Learn from Chris Mills, VP of Product Marketing at Wrike, about leveraging AI to increase internal efficacy.
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[MUSIC]
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Welcome to Pipeline Visionaries.
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I'm Ian Faiz on CEO of Casperin Studios,
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and I am joined by a special guest, Chris.
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How are you?
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>> I'm great.
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>> Great to see you.
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>> Yeah, excited to chat today.
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We're going to talk right.
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We're going to talk marketing.
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Your background, everything in between in today's show is
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always brought to you by our friends at Qualified.
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Go to Qualified.com to learn more about
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the number one conversational sales and marketing platform
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for companies, revenue teams that use Salesforce.
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By the way, they just announced Piper.
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Chris, first question, what was your first job in marketing?
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>> First job in marketing.
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Let's see. I started my career in
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professional services consulting doing system integrator
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implementations of technology,
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and then did that for six years,
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and then went to business school,
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came out of business school and went into product management.
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Then eventually, I'd sort of
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inherited a product marketing team,
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I was doing a product management and product marketing,
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and decided I'd like working closer to the sales side of
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the house than the engineering side of the house.
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So that was what started my marketing journey.
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>> Then fly forward to today.
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Tell me what it means to be VP of product marketing and go to market at right.
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>> Yeah. So I run our product marketing team,
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which consists of what you would think of
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as traditional pure product marketing platform.
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Marketing, working closely with our product management team,
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I own our demand generation team,
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which consists of both broad-based integrated campaigns,
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as well as account-based marketing.
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Then I own our partner,
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ISV relationships too, and then generally involved in a lot of
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our go-to-market strategy planning,
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and what markets and segments are we going to go after?
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So it's a fun job, and it's constantly evolving.
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>> Yes, sure is. Everything under the sun with the product and demand.
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Let's get to our first segment,
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the trust tree where we go and feel honest and trusting.
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You can share those deepest, darkest pipeline secrets.
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Zoom it out, tell us a little bit about
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right and what the company does.
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>> Awesome. Well, right. So work management platform that
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combines structured project management and resource management and planning,
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with communication, messaging, document,
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task collaboration, and then we power that with AI-powered workflow automation
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and analytics.
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So pretty powerful platform built to help companies manage
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the modern complexities of work in a very distributed hybrid global work
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environment.
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>> Obviously, we're talking about this.
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It's a competitive space, but it's also just a massive, massive market,
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and so much an on-consumption of people who are trying to figure out what
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the heck is going on in their companies and how it's done in
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productivity, I think, more important than ever in
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this sort of belt tightening time, especially in tech.
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Who are your customers and how do you think about the market?
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>> Yeah. I mean, as you said, it's a huge market.
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I mean, basically any knowledge worker at any company,
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whether you're a small mom and pop job or you're global,
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the sort of fortune in 1,000 company can use technology of ours,
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like ours to help manage and structure their work,
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to collaborate, to organize, to report and get visibility into what's going on.
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So generally our customers consist from relatively small companies that could
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be
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sort of very small businesses, mom and pop shops,
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all the way up to the global, you know, fortune 100.
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I think we have eight of the 10, fortune 10 companies.
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And so we serve a pretty broad base of customers.
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Our heavy concentration in, you know, a handful of articles,
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including high-tech is a key vertical for us,
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manufacturing, retail and professional services.
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A lot of our customers tend to be in those industries,
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but that being said, we serve companies almost every industry.
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>> Yeah. And so for your role,
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how much are you thinking about smaller companies versus larger companies
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versus the enterprise and the different sort of buying committees?
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>> Yeah. I mean, I think, you know,
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given the broad set of size and complexities of companies that we manage,
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you know, we offer a different set of plans with, you know,
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sort of varying sets of sophistication of capabilities,
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you know, a basic team plan that's built for small businesses
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and tries to strip away some of the complexity of our enterprise.
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Orienting solutions to, we've got enterprise scale solutions
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that, you know, have a ton of configurility, flexibility,
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security and, you know, sort of governance capabilities built into it,
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built for the, you know, large enterprises.
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I think the interesting thing is, is that, like,
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as we look at our go-to-market strategy
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and the different types of customers that we serve,
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we have a PLG, you know, self-service motion that can, you know,
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take a very small company, comes in, you know,
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wants to try the product, signs up for trial, any commerce engine
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where they can just sort of slap their credit card down and pat you on their
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own
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to sales-assisted, you know, sort of sales cycles
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where a company might come in that we determine that they're in our ICP
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and, you know, we have a salesperson reach out to them if they want to engage,
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they can engage with the salesperson and sort of help walk through the trial
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process
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and, you know, go through the buying and, you know, sort of solutioning process
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to sell a big deal to, you know, then on the enterprise side,
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we've got enterprise sellers who are working more top-down with executive
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buying committees.
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And so generally that buying committee can consist of, like,
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"Hey, I'm a team leader or project manager and I'm managing a project.
