Learn from Clare Dorrian, CMO at SugarCRM, about avoiding strategic decisions based on conjecture.
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[MUSIC]
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Welcome to Pipeline Visionaries.
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I'm Ian Faison, CEO of Casper & Studios.
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Today I'm joined by a special guest, Claire.
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How are you?
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>> I'm good. I'm good.
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Thanks Ian. Thanks for having me.
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>> Excited to have you on the show.
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We're going to chat marketing.
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We're going to chat SugarCRM.
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We're going to chat your background and everything in between.
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Today's show is always brought to you by our friends.
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Claire, first question.
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What was your first job of marketing?
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>> Well, I had an unusual entrance into marketing.
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To be honest with you, Ian,
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back in a year that shall remain unnamed,
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I did a really small software company in Glasgow, actually.
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Glasgow, Scotland.
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I joined the business because I truly believed in who they were,
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what they had to offer by WaveTech.
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But I joined in a bit of a non-roll,
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to be honest with you, my background prior to that.
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I'd been in business analysis for the longest time.
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So sat in that uncomfortable middle,
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that uncomfortable between a business 90.
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But I fast found myself in that role, pitching proposals,
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being customer facing, and sat side by side with pre-sales and sales.
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And the CMO of the business at the time, over a drink, I might add,
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which is often how business is done in Scotland.
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Approach me to say, you know,
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I think we could use you over in our marketing team.
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Do you fancy a different kind of adventure?
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And I was at that point where I'd been doing business analysis
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for more than a decade.
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I was ready for something, you know, a fresh challenge.
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And I thought, you know, nothing ventured, nothing gained.
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And that probably says a lot about my personality as well, Ian.
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>> Right.
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>> And so I joined the marketing team as the most junior marketing person,
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but I have to say, in retrospect,
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I feel like my CMO at the time,
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who is now both a friend and a mentor,
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really offered me a gift because I finally found my home.
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I think I finally found where I needed to be.
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And in a role that I knew I would both enjoy,
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that I could flourish, but that I could feel challenged in
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and use everything I'd learned prior to that.
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So yeah, an unusual entrance, no degree,
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no Kellogg's School of Marketing program that went with it.
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I learned on the street, so to speak.
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>> So, flash forward to today,
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tell us what it means to be CMO of Sugar Sierra.
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>> Well, you know, my role is honestly all about helping our customers
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and our potential customers understand
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that the power of being able to connect data and insights
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to teams that help move you from lead to prospect to customer,
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so think marketing, sales and customer service,
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and ultimately help their businesses grow, right?
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By identifying and uncovering and going after accounts
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that fit your ideal customer profile.
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And my role here at Sugar Ian is an interesting one, right?
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Because we sit in a market of mega vendors.
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You know, we are the David to the Goliath.
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And I'm not going to lie, I got a bit of a kick out of that.
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You know, there are a number of mega vendors
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that have dominated the market for years.
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But where we specialize?
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And I think what, you know, I don't think that's, you know,
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for any business that's out there,
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that is of a similar shape and size to ours
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and anybody that finds themselves
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and privileged to be in a role like mine,
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you've got to find a niche.
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You've got to find a focus.
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You can't be all things to all men.
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And, you know, our niche, our focus is mid-market.
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So we, you know, me, my team, we are all about trying to pursue
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and acquire accounts that actually look a lot
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like the Sugar Business, where growth matters,
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but not growth at all expense.
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Being and remaining profitable, being efficient
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and effective in how you grow really matters.
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Because ultimately, the end of the day,
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we want to deliver outcomes that matter for our customers.
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And I think having come from the enterprise space, you know,
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as you heard me say, I started out very much
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in a start-up in Glasgow.
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But I've worked in enterprise businesses
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and I personally love that mid-market space
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of fast-focused on growth, but not at any cost.
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You know, I think for me that it brings out the best in me.
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I think it challenges you in very different ways.
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And, and yeah, so that's the focus of my team is
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trying to draw in those accounts that look a lot like Sugar
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and have similar challenges across the sales marketing
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and customer service spectrum.
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So it's kind of unique, right?
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That I'm marketing to people that look a lot like me
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and my team and the team that we actually collaborate
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with to be successful.
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It's kind of fun.
