30
- It's hard.
25:31
It really is hard that we, you kind of think about
25:33
the data table and the primary metric we care about
25:36
is the pipeline we create, the conversion rate
25:39
of that pipeline and not all pipeline is created equal.
25:42
So we're looking at pipeline by source.
25:44
How is it different if somebody comes to a live event
25:46
versus they click the request demo button?
25:49
How do those cohorts behave differently from there?
25:51
So that's one cut.
25:52
But maybe to answer your question more directly
25:54
about different industries and company sizes is the data
25:57
that table looks like you have company sizes as columns
26:00
and you can call it whatever you want,
26:01
SMB, mid-market enterprise, whatever.
26:03
And then the rows are number of engaged buyers.
26:07
And then each cell is what's the win rate
26:10
for each of those cohorts.
26:11
And then you can start to triangulate,
26:13
okay, at a thousand person company, mid-market company,
26:16
when there are five people engaged,
26:18
here's our win rate, when there are 15 people engaged,
26:20
here's our win rate.
26:21
And you can sort of have this little heat map that says,
26:24
we now have a best practice where we know roughly
26:26
the size of the buying group, we know how many people
26:29
we need to engage at those accounts.
26:31
And then we can drill into that data and say,
26:33
what are the personas?
26:34
And at what stage in the cycle do we need to engage them?
26:37
And you can start to create really sophisticated plays
26:40
that are marketing led, sales executed,
26:43
and try and optimize the entire process
26:46
and spend the right times on the right thing.
26:48
That's not just about creating 10x pipeline coverage.
26:51
That is not a sustainable way to run a business.
26:54
And so if you can be smarter about creating
26:56
high velocity pipeline, there's a real chance to close
26:59
via the sources that you know are creating
27:01
that meaningful pipeline.
27:02
And then you have the programs that accelerate it
27:04
and engage the right buyers at the right time,
27:06
that's the holy grail.
27:08
Way easier said than done, way easier.
27:11
And it's a journey for us.
27:12
Like we're not saying we're perfect by any means
27:14
in this regard, but we've created a lot
27:17
of the right infrastructure.
27:18
We've created a lot of the right content
27:20
thought leadership assets.
27:21
And now we therefore can go and operationalize the strategy.
27:24
- We always do uncuttable budget items.
27:30
What are your three uncuttable budget items, a query?
27:33
Oh, I'd cut the content to you.
27:35
(laughing)
27:36
- Dammit, it's been fun.
27:37
I was actually, I was doing my prep on my way here.
27:41
What, what, Nahal?
27:42
'Cause she's, I see my right hand here
27:44
and the number one thing that jumped out was social media.
27:48
I think it's, I was, because we were talking
27:49
and I'm like, it's probably shocking that
27:51
when I joined here and I got to hire somebody,
27:54
the most senior person I brought on runs our social media
27:57
strategy.
27:58
That is the number one thing.
27:59
And that's kind of weird to I think to a lot of people.
28:01
- We got some raised eyebrows from our CFO.
28:03
- Yeah, I had no facts.
28:05
- No, it's not Nahal, it's like, that's like,
28:09
I remember this, it was literally, Dev, I trust you.
28:12
It was this hand motion, like, look, I trust you,
28:15
help me explain to them why social media
28:18
is the number one thing.
28:20
And so I can go on a rant if you want on that,
28:23
but that's number one, uncuttable.
28:24
It's like the Crown Jewel right now,
28:26
I'd say what we're doing, it's working the best
28:27
and it's not just Clarice Channel,
28:29
it's our employee activation, it has our CEO's playbook.
28:32
I mean, Kyle's already a machine at it.
28:34
So like, it has so much more benefit
28:36
and reach than people are ready to admit,
28:38
I think for a long-standing point.
28:40
The other one I would say is like,
28:41
thought leadership or category content.
28:43
And that's where it kind of splices into like podcast,
28:45
articles and different things.
28:46
But for me, again, no shock,
28:48
director of content marketing and thought leadership,
28:50
social media and category content are,
28:52
gotta keep going.