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I go sign up for a trial and I buy a few or ample licenses
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to the more complex buying committees which may include a functional leader.
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Marketing tends to be, you know, a big buying center for us
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or, you know, PMO, program management office,
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tends to be a buying center for us and then professional services teams
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that do client, you know, project management are also another big buying center
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for us.
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And so in those cases, typically, you know, some business sponsor, champion,
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functional leader will initiate a buying process and evaluate, you know,
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different solutions.
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And then, yeah, those are complex enterprise buying cycles that, you know,
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involve a handful, you know, sometimes tens of people from the functional, you
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know,
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business unit that we're working with potentially some of their cross-
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functional work partners,
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procurement, IT, legal, finance.
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And so those were more, you know, kind of typical enterprise sales cycles
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that involve, you know, a bunch of different buyers from the company.
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You can see my auto-generated emojis.
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The thing that nobody would ever have asked for.
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Yeah, exactly.
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The first time it showed up, I was like, why are balloons, like, shooting out
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of my head?
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See if it does. Yeah.
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Well, it's so funny is like, if you're going to do that, like,
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I need like, tell me where the, you know, where the nearest burrito shop is or
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something,
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you know what I mean?
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If we're going to have balloons flash on the screen and the thumbs up,
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it's like, give me something actionable here.
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Speaking of burritos, how would you define your marketing strategy, you know,
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going after all these different types of accounts?
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We've got a pretty, you know, varying marketing strategy, right?
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So we're trying to go after this huge market and capture all the different
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kinds of people
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who are looking to manage their work more effectively.
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And so, you know, it starts with performance marketing.
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We do a decent amount of performance marketing and we spent years sort of
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refine our model
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around, you know, how do we tune our, you know, engine so that we capture as
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many leads
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to get them to our website, to get them to convert and make sure the right
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kinds of leads
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that are looking for solutions that are sort of in our category and that are
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good fits for us.
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So, lots and lots of energy goes into those, you know, performance marketing,
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you know,
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machine learning models to kind of figure out, like, where should we be
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spending money
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on what types of terms and, you know, what channels.
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We do a ton of work around SEO, so we got to hold digital team, you know,
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constantly tuning
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our SEO to content generation to orient towards the different types of visitors
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that we want
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to, you know, bring to our web properties.
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And then, you know, we have other more traditional sort of enterprise, you know
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demand generation marketing tactics that include, you know, integrated
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campaigns, you know,
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emails, webinars and seminars, event strategy, both our own events that we put
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on as well
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as, you know, industry sponsored events that are, you know, so where are target
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customers
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and prospects, tend to go to consume information.
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And then, you know, we're doing one to one to one to a few targeted ABM
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programs as well
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for some of our, you know, biggest strategic accounts, as well as, you know,
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kind of key
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targeted ICP segments that we're focused on.
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And either thoughts on strategy or team or buying company or anything like that
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Yeah, I mean, the way our go to market organization is set up is, you know, we
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think of our business,
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you know, from a land and expand perspective, like, we're very sort of a team
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to the way
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this market buys generally is they, you know, land and, you know, kind of a
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small team
10:36
or project team or part of the organization is looking for a solution they buy
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and then,
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you know, then there's an opportunity to take that team and can we get more
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members of that
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team and can we get other teams that that team works closely with?
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Can we go into other functions that that function collaborates with or other
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business units
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that, you know, are aligned with what that team is doing?
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And so we have a dedicated land team that's very focused on, you know, how do
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we acquire
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customers as quickly and as big as possible?
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And then we have expansion teams that are divided by G.O.
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So we've got general managers in the Americas and internationally who have
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teams of account
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managers who own the relationship and are responsible for, you know, expansions
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and up
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so-cross all within accounts.
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Those GMs also have the customer success and renewal pieces of the customer
11:32
relationship
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as well.
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And then we've got a mix of AEs and SDRs who, you know, sort of handle, you
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know, sort
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of cold prospecting or kind of lower scored leads, you know, go to the SDRs,
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whereas
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like higher, higher qualified, higher fit leads might get directed directly to
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the AEs.
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Okay, let's get to our next segment, the playbook.
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Where you opened up the playbook and talked about the tactics that help you win
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What are your three channels or tactics that are your uncuttable budget items?
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Yeah, I talked a little bit about the digital marketing piece, performance
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marketing that
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we do.
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I mean, that is, you know, a core part of our marketing engine.
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Now we've spent a ton of, you know, I think three years ago when, you know,
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sort of money
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was free and everybody was like growing like gamebusters.
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We're spending more on performance marketing.
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And I think everybody in the market was.
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I think everybody has sort of like, you know, looked at, you know, where they
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're spending,
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you know, market program budget and look for ways to optimize.
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So we spent a lot in the last year or so trying to make sure that like every
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dollar that we
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spend on performance marketing generates, you know, an adequate dollar or
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dollars of
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money on the return on investment.
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And so we've gotten much more efficient in that just from a lot of anything
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that we've
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done.