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OK, let's get to our first segment, the Trust Tree,
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where you go and feel honest and trusted
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and share those deepest, darkest pipeline secrets.
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You know a little bit about your company, what you do
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and who your customers are.
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What does that buying committee look like in the mid-market?
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It can vary, you know, for us.
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Oftentimes it does involve the CEO.
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Oftentimes it involves the, if this person exists,
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an IT leader, but predominantly in,
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we are, our buying committee is made up of marketing leaders,
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sales leaders and customer service leaders.
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The end user on the other hand is,
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and the influencer group are their team.
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So it can be one, some are, you know,
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one, some are all a combination of that type of group.
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And then tell me a little bit about your marketing strategy.
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Yeah.
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Well, coming back to the notion of we have to differentiate,
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we also have to build our brand differently.
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We are private equity backed,
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and we are all about growth,
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but growth that is profitable.
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And so one of our key marketing strategies
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to help build our brand in has been intentionally centered
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on aligning ourselves to partners and third parties.
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Third parties who have audiences that,
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guess what? Look a lot like our buying community.
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Partners who can extend the value of the technology
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that we have to offer, but who equally have customers
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that look a lot like our ideal customer profile.
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And, you know, I think a lot of businesses,
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their motion is some combination of direct and indirect,
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and ours is, you know, don't get me wrong.
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But when it comes to building the brand itself,
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we're very much leaning into, from a strategic perspective,
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those third party communities that are trusted,
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and that are trusted by our buyers,
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alongside with those ISB partners that extend the value
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of our platform and have customers that look like ours.
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So that's kind of one part of our strategy.
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I think like many businesses,
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the other part of our strategy is to build connections.
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At the end of the day, people buy from people,
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you can have the best technology in the world,
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but, you know, I think buying is emotional
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as much as it is financial and practical and outcome-centric.
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And I'm so glad the pandemic is behind us,
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because we can now get back out in the field,
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meeting our customers where they are.
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And it's funny to me, you know, having been in marketing
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for almost two decades, to see that in-person piece
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come back around here,
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because I think for so long, we all over-rotated on digital,
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and don't get me wrong, that is still critical,
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a critical part of our strategy, because, you know,
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the next generation of buyers are digitally savvy,
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so we have to embrace that.
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But I think, you know, when I look at,
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and I take a step back and look at what matters to us
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as a business this year, it's getting out and about,
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and in amongst the community of buyers, you know,
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person to person to build those connections
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and those relationships and that trust.
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That's kind of another key part of our strategy for this year
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that is different, because we haven't been afforded
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that opportunity for the last few years.
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So, yeah, just a couple of examples of how we're thinking
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about our go-to-market motion here at Chicago.
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And then what about your team?
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How do you structure your marketing team?
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Is it different because of sort of the size and scope
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of your company, because it's more mid-market?
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So, there are definitely some specialisms within my team,
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and so, you know, a dedicated group that looks after the customer,
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that, you know, handles and supports that drive for,
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how do I turn, you know, the amazing win of a customer,
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and how do I work with the cross-functional groups,
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both internally at Sugar and the customers,
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to take that customer on a journey through to advocates
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so that they can publicly, not only champion their successes
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of business, but also their success with Sugar.
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So, yeah, very much a group that's centered on the customer.
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Unsurprisingly, very much, you know, a group that is centered
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on growth, and that's organized by region.
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We operate in North America, in Amia, and in APAC,
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so we have field marketing groups that are very much tied at the hip
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with the local selling team, and their local customers and prospects,
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and I think that's really, really critical.
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But I think one thing I will say is, you know,
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what comes with a mid-market business is recruiting talent is key,
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and talent that may not come with that ready-made skill set
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and that cross-functional discipline that's required
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when your team is lean on me, but by goodness,
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has that attitude and that appetite to want to learn,
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and to cross boundaries into new skill sets.
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You know, again, I reflect on my time working for a billion-dollar
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software company and being a part of a marketing team
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where we all very much had our swim lanes, events, websites, PR, AR,
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and I think one of the beauties of working for a much smaller,
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I would argue, more nimble team, is it allows you to
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sort of extend your lens out into those different functions
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and learn and grow, and I've personally found that hugely satisfying.
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It's one of the ways that I think we retain the stuff that we do.
