On this episode, Todd describes how to organize your startup for success, and how to make RevOps reflect your go-to-market strategy. He also dives into which decision-makers are most important in his process.
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[MUSIC PLAYING]
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Rise, rise, rise.
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Rise, rise.
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[MUSIC PLAYING]
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Rise.
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Welcome to Rise of RevOps.
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I'm Ian Faizan, CEO of Caspian Studios.
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And today, we are joined by a special guest, Todd.
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How are you?
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I'm doing great.
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How are you doing today?
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Excited to chat with you.
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Excited to chat about Aiden and all the cool stuff
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that you're doing.
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Chat about revenue.
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Chat about revops and everything in between.
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And as always, our show is presented by Qualified.
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Qualified is the absolute best.
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Go to Qualified.com to learn more.
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They're a tool that every single rev ops person
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needs in their toolkit.
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If you're selling with Salesforce,
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if you're using Salesforce, you need
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to use Qualified, go to Qualified.com.
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Let's get into it today.
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Todd, tell us a little bit about your first role in revenue.
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So I've been doing business development and sales
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my entire career.
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It's just always been where I found myself.
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But really, the first big opportunity in rev ops
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was when I joined Zendrive.
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Zendrive was a very cool new tech startup out of San Francisco.
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And I joined there in 2017 as the first BD hire.
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It was basically a bunch of really smart engineers
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and they needed to start building partnerships.
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And so they brought me in.
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And over the next three and a half years,
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built out the entire revenue function.
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So we built out a sales team and a BD team,
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built out a PR and marketing team,
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built a fantastic customer success,
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and also added a couple of solutions engineers.
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And really built it out as one coordinated operation.
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And it worked really well.
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And loved it and never looked back.
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And so, fly forward to today.
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Tell us what it means to be CRO of Aiden.
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So Aiden is a fantastic new startup, just founded in 2020.
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And playing a similar role to what I did at Zendrive.
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I, again, was the first BD hire.
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And we are just in the early stages
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of building out a sales and a BD team,
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starting to build out a customer success team,
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as well as PR and marketing.
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So we're in the very early stages of building those outs,
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defining what our customer journey looks like
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and what the procedures for each one of those different groups
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bring to the table.
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So we're really in that high growth, very fluid,
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some would say chaotic time,
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that's always fun to start up.
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- The perfect time to be talking about rev-ups.
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And it is one of those things that I think is so fascinating
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with startup world, which is when you get to build
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everything from scratch and you get to build things
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the way that you want to do it.
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Obviously resource constrained, of course,
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but it's a fun time to build.
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- It is.
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I mean, every startup has limited resources.
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So you're always trying to do everything you can
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with what you have.
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But how you structure your revenue ops
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really can be one of the keys to whether or not
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the startup makes it or not.
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So make sure that you're amplified
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and getting the most out of the resources you have available.
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- All right, let's get into our rev opening here.
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How do you define revenue operations?
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- So I define it as everything that touches
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the generation of revenue for the company.
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So I have a pretty broad umbrella.
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I definitely think it begins with PR and marketing.
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Certainly sales, sales management, the BED team
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and customer success.
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I think that's all probably pretty standard.
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But I also would include solutions engineering in there
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because it's really part of the sales process.
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If you're moving into a POC
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and your solutions engineer is integral to that,
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particularly if the actual process of integration
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is part of your value proposition.
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If you have a faster integration or an easier integration
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or no code integration,
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those are keys to your selling
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and the solution engineer is key to it.
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So I would include all of those different groups.
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And I would say you really need to maximize revenue.
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You need really good collaboration and cooperation
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across all of those different teams.
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- And how does Aiden go to market?
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Who are you selling to?
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- So Aiden really, we reach out in two places.
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So primarily we reach out to auto manufacturers,
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auto OEMs to provide our solution,
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provides them a way to monetize access to their vehicles,
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to connected vehicle data, not just data,
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but also to communicating and talking with the owners
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and drivers of the car.
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At the same time, we also reach out to service providers,
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anybody that wants to provide a service into a car,
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like an insurance company or a parking company
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or an EV charging network.