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So that's a key, you know, marketing budget line item for us.
13:02
And I think another sort of unmovable thing is like we throw an annual
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conference every
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year, called collaborate.
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There's an opportunity for us to bring our customers together and, you know,
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potential
13:14
customers together to talk about leadership and where the world of work is
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going and,
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you know, sort of best practices on how people are managing, you know, modern
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work and the
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challenges that come along with that as well as, you know, sort of best
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practices on how
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how our customers should be using, right, or how any customer that uses RIC can
13:32
use it
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to the best extent.
13:34
So I think that's a key event for us that there's an opportunity to interact
13:40
with our
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customers and also get our customers to sort of interact with potential
13:44
customers as well.
13:45
And so we'll always continue to do that.
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We're doing sort of a hybrid event this year to look forward to, you know,
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getting back
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in person most likely next year.
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The third area is around like just our marketing and sales tax act.
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So I mean, we've got a fairly sophisticated set of marketing sales tools that
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our teams
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are using from, you know, Marketo and demand base, lean data, zoom info, sales
14:10
loft, and
14:11
our teams use RIC pretty extensively, both in the marketing team as well as
14:15
across the
14:16
organization.
14:17
I mean, we're definitely, you know, each young dog food, drink your own
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champagne, you
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know, sort of a practitioner of using RIC to run the organization.
14:27
And what is not sort of like in your, in your remit for things like, are you
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not looking
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at sort of like the classic corporate marketing functions like, you know,
14:37
content or comms
14:38
or brand or something like that?
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So I have product marketing, demand generation with the exception of digital
14:49
and, you know,
14:51
sort of go to market strategy.
14:53
So the marketing leadership team, I have a peer who runs digital.
14:56
So that peer is responsible for our SEO strategy, our web properties and our
15:03
digital spend,
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you know, performance marketing.
15:07
And then I have another peer who runs corporate marketing and creative, you
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know, sort of
15:10
brand part of marketing team.
15:13
So within some of the, obviously you said you're doing a ton of stuff with paid
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Paid is usually, you know, an uncutable budget item with a lot of people.
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You mentioned machine learning, all sorts of stuff like that.
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I'm curious though.
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How do you think about sort of, you know, you have the people that are in
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market and then
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people that are not in market, you know, especially on the enterprise side
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where it's
15:37
all a little bit more fungible, you know, the, the, the, the CMO is probably
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not filling
15:42
out the, you know, a lead form just because they see an ad or, or, or, you know
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, searching
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for your solution necessarily.
15:50
Yeah.
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Yeah.
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And that's where our ABN tactics come into play.
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And we're starting to do more and more on ABN side.
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We think that there's a big opportunity there because, you know, as we're doing
16:02
more enterprise
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deals and looking at selling top down.
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Yeah.
16:07
But those people are not signing up for trials and responding to ads.
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And so that's where there's an opportunity for us to sort of closely refine our
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, ICP
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and personal, you know, definitions and figure out like what companies do we
16:24
want to go
16:25
after that are good sort of industry fit size location, whatever have the types
16:31
of workflows
16:32
that lend themselves to a solution like ours and then who are the typical
16:36
buyers within
16:37
those organizations that are going to, you know, have a remit that lends itself
16:43
to like,
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hey, I need to go solve problems and I'm accountable for, for driving, you know
16:47
, better
16:48
efficiency in the organization and I need a tool like Rike to help me make that
16:53
happen.
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That's where our ABN programs are coming into play.
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We're trying to get in front of those people to educate them on who Rike is and
17:01
then what
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we do and some of the problems that we solve for some types of companies that
17:06
were helping
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solve problems at pretty large scale.
17:10
And so that's where we're doing a lot of our ABN stuff.
17:13
And I think there's, you know, we're constantly sort of tweaking experiments on
17:18
things that
17:18
think of work and don't work within that.
17:21
And I think there's an opportunity for us to use those ABN tactics both within
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existing
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customers as well as to identify new prospects who haven't bought, right?
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Chris started using us because like when you look at these enterprises, like we
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may be
17:36
highly penetrated within, you know, a department within a big company or even
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within a business
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unit within a company and yet there are a bunch of other departments that could
17:45
benefit from
17:46
our solution who don't even know that we're there and the people that we're
17:49
working with
17:50
don't know the other people that we need to work with.
17:52
So how do we sort of, A, use the reference selling, you know, and the advocates
17:57
that
17:57
we have at the company to help us navigate to other parts of the company, but
18:01
then also
18:02
how do we, you know, sort of amplify the stories that were helping and the
18:08
benefits that were
18:09
helping generate other parts of the business.
18:11
So that, you know, others within that company can see, oh, hey, like, I didn't
18:15
know Joe from
18:16
this business unit is working with right and they're doing some pretty cool
18:19
things.
18:20
I need to go check them out.
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Yeah.
18:23
Any other sort of examples there of stuff that you've, you know, how much of
18:26
that is sales
18:26
driven versus marketing driven?