28:54
- That's a margin to do.
28:55
- I totally agree, I totally agree.
28:57
I'll say one other thing, yeah.
29:00
- You still have a job, don't worry.
29:01
The thing that's uncuttable from my perspective,
29:05
in addition to what Devan said, is we sell the CROs.
29:08
There are number one person,
29:10
I know Devan listed the three,
29:11
but CROs are the main decision makers in many respects.
29:13
And so they're the ones that get the outsized amount
29:15
of our time, energy, attention, resources,
29:17
budget, the problem is that many CROs,
29:20
no offense to anybody in the crowd or anybody listening to this,
29:22
that they don't read a ton of stuff like a--
29:24
- Totally.
29:25
- They do not.
29:26
- White paper a CRO, rather,
29:28
it's hard to get them to come to a virtual event.
29:31
- They don't read marketing collateral.
29:32
That's something, they read other like industry stuff
29:34
and not marketing, but yeah, like B2B.
29:37
- But what they do, and I've had this conversation
29:39
with a handful of CROs, and I always ask them,
29:41
like when you need to answer a question, what do you do?
29:44
Zero of them say Google.
29:46
They all say, I pick up the phone,
29:48
and I call this person, this person, this person,
29:50
I just ask them, give them an answer that way.
29:52
And so the word of mouth and manufacturing that word of mouth
29:55
is something that we spend a lot of time thinking about.
29:58
So to answer your question finally, Ian,
29:59
is the uncuttable thing for me is in-person events.
30:03
In-person events.
30:04
And I'm not talking about, this is lovely to be here
30:07
at Dreamforce, and what are there 50,000 people here,
30:09
something like that, great.
30:10
I'm talking about the six-person dinner.
30:13
You know, you go to Denver, you go to Atlanta, Chicago,
30:16
whatever, just get six CROs talking to each other,
30:18
not about Clary, just about what's going on
30:22
and how they can help each other.
30:23
And if we can build those communities,
30:25
build that network and earn their trust,
30:27
they're gonna be much more likely to ultimately come back
30:29
to us to try and solve other problems.
30:31
So it's not super expensive.
30:34
Like it costs way more to serve a billion paid ads
30:37
than to run four different in-person dinners every month.
30:40
- Totally.
30:41
- And so that's an investment that I think
30:42
we need to continue to make.
30:43
And I think this is a real appetite for just humans
30:45
in general to have more face-to-face contact,
30:48
but certainly CROs because that's who they trust
30:50
is each other.
30:51
- Yeah, one of the things with in-person events,
30:53
and the reason why I totally agree, by the way,
30:55
at the small batch events, like,
30:57
it's a very common uncuttable budget item,
30:59
and it's something that I think came out of dealing
31:03
with COVID, like how do we do stuff,
31:04
and how do we figure this out?
31:06
And people are like, oh, it turns out these small batch events
31:08
are way better, they outperform.
31:10
And so what I think is really interesting
31:13
is you have the content size,
31:14
so like, value leadership content from your team,
31:16
like push content, then you have like,
31:19
so I think of content in community as like a push and pull.
31:22
So content pushes into your community,
31:24
but it also you pull out of your community,
31:26
other ideas that they wanna hear and stuff like that.
31:28
So it's those two things work in parallel.
31:31
And your community includes doing events,
31:34
and it's not necessarily like,
31:36
demand is running an event per se,
31:38
although that's fine too.
31:39
What community is running event,
31:41
where it's like, with no salespeople in the room,
31:43
with no like, even sales agenda at all,
31:45
we were just talking with Karen Flores from Okta about this,
31:48
of just like getting people together,
31:50
and like, let them talk about
31:51
whatever they wanna talk about is fine.
31:54
And like, back in the day,
31:55
this was like people, you know,
31:56
going to golf courses, doing stuff like that, right?
31:59
We don't have time for that anymore.