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And one of the keys to where we are right now
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in our growth is maintaining balance.
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So we have auto manufacturers that have cars that provide data
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and then we have enough service providers
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to provide value to those auto OEMs.
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So it's people often say, well, it's the chicken or the egg
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and we kind of respond, look, maybe it is the chicken or the egg,
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but at the end of the day, if you want either chicken or egg,
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you got to buy one of them.
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- That's right.
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And what does, you know, it's early days,
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so you don't have an entire massive RevOps team yet.
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So what does RevOps look like at Aiden?
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- So for us, one of the first positions we filled,
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we actually hired Angela Samos as our PR and marketing person
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'cause the first step was to build awareness.
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And she's done an amazing job of getting us to the right events
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and getting the right analysts and the right journalists
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to cover us and we've really, in a short period of time,
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generated some pretty fantastic awareness
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and we run some really nice awards.
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We won the editor's choice best of mobile world congress.
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So a couple of awards and really driven a lot of awareness.
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So that's been great.
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So that certainly is a fantastic tool for our BD folks
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as they're reaching out to auto manufacturers
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and to service providers to kind of share with them
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all the coverage we've been getting
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and the great analysts coverage
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that we've been getting as well.
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So that's been really helpful.
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So kind of step two is starting to build out
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our business development team.
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And we've done that in kind of a unique way.
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We have some direct employees
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and we've also used some contractors
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with some highly motivating compensation in place.
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So that's worked out pretty well.
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And right now we're in the process of building out
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our customer success to really support our initial clients.
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And so pretty excited about that.
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Yeah, how do you think about building,
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you know, with think like a big company?
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You know, you always hear that with regards
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to your go to market strategy
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and how RevOps sort of fits into that.
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Well, I mean, the RevOps should be a reflection
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of your strategy and your go to market plan.
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And for Aiden in particular,
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we have a, I would say highly focused outreach.
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We have a very small team,
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but a very well connected team, a very strong network.
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And so we leverage that network of the members of our team,
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as well as our advisors and our investors
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to try to compress the sales cycle
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by getting in front of decision makers as soon as possible.
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And I know everybody says,
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we want to compress, compress the sales cycle.
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I get that.
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But the way that we do that is by using existing connections
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to reach out directly.
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So ideally, our very first meeting is with a decision maker.
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So we can move really quickly,
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instead of having to go, you know,
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months of going through gatekeepers
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and using drip campaigns, that's just expensive.
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And startups don't necessarily have the money for that.
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So we very specifically selected people to join the team
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that were highly connected in the auto
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and connected car ecosystem
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so that we could use existing networks
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to go right to decision makers.
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Yeah, that's fascinating.
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It is that sort of like any types of type of sort of bottom up
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approach when your startup is like,
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if you're not talking to a decision maker,
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not only is it not helpful from a sales perspective,
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but it's also not helpful for like a product feedback perspective.
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Like when you're a startup,
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you need to know why they're saying no.
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And if they're saying no,
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and it's not an actual no,
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then you're not getting any information from that exchange either.
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Yeah, that's absolutely true.
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And for Aiden Auto,
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our product is a services platform.
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So we can deliver any service.
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We're really, we're service agnostic as well as auto OEM agnostic.
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We can work with any auto OEM,
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we can work with any service provider,
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but really valuable feedback is what are the use cases
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and services that the OEMs really want?
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What are their top priorities right now?
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And so just as you just mentioned,
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that information really needs to come from well-informed decision makers
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within the auto OEMs.
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So the more we can get in front of those people
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and get their feedback,
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whether it's a yes or no,
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or hey, we need to see you build out this first,
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that's all invaluable feedback.
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- Well, let's get to our first segment, RevOps,
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Sicles, where we talk about the tough parts of RevOps.
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What's the hardest RevOps or just revenue problem
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you faced in the last six months?
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- So, so the biggest challenge for us at Aiden Auto is
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we are really a brand new technology.
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We're not a data aggregator,
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we don't use mobile apps,
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we don't use hardware,
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we are a software only solution
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that connects directly to a connected car
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and streams real time data directly off the car
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to our service providers
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and provides two way communication.