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I think it's a conversation of both.
18:30
I mean, we spent a lot of the last, you know, handful of months working closely
18:36
hand in
18:36
hand between the marketing team and the sales leadership team on identifying
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where do we
18:42
think our top accounts that we want to go after and what's the white space in
18:47
those accounts
18:48
and what departments and sort of higher person knows the, do we want to get in
18:52
front of and
18:53
then partnering with the sales reps who own those accounts to kind of figure
18:56
out like,
18:57
hey, for this specific company, what are the tactics that we want to use to try
19:02
to, you
19:02
know, provide some air cover to educate those buyers so that when the sales rep
19:09
picks up
19:09
the phone or, you know, kind of reaches out that they're not reaching out
19:13
completely cold,
19:13
they know who we are and they know what some of the things that we're already
19:17
doing at
19:17
the company are.
19:19
What about something that's not working that you're most cuttable budget item?
19:25
You know, I don't know if it's a budget lineup because a lot of these types of
19:28
things are
19:29
free but like email as a channel, you know, it's been a dying channel for a
19:35
long time,
19:36
I think, particularly it's a standalone channel.
19:39
It's just not effective.
19:40
I mean, like everybody's in boxes or, you know, sort of exploded with, you know
19:45
, both
19:45
internal, external and people trying to sell them stuff and like, it's just not
19:49
an effective
19:50
way to get people's attention.
19:53
I think there's still, there's still a place for email both from a marketing
19:58
perspective
19:58
as well as from a sales engagement perspective where you're getting emails from
20:05
reps.
20:05
But I think like market automation tools killed the email channel, right, where
20:09
, you know,
20:10
companies were just able to sort of send massive amounts of email out at scale
20:14
and that's
20:15
resulted in, you know, all of our inboxes being filled with lots of email that
20:20
we'll
20:20
never look at or that goes straight to a junk folder.
20:24
Sales engagement tools like outreach and sales loss have done that to a degree
20:27
because they've
20:28
enabled sales teams to send out lots of emails at scale.
20:32
And I think when used correctly, sales cadences and sequences can be very
20:37
effective.
20:39
But the key is that the reps need to take the time to personalize the
20:44
interactions with
20:45
the customers or prospective customers.
20:48
Otherwise any, any one of us who gets, you know, sort of cold prospecting on a
20:53
fairly
20:54
frequent basis can spot like a generic email cadence, you know, cold outreach
20:59
in a second
21:00
and it just gets immediately deleted.
21:03
Whereas the reps who take the time to personalize the first 20% of it have a
21:08
much higher likelihood
21:10
of actually getting someone to engage.
21:12
I can think of companies trying to sell us a solution on the sales and
21:17
marketing tax
21:18
stock and they sent, you know, me, the VP of GoToMarket or CRO or CEO and our
21:26
head of revenue
21:27
operations, the same similar email.
21:30
And it was very tailored and you mentioned we were competing in a competitive
21:33
market
21:34
against these companies and, you know, what if we knew more data about where
21:38
those companies
21:39
existed, whatever.
21:40
It was super effective in terms of like a caught our attention because it was
21:45
something
21:45
that was top of mind for us, it namedrop some of the, you know, competitors
21:50
that are top
21:50
of mind and literally all of us like kind of said, did you get this email?
21:54
I got this email like we stuck to these guys and so super effective.
21:58
So email can work as a channel but typically you have to do it right.
22:03
Content and things that are going to add value versus ask for a meeting.
22:08
Yeah, I think that that's exactly it.
22:11
It's just like so much of email right now is just saying buy our shit.
22:15
Like nobody wants that anymore.
22:17
And we've covered it.
22:18
Yeah.
22:19
How do you think about experiments and like experimental budgets and try new
22:22
things?
22:23
Yeah, I mean, I think we try to save 10ish percent of our budget for like, you
22:30
know, completely
22:31
net new experimental things, whether it's like trying to do piece of technology
22:35
or trying
22:36
a different type of campaign or different tactic.
22:38
We were constantly like we have a pool of money on the performance marketing
22:44
side where
22:45
we're just constantly running a B test and stuff, but that's sort of like
22:49
within that
22:49
budget.
22:50
But then we try to save off like a certain portion of budget so that we can try
22:55
, you
22:55
know, additional things and, you know, we're doing a lot of experimentation
23:00
with ADM programs
23:01
now because we think that there's a big opportunity for us, particularly as we
23:05
focus more and
23:06
on, you know, kind of larger enterprise companies to leverage ADM tactics to
23:11
help complement
23:12
efforts of the sales team.
23:14
So what like a couple examples of that might be like, how do we, how do we
23:20
better leverage
23:22
champions within our customers and understanding, you know, you know, using
23:28
data to understand
23:30
power usage and, you know, interaction and engagement.
23:34
But as well as like how do we track those advocates as they move around and,
23:38
you know,
23:38
sort of reach out to them as they go to new companies or change jobs to
23:43
leverage them.