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So there's a little bit of specialism to summarize,
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but equally within my team, there's room to grow and to learn,
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because I think when you are small and nimble,
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both in terms of people and dollars, that's just a non-negotiable, right?
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Yeah, I love that. Very cool.
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Any other thoughts on sort of strategy in terms of being lean and mean
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before we get under our tactics next segment?
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Yeah, don't drive a strategy based on conjecture.
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I think that what I oftentimes see in smaller, more nimble teams,
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are ideas very quickly become the de facto execution.
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And sometimes that is built out of that notion of we need to move quickly,
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particularly again, I come back to when you're in a market of mega vendors,
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like Sugaris, that sometimes that you don't allow enough time for the idea to
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formulate,
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to look at the data, to really validate the strategy or the idea that you are
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moving forward with,
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is directionally correct.
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What I have seen in the past is that idea fast becomes an execution engine,
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without necessarily understanding, "What am I working towards?
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And how am I going to measure things along the way to ensure that
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what we do do is worth our time effort and our investment of people and dollars
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?" Well, yours is, or whatever currency it is.
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And so, I would say that that's an important role of any CMO,
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in any size of business, quite frankly, but particularly in a business that is
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lean and mean,
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that I think it's really important to challenge yourself, and to keep yourself
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and your team
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honest in terms of if we do this, what difference is it going to make?
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And try to quantify that to the best of your ability.
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Because guess what? That's what you see here wants to hear, right?
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When you come back to the beginning of the budget cycle and say,
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"I need three more people over here," or, "I need X number of dollars because
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we're going to go
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back to trade shows," you kind of have to prove it, or guess what? You're going
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to lose it.
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So, I think that's a really important role of not just a CMO, but anybody that
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you have on your team
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to point in a direction, be clear where you're headed, be clear how you're
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going to measure
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the success along the way, and celebrate it. I think I see two million teams
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that move on to the
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next cycle here, move on to the next project. And I think it's so important to
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take those moments,
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not just a celebration, but a reflection, and ensure that you learn from what
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it is that you do,
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because guess what? You're not always going to get it right. And that's fine.
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And that's fine too.
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Just don't always get it wrong.
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Okay, let's go to our next segment. The playbook where you open up that
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playbook and
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talk about the tactics that help you win. What are three channels or tactics
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that are your most
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uncuttable budget items?
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Okay, so the first one I would call out Ian is reputation, what I call
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reputation management.
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Today, all of us, you think about when you go on a holiday, what's the first
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thing that you do?
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You go to the review sites, right? To look at the villa, the apartment, the
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accommodation,
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how does it stack up, across all the different things that really matter to you
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Software technology, it's no different. And all of this is happening without us
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being able to
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understand and control it. And so for me, it's so important for us to ensure
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that on the relevant
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review sites, things like G2, things like got an appearance sites, and I'm not
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trying to give
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them free publicity, that we have both up to date relevant customer feedback,
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that potential
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customers of sugar can point to to learn a little bit more about who we are,
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what we do, and how we
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can help on their own. Because guess what? They're going to do it anyway. And
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so we as a marketing
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team are very much prioritizing our reputation management focus to ensure that
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we put our best
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foot forward for when our buyers are doing their research, just like we do as
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consumers in everyday
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life. So that for me is one of our uncuttable focuses, and I think that stems
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from just
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changes in how people buy these days. It wasn't like that 10 years ago. The
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second thing,
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and some of this has been around for a long time in tech.
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So the technology industry has often looked to industry analysts to help extol
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the market category
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and the trends that are happening in the category that you reside in. But
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obviously over the last
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over the last decade or so, that notion of your traditional industry analyst
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has very much shifted
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and there are influences out there, influences who have their own communities
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and have built
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their own communities that operate on social media channels. There are still
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the traditional
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industry analyst out there. And you know, there are certain segments of the
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market where it matters
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that you embrace them and you get to know them. But I think that notion for us,
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as part of our go-to
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market motion of identifying, engaging, and being side by side with credible
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experts and influences
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in our space is a critical part of our brand build. You heard me say that
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earlier, you know,
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it's one of those strategies that we are using to help elevate sugar among our
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coal buying community and potential buying community as part of our go-to
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market. And to me,
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that is critical because when the market, when you've got work to do to drive
18:08
brand awareness,
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piggybacking is an important strategy on brands, you know, piggybacking on
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brands that already have
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credibility, QDOS, is important. So that's one of the things that we are
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certainly prioritizing
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as part of our investments. And then the third thing, and this sort of closely
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ties to the
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influencer play in is content because it's one thing being side by side with
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that group of,
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you know, industry experts and folks that, you know, people look up to, but you
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got to have
18:48
something interesting to say. And you've got, you know, the way we're thinking
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about the influencers
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is much less about influence on pipeline, albeit, you know, there are some that
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do. It's much more
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about how can we together help educate the market on how to solve the problems
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that they're facing.