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So these service providers,
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whether it's an insurance company or a parking company
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or an EV charging network,
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they can communicate directly to the car.
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We actually allow them to deliver web pages directly into the car
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so they can deliver their web pages,
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deliver their URL directly into the vehicle user interface
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and it can be interactive web pages
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so they can communicate directly with the drivers.
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So this is really a new way
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for people to deliver services into the car.
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And so our biggest challenge is bringing people up to speed
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on what Aiden is, how it works
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and the incredible opportunity for OEMs
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to monetize access to their vehicles
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and the incredible opportunity for service providers
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to deliver their services directly to the drivers
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and the vehicles.
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And again, it's new.
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So people will always compare us to data aggregators
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or to mobile apps or hardware providers
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and we're really different.
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And so a lot of our initial pitches
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is really educating people on the technology
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and how it works and what it unlocks.
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>> Yeah, when you're thinking about sort of such a,
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such a new product offering,
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is there any things either,
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obviously this company is still very early days
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but something in your previous role
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where we're getting that like,
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just brand awareness of just being even on the map,
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how that can help or any best practices
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that are where that can help.
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>> I think that's a challenge that a lot of startups face.
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The other great advantage we have at Aiden is
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this isn't just slides, it's not slide where,
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we're actually live.
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We are live with Volvo Group vehicles,
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we're live with Lincoln Co vehicles.
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So we can actually give live demos and show that,
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yes, we are in production, this is live,
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this isn't an idea, this isn't just a concept,
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it's live and it's out there.
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And if you go live on our platform today,
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we can connect you to vehicles tomorrow.
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So that's a huge advantage.
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But yeah, awareness is that first step.
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And then I say the second step is building a sales
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and business development team that is really tenacious
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as well as really well connected.
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And I think on the tenacity piece,
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you need BD people and sales people
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that push that boundary of they wanna be tenacious
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without becoming a pain in the ass.
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And it's easy to cross over
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and I think we all have had experiences with those sides,
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but if you can push that envelope again,
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it helps you to kind of maximize your output
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of what the effort you put in.
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>> Yeah, especially when you're selling something new,
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like some people just aren't ready to take the plunge
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on something new, even if they,
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you feel like it's in their best interests, you know?
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And that can be kind of challenging.
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>> Well, that's certainly true in our space, right?
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We're selling to auto manufacturers
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and really the biggest service providers
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out of the door are insurance companies,
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both of which are very big, typically,
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big legacy companies that are very risk-averse
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and they don't change direction quickly.
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So yeah, that's always a challenge
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in building their confidence, building their awareness,
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making them aware of all the opportunities
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and the problems that we can help them solve.
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So that's a challenge.
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>> You mentioned investing in customer success.
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Obviously, you've already invested in sales
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and in marketing, how do you sort of balance
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the resources for those three groups?
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Or do you even see them as three distinct groups?
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Or do you just see them all as part of revenue?
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>> I actually like to build a team.
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So you've got one BD or sales rep
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with a customer success rep that worked together
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on a daily basis, so they get to know each other
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and know each other's flow.
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Yeah, the solutions engineer in there to help out
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with the integration and the technical work.
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So you've got all of those individuals working together.
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So it's not just the teams working together,
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but I actually like to team up the individual people.
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So you're working with the same folks every day,
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and I think that really builds a fluidity
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and helps you have a seamless experience
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for your end user.
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>> Yeah, and then as you layer on marketing on top of that,
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how do you think about driving demand
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and that marketing function?
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>> So again, I think you need to have really tight collaboration
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between your sales and BD team
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and their initial outreach and your PR and marketing.
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So that all is telling a consistent message
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and communicating a consistent value proposition.
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And then that comes back to the point you were making earlier
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about quality feedback from your customers,
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from your end users.
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We can get that feedback either from the BD and sales folks
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or from the customer success folks,
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and we can then build that into our messaging
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and reflect that in our marketing
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so that we're constantly iterating
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and constantly improving the message, improving the value,
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and making sure that all of those different pieces
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are communicating that in sync.
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I think that's where you get the most efficiency.