32:01
But I think it's really fascinating to pair together,
32:05
you know, this peer driven content of like,
32:07
getting your executives with your customers and prospects
32:11
in public, sharing that as like, on the main content,
32:13
and then partnering that with,
32:15
it by the way, with a small in person six,
32:17
you know, six person events, private event,
32:19
like just for you, if you're interested.
32:21
And it scratches the itch of the executive
32:23
who doesn't really wanna read stuff,
32:26
but they want to participate in stuff.
32:28
They want to have a voice and zero is like to talk.
32:31
And so it gives them a place to talk,
32:33
but to network with their peers,
32:36
or to share their thoughts publicly with the world.
32:39
And that's like what they're doing.
32:39
- And importantly, those small format events,
32:42
they can't be like a time share meeting,
32:44
where you lock people in a room for three hours,
32:46
you're just pitching them this beautiful space,
32:48
you have in Hawaii, like, don't turn it into a sales pitch.
32:51
People were shocked, we just did a recent dinner in Chicago,
32:54
and we had the unbelievable sales leaders there.
32:57
And at the end of a three hour dinner,
32:59
where we were just shooting a breeze,
33:00
talking about family and the Taylor Swift tour,
33:02
and like whatever.
33:03
At the end, they were like, where's the sales pitch?
33:05
It's like, I'm not gonna pitch you.
33:07
If you wanna learn more about Clary, go to the website.
33:10
Like we're here to talk to each other.
33:11
- You just spend an hour with us.
33:13
I don't care about that.
33:14
That was one of the things, shout out to Nate Skinner,
33:18
former salesperson, CM OVON, Fido.
33:21
Where when I did a podcast with him back in the day,
33:23
he was like, I do not care if people talk about
33:26
our product at all.
33:28
In fact, you can like competitors on,
33:29
you can let anyone, it's like, it's our platform.
33:31
They're coming to us.
33:32
We're getting all these like engagements here.
33:34
It's like, it doesn't matter.
33:35
It's like, if you create the space
33:37
and let them do what they want there,
33:38
it turns out like you'll get a lot better results.
33:41
- Yeah.
33:42
- What else is your, or actually not what else?
33:45
What about your most guttable budget item?
33:48
What's something that you didn't wanna spend money on
33:49
this year or next year?
33:51
- All my budget items have been approved.
33:53
Which one did you not want to approve?
33:55
- No, if you gotta approve, it's not, it's not cutable.
33:58
- Cutable.
33:59
I mean, I run an extremely lean team, like in tech stuff.
34:03
Like I was just weird, like we were talking earlier,
34:05
but like how much tech, it was funny,
34:06
but in sales, one rev-ops leader told me,
34:08
he's like, Deb, this looks good.
34:09
Like how much, how much things my tech stack
34:12
am I supposed to have?
34:13
And that was resonating with me.
34:14
And so like when I'm interviewing folks or talking,
34:16
I think it's like weird, like asking what like a marketers
34:18
tech stack is, 'cause it's like Google Docs.
34:21
Like we can get a lot done with Google Docs.
34:23
Like I don't need a lot of like technology.
34:25
So I run a pretty lean team in business.
34:28
So like I honestly like can't say that I come,
34:31
like I don't ask for money that I don't absolutely need.
34:32
And I'm not just saying that 'cause he says yes.
34:34
So I don't have anything that I could cut.
34:38
- What about something you're not investing in this year?
34:40
- Well, I'll answer the first question first.
34:42
And then we can talk about that in a second,
34:44
which is I have increasing skepticism of paid ads
34:49
as a means for demand capture.
34:52
- 100%.
34:53
- For demand capture.
34:53
So there's demand creation, awareness is kind of a more
34:57
common term for it.
34:57
And there's demand capture.
34:58
Like how getting people actually convert, raise their hand
35:01
and say tell me more.
35:02
That's just not the way that buyers buy.
35:05
There's, buyers want to do more research.
35:07
They want to become more educated.
35:08
And so I think there's a time and a place for paid ads
35:11
to create awareness, tell the category story,
35:13
show up on LinkedIn.
35:14
So we're getting those impressions.