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And at the core of that is content. Content that you can consume easily,
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content that takes you on a
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journey that sparks your imagination, that clearly articulates how you can
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solve a problem that I
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face in my role as a team, as a business that our customers are facing, because
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it's not just
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the internal problem, obviously, businesses are trying to solve how that
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problem manifests
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for their customers and prevents them from grabbing. When I think back to how
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my, my team and my
19:45
investments were structured, even just a few years ago, one of the, one of the
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areas that has seen a
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significant uplift is content, because at the end of the day, you know, what
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draws you in as a
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story, a narrative that you can identify with and that the crux of that is
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content. Do you have any
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piece of content that particularly stand out to you or types of content or
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anything like that?
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So rather than a piece of content, maybe I'll talk to you about how we approach
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it.
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So, and again, I think that this comes back to getting crafty when you are a
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lean mean team.
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We think about big rock pieces of content. And so as a, for example, we are
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working with an
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industry publication right now to conduct a survey, conduct a survey out into a
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market segment and
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a group of respondents that guess what? Look a lot like our buyers. And the
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reason why we're doing
20:49
that is, well, several faults, right? Firstly, we want to make sure that the
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messaging that we're
20:55
putting to market actually correlates to the problems and the challenges and
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the things that
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keeping them awake at night. Secondly, when I talk about big rock pieces of
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content,
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those research insights is the big rock piece. But the way that we approach
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content is to break
21:15
down those insights and map themes, topics that those insights have and will
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uncover,
21:22
and we're in the middle of this right now, by the way, this piece of research
21:27
into social media
21:29
sound bites, webinars into short form, long form, and multiple formats. And
21:37
with a perspective that
21:38
will resonate to each of our core buying groups, so that we get the most out of
21:43
the research that
21:44
we're doing. Does that make sense? Yeah, for sure, of course. We're not. We're
21:49
approaching content in
21:51
a way where we're trying to uncover insights that we can then package in many
21:58
multiple ways
21:59
to educate when people are at the top of the funnel, to reinforce that the
22:05
challenge that
22:06
they're having or that they're expressing to us when they become a prospect is
22:11
shared by many others,
22:13
and they are not alone. But also into door openers for our sales team, to give
22:20
them reason to reach
22:21
out, to give them reason to connect as well. So yeah, I'm thinking about the
22:26
format working
22:27
in different ways. You know, social media is a plastic example of where bite
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size really matters,
22:34
right? Long form just won't cut it. But building that story, so what most like
22:40
they do in movies,
22:41
right? You know, what Hollywood movie doesn't come with a trailer? We always
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think about social
22:46
media as the trailer, you know, in the long form research report as the as the
22:51
movie itself. And so,
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yeah, thinking about content as a big rock piece that you can break down into
22:57
lots of different
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formats that work for the channels that are right for your business. And that's
23:01
what we're doing.
23:03
But then how you can apply it along the different customer journey to either
23:07
educate and light
23:09
and emotionally connect, validate whatever it is that you're trying to do. That
23:14
's how we're thinking
23:14
about content here at Sugar. I love that. Yeah, in my book, I wrote, you know,
23:19
educate, inspire,
23:21
entertain is sort of what we do here at Caspian. And I feel the same way about
23:25
those trailers,
23:26
like you you want to be able to give give the message in in the format, in the
23:35
place where it's
23:35
supposed to be. And I think a lot of people, you know, just see social as like
23:40
just spreading
23:41
the stuff rather than like just if they can consume it right there, and they
23:46
can get the
23:47
insight or get the information or, you know, find that one statistic of the
23:51
report right there.