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>> Any rev-oops moments over the past year or so,
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or any mistakes, if you had a magic wand
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and had to do over anything that you would do over?
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>> You know, it's always hard to keep all of those pieces
15:24
in balance so that you are delivering the people that you need
15:29
and the roles that you need
15:31
based on the client base that you have.
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So it's easy to start with your sales and your BD
15:38
and ramp up sales as fast as you can,
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but if you don't have the customer success people
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in place to support those clients,
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you risk having an early client failure,
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which can be disastrous for a startup.
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So I think even though startups tend to want to put
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ton of resources into sales and BD right up front
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and ramp up client base and ramp up revenue,
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you have to balance that.
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You have to have the customer success folks in place
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to make sure you're supporting those clients
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so that you don't have that catastrophic early on client failure.
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>> Let's get to our next segment, the tool shed.
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We're talking tool spreadsheets, metrics,
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like everyone's favorite tool, qualified.
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It'll be to be tool shed is complete without qualified.
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Go to qualified.com right now and check them out.
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Todd, what's in your tool shed?
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How have you set up the technology
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in the early days for ADEN?
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>> So at ADEN we use Google.
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So we use Google Mail and Google Docs.
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And so right now we are using a CRM tool called monday.com.
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This syncs with all of our Google tools
16:45
and makes it very simple and easy for our folks
16:49
to track their interactions with clients.
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Before monday.com we were on Notion,
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which is great 'cause it's super cheap,
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but we did find as regrew we needed more functionality,
16:58
but we didn't think we were big enough
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to really need all of the resources of Salesforce.
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And so Monday is a fraction of the cost of Salesforce.
17:08
So again, it's a great place for us to start as a startup,
17:12
but also one of the things that we made sure was true
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as we move forward with Monday
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was that when we are ready, when we feel we're big enough
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and we need all the functionality of Salesforce,
17:23
we can very easily transition and move all of our data
17:26
from Monday over to Salesforce.
17:29
So that was kind of the ability to move forward
17:31
to Salesforce at some point was a criteria
17:34
in us selecting Monday.
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But it's worked really well.
17:36
And then on top of that we need to train our sales
17:40
and our BD and our CS to really live in the CRM
17:43
and make sure they're capturing everything there.
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Honestly, I think that's often one of the biggest challenges.
17:49
Even if you're an organization, you've gone out
17:51
and you've bought Salesforce and you've hired some consultants
17:54
and you've customized the whole thing,
17:55
it's all fantastic.
17:57
If your sales and CS folks aren't using it,
18:01
it's a little value.
18:02
So along with your investment in the technology,
18:05
you've got to invest in training your teams
18:07
and making sure they're really using that CRM team
18:09
and capturing everything in there.
18:11
What metrics matter to you?
18:14
Well, we are an early stage startup.
18:20
So right now we really care about quality engagement
18:25
with potential clients.
18:28
And for us, that means a balance of auto manufacturers
18:31
and service providers.
18:33
So again, we don't want outreach to a thousand different
18:36
different prospects. We want outreach to a hundred high quality
18:40
prospects that can move quickly and can convert to actual
18:44
production and revenue in this calendar year.
18:47
So we are pretty focused on a limited number of high quality
18:53
prospects.
18:54
Yes, is there any, is there anything that you measure
18:59
within that word like to score those type of engagements
19:03
or score those type of like ICP sort of accounts?
19:08
Well, we always look at yield from outreach.
19:11
So if we do a LinkedIn outreach or email outreach,
19:14
whatever that is, we're looking for where we can get the
19:17
highest yield.
19:19
And that comes back to kind of one of our original strategies,
19:22
which was to hire highly connected people that have really
19:26
strong networks in our specific ecosystem,
19:29
which is automotive and even within automotive,
19:32
it's connected cars and connected car data and services
19:35
into those cars.
19:36
So it's a pretty defined niche.
19:39
And so by finding people that are already well established
19:42
in that niche that have known names,
19:44
it really increases your yield.
19:46
So instead of getting a cold LinkedIn outreach from someone
19:51
you're not even connected to, you're getting an outreach to
19:54
someone you've been connected to for years and have had previous
19:57
conversations, which and maybe even have done business with
20:00
in the past.