23:44
How do we locate technographic information and understand, you know, what are
23:49
the different
23:50
either competitive or, you know, synergistic solutions that companies are using
23:55
and leverage
23:55
that to inform, you know, who we're going to go after, what's a good fit
24:01
potentially
24:01
because they're using complementary technology or potentially who to avoid it
24:05
because they,
24:06
you know, they've got other solutions that doesn't make sense for us to knock
24:10
on a door
24:11
or spend less energy knocking on the door.
24:13
So we're looking at things like that.
24:15
Any particular ways that you'll measure success, that's perhaps different from,
24:19
you know,
24:21
for your org or maybe a KPI or a metric or something that you track that's
24:25
particularly
24:26
interesting.
24:27
I mean, we're super metric driven organization.
24:32
I mean, we're constantly looking at our final metrics on a weekly, if not daily
24:37
basis and
24:38
then like at the executive team level, we're doing monthly MBRs, which are a
24:42
combination
24:43
of marketing, you know, kind of final metrics as well as, you know, sales,
24:48
final metrics
24:49
and it's sort of combined presentation from marketing leadership and sales
24:53
leadership.
24:54
I mean, we're looking at, you know, fairly typical metrics, like number of
24:59
leads, quality
25:01
and score of leads.
25:02
So, you know, we have some, you know, sort of internally built, you know,
25:06
machine learning
25:07
models that score leads based on ICP fit and size of company and other
25:13
activities that
25:14
they've done.
25:15
And we've kind of, you know, really honed in on like, you know, leads that have
25:20
a score
25:21
of nine or above converted at much higher rate than, you know, beats that have
25:25
a score
25:26
of, you know, nine or less.
25:28
And so we, you know, we route and treat those leads special.
25:31
We report how on them at a more detailed level, we're looking at things like
25:36
speed
25:36
leads or how quickly is either a SDR a following up with a lead, whether it's,
25:41
you know, a
25:42
non trial lead, you know, somebody downloaded a piece of content or asked to
25:46
talk to sales
25:47
or somebody signed up for trial, how quickly can we engage with that trial user
25:52
to offer
25:53
our systems, you know, if they want to talk to sales rep to help guide their
25:56
trial experience
25:57
or, you know, can use additional content to help educate them through the trial
26:01
experience.
26:02
You know, we're focused on how quickly can we get in front of them because we
26:05
know that,
26:06
you know, that has an impact on likelihood to close and likely to have a
26:10
positive trial
26:12
experience and get the value faster.
26:14
We're looking at converter conversion rates at every step in the funnel.
26:19
So, you know, lead to opportunity, opportunity to close.
26:24
You know, we look at a lot of product metrics because we're, you know, it's a
26:27
real P.L.G.
26:28
trial driven.
26:29
So we're looking at users in the trial and are they, you know, taking key
26:35
actions and
26:36
you're discovering value in the product in the early, you know, hours and days
26:41
of their
26:41
trial experience and if not, how do we kind of provide them with content to
26:46
help them
26:46
kind of discover that value.
26:49
We look at velocity metrics, how fast our leads and deals moving through the
26:53
funnel.
26:54
You know, and then we're looking at cost per, you know, cost per V and cost per
26:58
, you know,
26:59
through different channels.
27:01
We break everything down based on, you know, geo segment, like SMB, BSB, you
27:07
know, commercial
27:09
bit market and enterprise.
27:11
And then we take a geo, geo lens to it to see, you know, how are we performing
27:16
across
27:16
all those different slices of how we look at the funnel.
27:19
Can I ask you a question that's, that's a bit, a bit leading, but also, you
27:24
know, a
27:24
bit different.
27:25
Do you think it's all worth it?
27:28
Like, do you think that breaking everything down into all of those details, you
27:32
know, is
27:33
actually helpful in the long run to provide all that information?
27:37
Like, what part of the marketing sort of mix here?
27:40
Because, you know, your team obviously is doing all of that stuff.
27:43
There's two other teams that are working, you know, and a little bit less of
27:46
the data
27:47
and more of sort of the art side of the business for like for better term.
27:50
Yeah.
27:51
I mean, I think we, we debate that.
27:53
I think that the company historically has been super, super data driven.
27:58
And, you know, when you're getting, you know, thousands or tens of thousands of
28:04
people to
28:05
sign up for trial and go through the trial, PLG experience, you know, every day
28:11
that you,
28:13
that something is broken in that process is a bunch of missed opportunity to
28:18
fix something
28:20
or adjust something to sort of improve your conversion rates.
28:23
At least that's the way we thought about it historically.
28:25
And so we don't want to wait two weeks a month towards the end of the quarter
28:30
until we see,
28:31
oh, holy shit, this metric is upside down.
28:34
Like what happened?
28:35
Oh, like some, you know, scoring algorithm broke or, you know, Google changed
28:41
something
28:42
in its algorithms and, you know, we didn't adjust until we noticed it.