35:16
So it's like a billboard.
35:18
It's like a billboard.
35:18
I think treating paid ads like a billboard is way smarter
35:21
than trying to lean on them as demand capture mechanisms
35:23
because then you end up playing this impossible game
35:26
of skyrocketing CPLs, terrible conversion rates,
35:29
terrible win rates, and your finance team is like,
35:31
what the hell are you guys doing?
35:34
And so I think we got to find a better balance
35:36
and rethink a lot of the ways that kind of the traditional
35:39
playbook of running paid ads so that people see an ad,
35:42
click an ad buy a thing.
35:43
It's just not the way it works in B2B anymore.
35:46
- I totally agree.
35:47
We have an ad that we've been running for like the past year.
35:50
And our A/B test was like, do we go with just like pure value,
35:55
like value proposition?
35:59
And then others was like, let's just be funny.
36:02
And the one that's funny, way outperformed.
36:04
So we did an ad with someone like who looks like he's
36:07
on a deathbed with a bunch of doctors around and said,
36:09
I almost died making our company podcast
36:11
but then I found Caspian.
36:13
And like we get all sorts of comments on it
36:15
and people like tagging their friends and stuff like that.
36:17
And again, like I don't care if anyone ever clicks
36:20
on the ad but it's like, and we usually,
36:22
we use it a lot for retargeting as well.
36:24
So it's like people have already engaged with us.
36:25
But it's like that sort of thing like follow them
36:27
around the internet and make them laugh.
36:30
Like that's all you need from that stuff.
36:32
It's just like a positive brand sentiment.
36:36
And it's like, that's it.
36:37
But they're not, I don't need to measure
36:39
the conversion space, that stuff.
36:41
We have their email.
36:42
I could just send them an email.
36:43
- And that's a perfect segue into what are we trying
36:46
to invest in more.
36:48
And broad strokes, what we're, we,
36:50
Clary are trying to invest in is running our marketing
36:53
organization with more of a B2C kind of vibe.
36:57
We want the customer to be the hero.
37:00
We want them to be, to be the ones taking center stage.
37:03
The old B2B playbook of selling technology.
37:07
As it sounds obvious that like, of course,
37:09
we should be marketing and selling our technology.
37:10
Well, not really.
37:12
You need to be selling and evangelizing the problem
37:14
that you solve and you need to be putting the hero cape
37:17
on the buyer so that they feel empowered to go solve
37:20
that problem leveraging your technology.
37:22
And that's the move that we're trying to make.
37:23
So a lot of what we do in the run revenue campaign
37:25
and the way that we're showing up.
37:26
And certainly hopefully the vibe that you get
37:29
when you engage with any Clary properties,
37:31
whether that's runrevenue.pro or clary.com or us on social,
37:34
hopefully you get more of a B2C feel from us.
37:38
We want you leaving any Clary experience and feeling like,
37:42
that was, that felt like Nike.
37:44
I felt like Apple, not, that felt like IBM.
37:46
Like that's not the way we want to go.
37:48
So that's what we're trying to invest more in.
37:50
I don't exactly know what it means,
37:52
but it's something of a directional,
37:55
a North star and ideal state that we're trying to get to.
37:58
- I mean, I feel like that, you know,
38:00
starts with content in personal experiences.
38:03
You know, the buyer experience, how all that stuff feels.
38:06
Are we going to be the people who send 5,000 outbound emails
38:09
to the same exact person?
38:11
I just said this on another podcast,
38:12
where we did a test of, we took 250 people,
38:16
we sent them, you know, like an email like,
38:19
"Hey, buy Caspian."
38:20
And then we did the second thing
38:21
when we invited them on our podcast,
38:23
1% rate versus 25.
38:25
- Yeah. - Wow.
38:26
- Yeah.
38:27
- The offer is completely different.
38:28
And one makes you feel special and cool.
38:30
And the other one's like,
38:31
"Dima doesn't, everyone's trying to get you to buy something."
38:33
It's funny at, not Kyle, previous marketing land,
38:36
I've had that like, "Hey, we're behind on pipeline."