23:52
It's like, that's a good action. That's a good spot to be. I saw someone, one
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of the CMOs who's
23:57
who's come on the show just released a report that he said that on average that
24:01
their deal,
24:01
their deals were doing 695 touches with with all their different, you know,
24:08
content, you know,
24:09
all these sort of things. And he's like, there's just so many different ways to
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engage at this point.
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And if you're putting out all of those different, you know, pieces, that's,
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that's where you want
24:19
to be, right? I mean, like, to me, 13 impressions equals a sale, right? Well,
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an impression is
24:24
doesn't equal an impression anywhere, I suppose. It doesn't. It doesn't. And
24:29
you know, I think
24:29
it's easy to fast get overwhelmed, isn't it? By as you think about all the
24:34
different places that
24:35
you can put your content. And, you know, for those that are on the content
24:39
journey, not everybody is
24:41
blessed with having, you know, a dedicated content marketing team as a, you
24:45
know, for example,
24:46
A/B test. I always say A/B test, A/B test the format, A/B test the, A/B test
24:53
the channel. That's
24:54
how you're going to learn what works for your target buyer. And, you know, the
24:58
outcome that it is that
24:59
you're trying to drive. Don't think that just because you produce the content
25:04
in one way once,
25:06
that it doesn't have life beyond that. Because guess what? If you have the
25:10
insights to help you
25:11
understand what's driving the engagement, what's driving the connection, and
25:15
ultimately driving
25:16
the conversion, then, you know, hopefully you're able to go back and optimize
25:20
that content and
25:21
breathe new life into that content as a consequence of what it is that you've
25:25
learned.
25:25
Okay. What about your most cuttable budget item? Something that isn't working
25:32
or fading away or
25:33
just something that you're not investing in right now? You know what? Ebooks is
25:39
probably one.
25:40
And I think that, you know, five to six years ago, the Ebook was the latest,
25:47
greatest type of content,
25:49
right? And I think like with most trends, there's an over rotation. And what I
25:57
've seen is a lot of
25:59
gated ebook fluff, to be honest with you, out there. And so, again, I come back
26:07
to,
26:07
we are in a crowded market. Firstly, we've ungated a lot of our assets for good
26:13
reason,
26:14
because I would much rather have eyeballs on our content than I would, you know
26:18
, create a barrier
26:19
for our buyers to consume and get educated. So the gated ebook is definitely
26:24
one that has
26:25
RIPed over here at Sugar. And I think the other thing that we are trying to do
26:33
more of, and I don't
26:35
think we're alone here, is personalize things. You know, I think the days of
26:40
the equipping the
26:42
sales rep with the standard email and nurture campaign for the prospect who isn
26:48
't ready to buy
26:49
is just because they're probably not reading their email in the first place.
26:54
They're probably
26:55
looking elsewhere to learn more. And so, yeah, we aren't doing much of, you
27:02
know, stock standard
27:03
emails that we put in the hands of our, put in the hands of our reps. And then
27:09
the third thing,
27:10
where frankly, as a business, we are seeing, to some degree diminishing returns
27:17
is in paid
27:18
advertising. That may be unique to us. But we simply can't compete in with our
27:27
competitors.
27:30
So we have to look elsewhere to do that education, to drive that engagement.
27:36
That's not to say that,
27:38
you know, when I first joined the business, paid media wasn't a strategy that
27:41
worked better. It did.
27:43
But we've seen increased competition and increased investment from, you know,
27:49
who we come up against.
27:50
And so we just we've just had to look elsewhere. Yeah, I couldn't agree with
27:55
all three of those
27:56
things. I think, I think you're going to have, you know, with the rise of AI,
28:00
you're going to have a
28:01
ton of people using chat GPT to write more and more ebooks, which like, I think
28:05
that stuff is like
28:07
going to be total garbage, not that AI isn't super valuable. But that
28:11
particular stuff,
28:11
I think is totally garbage. You know, here's a here's a interesting anecdote.
28:17
So I wrote,
28:17
I wrote this book and, you know, technically it's a book, but 69 page book,
28:22
photo, thoughts,
28:23
pictures. And we actually use chat to, so I wrote all the, I wrote all the like
28:29
outlining and did
28:30
all that stuff of what I wanted to say. And our team, we sat down and we
28:33
actually use chat GPT to
28:35
write, to basically write the entire book. And we, and we looked at all of it
28:39
and we threw it all out.