28:46
And so I think, I definitely think that there's an opportunity to make sure
28:49
that you are
28:49
staying on top of those metrics.
28:52
Some things that we do are not as measurable or not as measurable in the
28:56
timelines, particularly
28:58
as you think about, you know, moving a market where deals aren't kind of
29:02
flowing through
29:03
the trial process in a matter of days and weeks, but they're potentially months
29:08
and
29:08
months.
29:09
And like all of the marketing touches that you're doing over the course of that
29:13
customer's,
29:14
you know, buying experience or customer journey are, you know, varied and
29:19
happen at different
29:20
times with different people at that account.
29:23
And so those things tend to be, you know, sort of more difficult to manage
29:26
because they're
29:27
just over a longer time horizon.
29:30
And so, you know, in some ways you have to look at, you know, different kinds
29:33
of leading
29:33
indicators, like, you know, how many accounts that are in our target segments
29:38
or, you know,
29:40
kind of one to one programs, how many are engaging, how many contacts that
29:43
those, you
29:44
know, customers are engaging, are we having an impact?
29:47
And you know, are those customers buying at a higher rate than those that aren
29:51
't?
29:51
So, you know, we're looking at different kinds of metrics there.
29:54
Yeah, I mean, there's a lot of metrics that we're all responsible for looking
29:58
at from
29:59
marketing perspective.
30:00
I think RIC is because of the volume and velocity of our business and the trial
30:07
, you know, PLG
30:08
nature of it, it's probably more metric driven than some of the other
30:11
organizations that
30:12
have been part of that were more, you know, solely focused on that prize where,
30:17
you know,
30:18
some of those daily, weekly monthly metrics aren't as measurable because your
30:23
deals, you
30:23
know, operate at a slower velocity.
30:27
Any other thoughts on playbook or plays or tactics or examples of stuff that's
30:31
working
30:32
well?
30:33
Yeah, I mean, I think, you know, lots of conversations happening around play
30:38
books now within the team,
30:40
like, what is a playbook?
30:42
And, you know, how do we enable the team on a playbook?
30:46
And like, is a playbook something that you run at a point in time or is a
30:49
playbook something
30:50
that you have at your arsenal that you pull out if and when appropriate?
30:55
So there's been a lot of like, you know, alignment around like as an example,
30:59
like we're going
31:00
after certain industry segments and we're building, you know, industry specific
31:06
solutions, messaging
31:07
and positioning of personas and, you know, sort of content that's oriented and
31:12
examples
31:12
in customer case studies and demos.
31:17
And so like, what does that playbook consist of?
31:19
Like, how do we pull all that all of that together?
31:22
How do we have the right and implement programs to enable the sales team on,
31:25
you know, what
31:26
that playbook consists of how to apply it to their book of business and, you
31:30
know, to
31:31
the accounts that they own because you won't run every playbook at every
31:35
account, right?
31:36
Like you have to use your own sort of knowledge of your, you know, the accounts
31:40
that are in
31:41
your territory to understand, you know, on a run this play at this company and
31:46
I'm a
31:46
different play at this company and I'll come back and run this other play at
31:50
the company
31:51
after I'm run the first play.
31:55
So lots of work, I mean, I think, and so there's a lot of enablement and sort
32:03
of conversations
32:04
are, you know, going on around now.
32:07
Like, how does, how do my team partner with the enablement part of our
32:11
organization to
32:12
make sure that we're getting ourselves teams, all the ammunition and training
32:17
and, you know,
32:18
sort of understanding to, you know, properly execute and activate some of the
32:25
players that
32:26
we're looking to run.
32:28
Are you all doing anything with AI, AI tools?
32:31
How are you thinking about AI?
32:33
Yeah, I mean, AI is, you know, it's come upon us over the last, you know, 12 or
32:39
18 months
32:40
I think everybody's still trying to figure it out.
32:44
It's definitely an area of focus, I think are, you know, it's interesting
32:49
because our internal
32:51
teams are trying to figure out how to use AI to do their work more effectively.
32:56
And then we're also, you know, I think most software vendors in general are
32:59
trying to
33:00
figure out like, how can we incorporate AI into our solutions to help our
33:04
customers,
33:05
you know, benefit and automate some of the things that can be automated so that
33:10
, you
33:10
know, people can focus on, you know, strategic creative work.
33:14
And so from a marketing team perspective, you know, our teams are using AI for
33:20
things
33:20
like, you know, we've probably 10xed our SEO content generation leveraging AI
33:29
to, to
33:30
at least draft content.
33:31
I mean, all the content that we're creating still has human eyes that touch it
33:36
and review
33:37
it and publish it.
33:39
But like you can definitely, rather than staring at a blank, you know, white
33:43
piece of paper,
33:44
I think you can use AI to sort of generate a great first draft and then modify.
33:49
So we're using it for things like that.