38:39
What do you say we just like send an email
38:40
to our database asking for demos?
38:42
- Yes, let's send more.
38:44
- And I was like, "Man, if that was a good idea,
38:45
"more people would be doing it."
38:47
And it would be working.
38:48
And so guess what, I got forced into doing it.
38:50
Wrote the best copy I could,
38:52
not one demo, 75,000 people on list, not one demo.
38:55
And I was like, "Can we just like hang this up now?"
38:57
Like, this is not how the world works.
38:59
- But Devin it costs zero dollars to send those emails
39:01
and you got-- - My time is not worth.
39:03
- 0.23, yeah. - 0.23 deals
39:07
that close because of that.
39:08
But that's the same argument.
39:09
You're like, but the other side of that is,
39:11
it's super annoying to be on the other end of that.
39:14
And have you ever thought of that?
39:15
- It is.
39:16
- And my thought was trust immediately.
39:17
- The unsubrate was what I showed.
39:19
Which was like three times higher than when we were saying,
39:21
you know, we were saying,
39:22
you know, like content, a lot of like just offers, right?
39:24
Free stuff.
39:25
And I'm like, now there's, I don't know,
39:27
thousand people, I have to go regain their email
39:29
and regain their trust because we decided
39:31
to take a shortcut that didn't work.
39:33
- And that's not gonna happen.
39:34
If somebody unsubscribes from your email,
39:36
like, why would they ever resubscribe it?
39:39
- Unless you've shown them that you're gonna treat them
39:41
like a lead in your database.
39:42
And not like a human that who has problems you understand
39:45
and can help solve.
39:47
Why would they ever come back to you?
39:49
- Ironically, we had to do it again twice.
39:51
Could you believe that twice?
39:51
We had to like prove,
39:52
I know six months ago, the world's changed.
39:54
I was like, okay.
39:55
- I was talking to someone who,
39:58
who due to pressure from the royal investors
40:04
in the sky that they fired a content marketing person
40:08
and hired two more outbound reps.
40:11
And I was like, you're already sending these people emails.
40:16
You wanna just send more?
40:17
Like, what are we talking about here?
40:18
Plus, outbound's a marketing function anyways.
40:20
So like, why do you even need those two people
40:22
to send those emails?
40:23
But you're like, that's like a back where you've already
40:25
lost, right?
40:26
And I think the other piece that we've talked about a lot
40:28
is like the 95% of people who are not buying,
40:31
that is when you need to get in front of them.
40:33
- Yes.
40:34
Well, that's why I liked your ad, sorry,
40:35
I didn't catch up.
40:36
Your ad that you said about the casket.
40:38
- It's like you're not converting them,
40:40
but you're winning mind share.
40:41
- Yeah.
40:42
- And you need to win mind share
40:43
before you can win market share.
40:44
So all that like people like,
40:45
all it's brand content, like that's not converting.
40:47
It's like, but most people aren't buying anyway.
40:50
So you need to start to get them to know, like,
40:53
and trust you, like you're doing with your ad.
40:56
And then later, when the meeting comes up
40:58
that I need your services, you'll be the first one.
41:00
And then you'll get more inbound.
41:01
Or when the SDR does do the outreach,
41:03
it's like, oh yeah, I've known you.
41:04
I've seen this stuff.
41:05
I'm more likely to take a meeting.
41:06
- Glad pass.
41:07
One of the things, I love that you were saying about
41:09
trying to feel more like that B2C experience.
41:13
And I think that I would add to that,
41:15
that just like having more personality,
41:17
and then having your sales process match your marketing
41:21
is something that that is like so hard to do.
41:23
If you can do it right.
41:24
It's like, if you're the company who has like all this
41:27
very cool, very like, hey, buy from us,
41:29
if you want to get better, but if not, like no worries.
41:31
And then your salesperson bangs down their door
41:33
5,000 times.
41:34
We had someone on the podcast who said something
41:37
that was brilliant, which was like,
41:38
we will not like pester anyone ever
41:41
unless they follow the lead form.