28:40
It was terrible. And like, again, not that, not that chat GPT is not valuable
28:45
for a million
28:45
other reasons, but for our purpose, every sentence was saying nothing. And I
28:50
just kept looking at it.
28:51
I'm like, I would rather say one sentence that I created that I feel very
28:55
passionate about
28:56
and put a picture that I think speaks to that or an example. And so what we did
29:02
was we actually
29:02
went and we took quotes from CMOs about all the topics and we like,
29:08
interpret those throughout the entire thing. And we got a ton of great feedback
29:12
. Those like,
29:12
this is like how business books should be done going forward. Because you don't
29:15
need to write
29:15
140 page book, right? Because after about 70 pages, like, you got your point
29:19
across, the rest is
29:20
just example anyways. Don't fill it with fluff because who wants to read that
29:23
crap anyways,
29:24
we just want to read the headlines. Like, that's all you want to do. And then
29:27
we just threw it,
29:28
like, I threw it on LinkedIn and you could just literally, you know, sit there
29:31
and use the, you know,
29:33
upload it as a PDF. You just sit there on LinkedIn and just scroll through the
29:36
entire book if you
29:38
want in five minutes. And so I just think that that sort of stuff is just way
29:42
more consumable
29:43
than reading a bunch of words that really nobody cared about in the first place
29:48
. You know what I
29:49
mean? Like, it's just, it's so hard to write something compelling and make it a
29:56
page turner.
29:58
When you're talking, you know, those type of content, if you're filling a full
30:01
of examples,
30:01
great. But if you fill full of examples, all those examples could just be one-
30:05
off individual
30:05
things that are two pages rather than burying them 78 pages into into a book.
30:10
So anyways,
30:11
I digress, but I totally agree with what you're saying. You know, you know,
30:14
what though, in,
30:15
you know, for me, you bring up a really important point that, you know, for me,
30:20
the power of AI
30:21
lies in the marriage of AI and humans, not AI alone. And I think you've just
30:25
perfectly illustrated
30:27
that right. I think there are many marketing teams that are looking to chat TPT
30:32
to write content
30:33
for them. And you know, I talked to my team a lot about this and I say, use
30:37
chat TPT for ideas.
30:39
Don't use it as your author. One, because you won't be able to differentiate AI
30:44
can do many
30:45
things, but right in an emotionally compelling way, it's not there yet. And,
30:51
and two, you know,
30:52
don't underestimate the power of your own experience and, and you know, how you
30:56
can connect with your
30:57
audiences. So I think you, you, you're very, very nicely illustrated. You know,
31:02
the, the power on
31:03
the combination of the two is, is, is really what we need here, right? So
31:07
experimentation is key,
31:08
experimentation is key, but I think you have to go into it eyes wide open.
31:12
Speaking of experiments, what do you set aside for that little 5%, 10% budget
31:17
for those crazy
31:18
experiments? Do you have any experiments that that you're working on now?
31:21
Yeah, so we set aside about 10% of our marketing budget for experimentation.
31:34
And I would say that
31:36
most of the experiment, and this might maybe doesn't surprise you, most of the
31:40
experimentation
31:41
that we do resides in our digital channels, because I think that they demand it
31:47
And, you know, so experimentation around a different message and style of ad,
31:55
you know,
31:57
whether it's an advertisement that served up, you know, through a LinkedIn
32:01
community,
32:02
through a third party community, or indeed, you know, albeit we reduced paid
32:06
media spend,
32:07
you know, in terms of paid media. On the websites, we are a global business.
32:16
web presence in multiple different languages. And that affords us an
32:19
opportunity
32:19
to try things differently, to see what resonates with the different cultures
32:25
and the different
32:25
job of these. But I would say on balance, the line share of where we're doing
32:29
the innovation
32:30
is very much centered on our digital presence. How do you view your website?
32:36
You know, I always find that website, a little like brand evokes a very
32:49
emotional response
32:52
in people, and a very diverse response in people. And I always find that, you
32:57
know,
32:58
web and brands are probably the two that people have the most opinions on, you
33:02
know.