33:52
From a product perspective, you know, we're looking at how do we leverage AI to
33:58
take,
33:59
you know, in some cases, a massive amount of data that sits in our system
34:03
around work
34:04
and tasks and projects and things that are happening and how you use AI to help
34:09
people
34:10
summarize a big thread of communication and collaboration that's happened over
34:13
a period
34:14
of time so that they can like quickly go in and assess what's the latest and
34:18
greatest
34:18
that's happened with this, you know, sort of stream of, you know, back and
34:23
forth, or
34:23
how do I translate into things in the different languages or how do I use AI to
34:29
, you know,
34:30
create recommendations of like, hey, this workflow can be automated and here's
34:33
a way
34:33
to do that.
34:35
Using AI to, you know, use natural language to, you know, create project plans
34:43
rather than,
34:44
you know, creating a project plan from scratch saying, hey, I have a project to
34:48
do to launch
34:49
this new product in this type of market and, you know, here's what the product
34:52
consists
34:52
of and, you know, build me a project plan and it can leverage data that exists
34:57
publicly
34:58
for similar types of products, projects as well as within that customer's, you
35:02
know,
35:03
set up historical projects, like how do you kind of generate content that way
35:07
and then
35:08
how you use AI to predict risks on a project or how to use AI to identify, you
35:15
know, resources
35:17
to staff on a project like, hey, I need a resource who knows Java, who's
35:22
available from
35:23
this time period to this time period and speaks, you know, two languages and,
35:29
you know, using
35:29
using AI to go figure that out and staff those people on the right projects.
35:34
So it's interesting.
35:35
I mean, like both our internal workers are using AI that's available to us to
35:40
help us
35:41
internally and then we're also, you know, kind of looking at our AI strategy
35:44
from a product
35:45
and innovation perspective and figuring out how do we make our system more
35:50
powerful, more
35:50
intelligent to automate some things to help people, you know, focus on more
35:55
creative,
35:56
your human-centric work.
35:58
Let's get to our next segment, the desktop where we talk about healthy tension,
36:01
whether
36:01
that's with your board or sales team, your competitors or anyone else.
36:04
If you had a memorable desktop in your career, Chris, probably more than I can
36:08
remember
36:09
and working for a long time, but a recent memory was around our ideal customer
36:16
profile
36:16
and our, you know, ICP strategy.
36:21
There was a lot of focus in the 18 months of like, hey, we need to focus on
36:25
certain
36:25
ICPs that close at a higher rate and these are the kind of companies that are
36:30
good fit.
36:31
And there was a lot of back and forth and, you know, we were, we, from a
36:35
management perspective,
36:36
you know, marketing and sales leadership, the executive team were sort of
36:40
pushing like,
36:41
hey, focus on this ICP and then, you know, a couple months later focus on this
36:45
other
36:45
ICP and I think that sales team felt like whiplash because it was like, you
36:51
know, you
36:52
just had to go do this and how we focus on this.
36:54
Like what is, and so, yeah, there was a lot of resistance from the sales team.
36:59
And so when we dug into it, I think a lot of it was around sort of
37:03
misunderstanding and
37:05
miscommunication of what an ICP really was.
37:08
Like, I think most of us in the marketing world think of an ideal customer
37:12
profile as
37:14
the characteristics of a company that make them look good fit.
37:17
Like, are they right in the right industry?
37:19
Are they the right size of company?
37:22
Are they in the right locations that we can serve them effectively?
37:28
And within, right, there was more of a concentration around ICP equals the
37:34
Department of Buying
37:35
Center that typically best and most often buys our software.
37:39
And so there was this sort of this mismatch when some people were saying ICP,
37:44
other people
37:45
were thinking something entirely different.
37:47
And so there was just a lot of realignment around like, here's what an ICP is,
37:54
here's
37:54
why, I think there was also not a great understanding of why we were going
37:59
after ICPs.
38:00
Because the market is generally pretty horizontal.
38:03
Like any company in any industry, any department, any type of worker can
38:08
benefit from software
38:10
like ours.
38:11
But I think there are certain departments, buying centers, articles who tend to
38:19
have problems
38:19
that lend themselves to solutions like ours and have a higher likelihood of
38:23
buying our
38:24
software, higher likelihood of closing, et cetera.
38:27
And so I think we had to align people around the high behind the ICP strategy
38:32
before people
38:32
truly bought into it.
38:34
And then re-educate people on ICP isn't just a department, ICP is a type of
38:39
company.
38:40
Because once you land a back type of company, then you can go from department
38:43
to department
38:44
and go wider in those kinds of companies because they have not only one
38:48
department,
38:49
but often many, many departments that tend to interact together so they can
38:54
collaborate
38:55
together using our software and/or they have multiple departments who have work
39:00
in challenges
39:01
that lend themselves to a platform like ours.
39:05
Let's get to our final segment.
39:06
Quick hits, these are quick questions and quick answers like how qualified
39:09
helps companies
39:10
generate pipeline quickly, go qualified.com to learn more.
39:13
Quick hits, Chris, you ready?
39:15
Sure.