41:43
And then it's like, we will email them 100 times
41:45
because they told us that they wanted to do business with us.
41:47
So like, until they say, no, actually that was my bad.
41:51
I just did that when I was in the middle of the night
41:53
and I was in a weak place.
41:54
- You get like, don't opt out of that.
41:57
And I thought that was like a refreshing way
41:58
of thinking about it.
41:59
It's like, hey, I'm not gonna,
42:00
you interrupted me to say I want your,
42:02
you know, I might want to do business with you.
42:04
But at least that has like a strategy behind it,
42:07
rather than just like annoy the living heck out of people.
42:09
- Sure.
42:10
- Right.
42:11
- Anywho.
42:12
- Yeah.
42:12
- Last thing here, just talking about RevOps really quick.
42:16
Obviously we've been doing this show Rise of RevOps
42:19
with Qualified and I have been stunned
42:23
at how different RevOps teams are,
42:26
where it sits in the organization.
42:28
Does it roll up to CFO?
42:29
Does it roll up to CRO?
42:31
What type of person?
42:32
What is their background in it?
42:33
RevOps seems like it is this like uncharted territory
42:36
that like we're sort of figuring out on the fly.
42:39
Obviously you work with tons of RevOps people.
42:41
So I'm just curious like about this,
42:43
this sort of like nascent field
42:45
that is now the zipper between sales marketing
42:48
and customer success, which is all really new.
42:50
Like what is sort of the next phase for RevOps?
42:53
- So RevOps is, I'm glad you did a really good frame up
42:57
because a lot of people think of RevOps simply as
43:00
a coming together of sales ops, marketing ops, CS ops,
43:05
just jam them together.
43:06
Put them on the same team, put a leader and we have RevOps.
43:09
And that's not it, it's not it.
43:11
What RevOps is, is it's a function that facilitates
43:16
the operational strategy of running revenue.
43:19
And so I don't like the function,
43:22
we get so wrapped around the axle about the function
43:25
and where it reports and all those things like,
43:27
well, what are we actually trying to do here?
43:29
We're trying to create a revenue strategy,
43:32
operationalize that strategy and drive predictable growth.
43:35
That's what RevOps is.
43:37
And so I think it makes sense for some works
43:39
for that to roll into finance.
43:41
I think it makes sense in other works
43:42
for that to roll into the CRM.
43:43
A lot of it is situational, a lot of it depends.
43:46
And so like the answer to any good question
43:47
is always nuance.
43:49
And I think the answer to this one is nuance
43:50
and it depends on the needs of the business.
43:52
But that North Star is really important.
43:54
You as a RevOps person or team,
43:56
you are the facilitators of the revenue process.
43:59
You're the ones who make it come to life.
44:01
You're the ones making sure all your revenue critical
44:03
employees have the means to collaborate.
44:05
You're making sure that all the processes
44:06
that you're running are standardized, governed and can scale.
44:10
And if that's the service you're providing to the company,
44:12
you are irreplaceable because you're driving
44:14
the most important business process, which is revenue.
44:17
- Another thing that I think you can add onto that
44:20
is that there's certain folks, RevOps folks,
44:23
that are strategic and then some that are operational
44:26
and then the unicorn that is both.
44:28
- Yeah, and that yeah, exactly.
44:30
And so when you talk to the people
44:33
who are the strategic level thinker,
44:34
you have this like, you talk to them,
44:37
you're like, oh, you're thinking about the business
44:39
for years from now, you're thinking about
44:40
like all of these super strategic levers,
44:43
thinking about, you know, all of these different parts
44:46
of the business and how one thing impacts another.
44:49
Like if you move this, if you change a stage here,
44:51
if you do this, and like those types
44:53
of strategic conversations are not things
44:57
that historically have been in RevOps.
44:59
And it's really fascinating.
45:01
Like how do we help build the RevOps community
45:04
to develop the strategic muscle if you don't have it, right?