33:03
And the reason why I think that's the case is because it really is your
33:09
shopfront, right? Your window into the world of whatever business you represent
33:18
. And so
33:20
it's really important to put your best foot forward, you know, in terms of your
33:27
in terms of your web presence. How do I think of our website as a vehicle to
33:34
continue to educate
33:36
on how we can help? And as a vehicle to ensure that if you think we can help
33:44
solve a problem
33:45
that you have, that you can get in touch with us and get in touch with us real
33:49
quick.
33:49
Because convenience really matters, Ian, when it comes to website, you know, we
33:54
've all been,
33:55
we've all been educated by the BTC experiences of make it fast, make it easy,
34:00
make it convenient,
34:01
and make it all about me. And I think that prevails when it comes to B2B
34:08
website presence.
34:09
So that's how we think of our website. Ironically, our website is in the middle
34:14
of
34:14
transitioning. We are on a bit of a journey with our website as we fine tune
34:19
our message and tell
34:20
our narrative in a more cohesive fashion. It's a window of validation for our
34:24
customers that
34:25
they've made the right choice. But for us, our website is much more geared
34:29
towards, you know,
34:31
acquisition of new accounts, acquisition of prospects. And like I say, valid
34:37
ating whatever
34:38
it is that they found on those reputation sites in our content out there in the
34:42
dark funnel,
34:44
making sure that when they land there, that, you know, they see more of the
34:49
same, but at a next
34:51
layer down. All right, let's get to our next segment. The dust up, where we
34:56
talk about healthy
34:57
tension, whether that's with your board, your shell scenes, your competitors,
34:59
or anyone else,
35:01
have you had a memorable dust up in your career, Claire? You know, it might not
35:06
surprise you, Ian,
35:07
but I'm not an argumentative type. I like to think I'm pretty rational. But you
35:13
know what?
35:14
I do remember a moment, a time when I was actually working for a business in
35:21
the same
35:22
private equity portfolio that I'm in right now. And our business was in
35:27
transition. And
35:28
we were extending our footprint out into, you know, new buying community with a
35:34
wider portfolio
35:35
that had come both through acquisition and organically. And so guess what? The
35:40
rebrand project became
35:43
a thing. And and I remember very distinctly, a conversation with my CEO where
35:51
he was target
35:52
fixated on color choice. And I think I can say it now with hindsight, he just
36:00
had an emotional
36:01
connection to certain colors. But at the time, I found it really difficult to
36:06
reconcile why
36:07
color should matter to a, you know, to a CEO. And my path through that, being
36:15
very honest,
36:17
was to take a step back and go ask some sample customers, go poll the community
36:26
, the very
36:27
community of people that we were trying to target with alternatives, present
36:35
the brand or the
36:36
to be brand. And not just the visual application, but the narrative that went
36:41
with it. Because
36:42
brand is obviously so much more than that. But present that in a couple of
36:46
different ways,
36:47
almost a B test before we went live and gathered that input and that insight.
36:53
And that's what that
36:54
groundswell of opinion from at the end of the day, the people that we the very
36:59
people that we were
37:00
trying to attract. And that's what I used to convince our CEO that red was not
37:07
it.
37:07
And I think therein lies, you know, a really important lesson that we all work
37:17
with people who
37:21
can be very opinionated on, you know, I do think marketing is one of those
37:26
teams that
37:27
everybody has an opinion on, much like as I said earlier, everybody has
37:30
something to say about
37:31
your brand and your website. And I think that's how we develop our shoulders as
37:35
marketing teams. But
37:36
that's where I would encourage anybody that's listening. Go use the power of
37:42
the very community
37:43
that you're trying to reach to help validate what the right choice is. Go look
37:47
at the insights,
37:49
you know, based on what's worked previously. Go test, go A/B test, you know,
37:55
whether it's words,
37:56
colors, content, mediums, channels, go test to prove and validate what it is
38:02
that you should be
38:03
doing. Because I'll bet you're bottom dollar that no CEO or no rational CEO in
38:12
my experience
38:13
would ever push back on the grandswell of feedback and opinion from the people
38:19
that the
38:19
business is trying to attract in order to grow. And that's how I work my way
38:23
through it in.
38:23
All right, I'll do our final segment. Quick hits. These are quick questions and
38:28
quick
38:28
answers just like how quickly qualified helps companies generate pipeline to
38:32
have a near great
38:33
assassin website to identify your most valuable visitors in instantly start
38:37
sales conversations.