39:16
With the hidden talent or skill that's not on your resume?
39:19
It might be in my likes or hobbies or whatever, but I've been skiing since I
39:24
can almost walk.
39:25
My kids have definitely been skiing since they were like in diapers.
39:28
I've been skiing since I was a little kid.
39:30
And when I was a kid, I lived on East Coast.
39:34
Skiing was expensive.
39:36
We ski as much as we could, but it was probably five, six days a year.
39:40
That was a good year.
39:41
And I moved to California 20 years ago.
39:43
I really did eat closer to the west coast, much better skiing than the east
39:46
coast, which
39:47
is, I don't know if you've ever skied on the east coast, but it's ice back
39:50
there.
39:50
And the seasons last about six weeks.
39:54
So I moved out to California to be closer to good skiing.
39:57
And since I moved here 20 years ago, I've probably skied 500 times, maybe more.
40:02
I was a good skier when I was 18 years old.
40:06
And now many, many years later, I won't say how many years, but I'm probably
40:10
better skier
40:11
now as a multiple decades past that than I was when I was 18.
40:19
That's awesome.
40:20
Favorite mountain?
40:22
Whiskey or home mountain is what is now called Palisades Tahoe, which used to
40:29
be called Squaw
40:30
Valley.
40:31
I met my wife in the bar there and we got married.
40:35
No way.
40:36
In the valley there.
40:37
Yeah.
40:38
That's pretty epic.
40:39
That's amazing.
40:40
That is truly a story built on the slopes.
40:44
The whole family really on the mountain.
40:46
Yeah.
40:47
That's pretty amazing.
40:48
That's where the Olympics was, right?
40:50
Yeah.
40:51
It was like a 1960-ish.
40:52
It was sometime in the '60s, the Olympics were held in Squaw Valley.
40:57
Yeah.
40:58
Crazy.
40:59
What is your best advice for a first-time VP of product marketing or a demand
41:07
gen?
41:08
It may seem obvious, but never stop learning.
41:12
I think no matter how much you experience that you bring into a role when you
41:18
come in
41:19
as a new marketing leader, yes, you should rely on that experience and have
41:28
seen a movie
41:29
before.
41:30
But from my experience, every movie is a little bit different.
41:32
Every company and the stage that they're in is a little bit different and you
41:36
can't necessarily
41:37
come in and wrote, apply everything you did in a previous role out of new
41:41
companies.
41:41
You have to be flexible and understand and assess the situation that you're in.
41:46
And then I think the other big piece that I would have given 15 years ago, self
41:52
-advice
41:53
around is resist the temptation to jump into the new job and give it 120% of
42:01
your time
42:02
and neglect everything else.
42:04
Obviously, you don't want to neglect your family and your health and your
42:09
social life.
42:10
But I think one of the things that people forget to do or it's easy to cross
42:15
this off
42:15
the list because you're too busy is fostering and keeping the network of folks
42:21
that you
42:22
have in your network or even just finding new people to network with.
42:27
Because often when you jump into a new company, everyone's going to expect you
42:32
to have answers
42:33
to everything, you're not going to have answers.
42:37
It's impossible to have all the answers.
42:39
And I think having an external group of folks that you can bounce ideas off of
42:44
and commit
42:44
to rate with in some ways is super helpful in thinking through some of the
42:49
things that
42:50
you should be thinking about when you start a new role.
42:54
Because typically you're going to be the most experienced marketer at that
43:00
company.
43:01
I think the founders and CEO will have been at the company for a while and they
43:06
will
43:06
have thought through a lot of the marketing challenges.
43:08
But often you're going to have more marketing actual experience than they do.
43:12
And while they'll comment you at a lot of ideas, they won't necessarily know
43:17
that 100%
43:18
of the players to run.
43:21
And so you can bring your experience to bear, but don't forget to bring your
43:24
network of
43:25
other folks that you know or other folks that were in similar roles to bear
43:28
because they
43:29
can help you in ways that no one else internal to the company can.
43:36
Well Chris, it's been awesome having you on the show.
43:38
For listeners you can go to right.com to learn more about, well first of all if
43:42
your
43:42
marketing team is not using it, go use right.
43:44
I don't know what to tell you.
43:46
But any final thoughts, anything to plug?
43:50
No, I mean I think go check out right.
43:53
You can find it for a trial and play around with the product if you're not
43:56
already using
43:57
it.
43:58
And if you're already a bike user or a mail about us, look for some kind of
44:03
exciting things
44:04
that we'll have coming out over the next few months including industry
44:09
solutions for manufacturing
44:12
and professional services.
44:14
We're doing a lot of really interesting things around AI.
44:17
We've got some data centric products and analytics updates coming out.
44:22
So some really super exciting things will be coming out in the coming weeks and
44:27
months
44:28
ahead so check us out.
44:30
Awesome.
44:31
Thanks Chris, appreciate it and we'll talk soon.
44:34
Alright, thanks a lot Ian.
44:35
Thank you.