45:07
If you have just been like, if you started your career
45:10
as a Salesforce admin and you moved from there into like
45:14
your career path now to, oh, I have to go learn strategy.
45:17
Like that's a very different skill set.
45:19
So I think that part of it is fascinating.
45:21
And I know that y'all are gonna be at the cutting edge
45:22
of pushing that stuff forward.
45:24
- Well, we agreed, we agreed, Blue.
45:26
We had a session yesterday.
45:27
I think it was a Neil from Asana, the head of RevOps,
45:30
who was like the whole point of his like going from like owner
45:34
of the tech stack and the dashboard, you know,
45:36
the person who goes gets the dashboard
45:38
to that strategic function in that leader.
45:40
And that's what a Neil was doing a great job saying.
45:42
One was like, you absolutely have to be looking
45:44
a year or two years ahead.
45:46
But please don't get a twist.
45:47
Like you are always in the operational mode.
45:48
There's always too much work to be done.
45:50
And you just need to accept that as you go into the role.
45:52
- Yeah.
45:53
- But it's kind of like interesting
45:54
because I kind of appreciate that.
45:55
Like it is what it is, at least for now.
45:57
And you still need to find a way to be more strategic
46:00
to elevate the function from like what we call it.
46:02
Like the person who goes and gets the question
46:05
or go gets answers, the person asking the right questions.
46:07
- Yeah, we heard a CRO who talks about
46:10
how they just bifurcated their team.
46:11
They like, they have like their little, their strat,
46:14
they have a little strat team that just like never
46:16
has to get operational.
46:18
And then the rest of the RevOps,
46:19
we just purely operational.
46:20
- And they're constantly, their strat team is like,
46:23
they are thinking six months plus out all the time.
46:25
- That is, it's super fast.
46:27
- I'll find the episode now.
46:28
We'll link it up in the show notes as they say.
46:31
But that stuff is like, man, this is a brand new field.
46:34
Like it really is a brand new field
46:36
with the way that it is changing and you know,
46:39
it's super energetic.
46:40
- It's like sales enablement eight, 10 years ago.
46:43
You ask like 10 different companies,
46:44
what sales enable them to do and look like at your company
46:47
and you get 10 different answers.
46:48
So RevOps is growing and it's starting to mature.
46:50
So you're still kind of get that.
46:51
- Not only is it growing, RevOps is the number one
46:54
fastest growing job in the US.
46:56
- According to CNBC, like this is not clary propaganda.
46:59
This is real.
47:00
Number one, fastest growing job.
47:01
Faster than frontline medical workers,
47:04
faster than truck drivers,
47:05
faster than every other job in the US, which is wild.
47:09
And it's because they are the facilitators
47:11
of the revenue process.
47:12
And to do the job well,
47:13
you earn the right to think long term by executing short term.
47:17
You earn that right, you earn the seat of the table
47:19
by doing the hard stuff, running toward the fire,
47:21
figuring out how to make the rest of the team successful.
47:25
- And it's interesting to hear that teams have bifurcated.
47:28
I wanna help.
47:29
- I heard that.
47:30
- Yeah, I wanna follow up with that person
47:32
like six months from now, like did it work or today?
47:34
- Yeah, no kidding.
47:35
- Case study.
47:36
- Gentlemen, it's been wonderful having you on the show,
47:39
having you at the event.
47:40
For listeners, you can go to clary and check it out.
47:42
A lot of great, check out the Run Revenue podcast
47:45
and any final thoughts, anything to plug?
47:48
- You just plugged the main two CTAs that I love to plug.
47:51
So yeah, go run revenue with clary.
47:53
- Yeah, totally agree.
47:54
The most, the highest leverage thing you can do
47:57
as an operator, as any revenue critical employee
48:00
is root out and stop revenue leak.
48:03
If you do that, you're irreplaceable.
48:05
You're never gonna get riffed.
48:06
It's gonna be lovely.
48:07
So that's the focus for everybody that we work on.
48:10
- Awesome, thanks so much.
48:11
Take care. - Yeah, thanks.
48:13
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48:15
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48:18
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