38:38
Quick and easy just like these questions go to qualified.com to learn more.
38:42
Claire, quick hits. Are you ready? I think I am.
38:46
Number one, was a hidden talent or skill that is not on your resume?
38:51
I'm going to cringe as I say this. Miss Damps of Great Britain in a year that
38:56
shall not be named.
38:57
Yeah, on to the next question quickly. Do you have a favorite book podcast or
39:04
TV show that you
39:05
do recommend? Sherlock. Yeah, the TV show written by two of my favorite writers
39:15
, Stephen Moffat and
39:16
Mark Gattis, just exquisite, exquisite acting, exquisite script, exquisitely
39:22
filmed. And I
39:23
didn't think the other thing I loved about it Ian, and I could say it works lyr
39:26
ical about this series.
39:28
For a long time, I'll try and keep it short. Just it was, you know, they're lay
39:32
the modern day classic,
39:33
right? Out there revered for years, who knew that something that TV show could
39:40
really
39:41
mix it up, twist it up and turn that iconic super sleeve into a high
39:47
functioning sociopath.
39:48
It's incredibly done. It's one of my favorites as well. One of my all-time
39:55
favorite shows.
39:57
Everything about it is just fantastic. Exquisite. Yeah, it really is. I'll have
40:04
to, we have a different
40:05
podcast where we talk about our marketing lessons from our favorite content. We
40:10
'll have to get you
40:11
on to talk Sherlock. Love to. If you weren't in marketing or business at all,
40:16
what do you think
40:17
you'd be doing? Teacher. I come from a long line of teachers, and I'm pretty
40:23
much the only one in my
40:24
family who didn't teach. Probably says a lot about my personality. But I think
40:29
what's interesting
40:30
Ian is there's a lot of parallels to what I do, I think, with the teaching
40:37
profession. But yeah,
40:39
I think I had a fan myself teaching. What grade, what topic? Kids, I love the
40:47
creativity, the lack of boundaries that comes with the mind of children. Most
40:55
kids are curious,
40:56
right? I think it's such a privilege to be able to influence so young and to
41:03
help them chart a
41:04
path that makes them be successful based on, you know, based on them as an
41:08
individual. So yeah,
41:10
it would be kids. I don't think I could handle the teenagers. I have nephews
41:14
and nieces that are
41:15
hitting the teenage years. And yeah, definitely that would be a that would be a
41:21
segment I would
41:21
avoid in the teaching profession, I think. What is your best advice for a first
41:26
time CMO?
41:27
Don't take the job in a pandemic like I did. That was a good one. Oh, honestly
41:38
though, listen,
41:44
you don't know what you don't know as a CMO. And you know, my job here at Sugar
41:51
, this is my first
41:52
time as a CMO. And I think that the listening skill set is not to be underrated
41:58
. You know,
41:58
as you join the business listening to how is marketing perceived? What is the
42:03
reputation of
42:03
marketing? What does your team look like? How are they performing listening?
42:08
Who does the customer
42:09
look like? What are they trying to do? How can you help them on that journey?
42:12
Yeah, listening.
42:14
How are you going to learn? How are you going to figure out where your quit
42:17
wins lie and
42:17
how to build your own term strategy? Claire, wonderful chatting with you today
42:22
for listeners.
42:23
You can go check out Sugar CRM. Claire, any final thoughts on anything to plug?
42:27
Nothing to plug. But you know, I will say to the marketers out there who,
42:37
I think I said this to you in when we were thinking about this podcast. I don't
42:41
think there's any
42:42
other profession where we've ever had to, that has to face change, either at
42:47
the speed, speed and
42:48
pace as marketers do, whether it's the change in tech, the change in the
42:52
customer behavior,
42:53
the change in channels available to us, the changing skill sets of the
42:57
marketing team,
42:59
the changing way in which you work with all your different cross-functional
43:02
stakeholders.
43:03
And so, you know, I'd much less plug and much more just say, you got this. You
43:08
got this team
43:08
marketing, you know, embrace the change because it's how you learn and grow.
43:12
Fantastic. Claire, wonderful having you on the show. Thanks again and we will
43:17
talk soon.
43:18
We will. Thanks for having so much for your time. Appreciate it.
43:28
And so we do have