20:01
And so instead of going from one to 3% yield,
20:06
we hope to get 30 to 40% yield out of every campaign.
20:10
Yeah, what types of, you mentioned a couple of the types
20:13
of campaigns that you're doing.
20:15
Outbound to Flington and outbound with email and things like
20:20
that.
20:21
Any other ways that you think about your go-to-market
20:24
strategy and how you're doing stuff and tracking it?
20:29
We do use LinkedIn a ton.
20:31
We are heavy LinkedIn users.
20:32
That's kind of a critical tool for us.
20:36
But again, just kind of related to our highly targeted
20:39
strategy, we use our advisors on our investors a lot.
20:43
So we have a pretty defined target list of auto manufacturers
20:47
and parking companies and insurance companies,
20:50
EV charging networks, predictive maintenance companies,
20:53
fleet management companies.
20:54
So we have defined list within each one of those verticals.
20:58
And when we bring in a new advisor or we bring in a new
21:00
investor or talking to one of those advisors or investors,
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we share our target list.
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And we compare, who do you know these different companies?
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What introductions can you make?
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And really, a warm introduction from an investor
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can be your most powerful tool.
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Because they can put you in touch not only with the decision
21:20
maker, but they often can put you in front of executive or sea
21:25
level people that can, number one,
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give you fantastic feedback on whether they believe your
21:29
solution has legs or not.
21:31
They can point out holes that maybe you haven't seen.
21:35
And ideally, they love your solution and can fast track
21:39
moving from conversation into actual production and ideally
21:44
revenue.
21:45
So we really leverage our advisors and our investors
21:48
and their networks.
21:49
Any blind spots that you wish you could measure better?
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That's a great question, but kind of by definition,
21:59
I wouldn't know what they were, would they?
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But I'm sure we have blind spots.
22:04
It's always great to get someone that has a completely
22:08
fresh perspective to look at your product,
22:11
look at your value proposition, and look at how you are
22:15
bringing that to market.
22:17
I love it when someone that I would not think of as part of
22:21
the automotive ecosystem reaches out and sees a clear
22:26
connection and explains, look, we can service your clients
22:30
as well, and this is how we do it, and this is a use case
22:33
you haven't thought of.
22:34
I love that.
22:35
So I always enjoy getting that outside perspective that
22:38
points out something you haven't thought of yet.
22:41
Any tool that you're excited about investing in sometime in
22:45
the near future?
22:47
Well, actually, I've been talking recently with the
22:53
Angel Squad from Hustle Fund, and I think we're going to use
22:57
them to help us, but they have a lot of energy and a really
23:02
connected network, and they seem to be able to move at a
23:05
higher pace than your typical VCs.
23:09
Certainly since the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and the
23:12
subsequent additional couple of collapses, the VC world has
23:16
gotten really competitive, really tight.
23:19
It's a little bit harder to get VC money than it was before
23:23
those collapses.
23:24
And so, you know, like the Hustle Fund and startup boost are a
23:32
couple of the companies that you can go to now that still
23:35
seem to have a lot of momentum, have a lot of energy, and get
23:38
things to happen quickly.
23:40
So I would definitely do a shout out to Hustle Fund and
23:42
startup boost, a couple of great organizations.
23:45
So yeah, we're excited to be working with them and also both
23:49
companies that I would invest with personally.
23:53
Any other thoughts on tool shed or spreadsheets or rat
23:57
tricks or anything like that?
23:59
Spreadsheets get a bad rap as, you know, old technology, but I
24:03
think the reality is all of us, if we're being honest, we'll
24:06
admit we use spreadsheets all the time, and they definitely
24:10
have value and they have function.
24:12
And I mean, the problem obviously is they don't scale.
24:15
Although Google Docs helps a lot.
24:17
If you can share a Google Doc that extends the use of spreadsheets.
24:21
But ultimately, yeah, you need to convert over to a larger
24:25
system that's more scalable because the next step for every
24:28
startup, once you've got your base clients and you've reached
24:31
production and you've got revenue coming in, now you need to
24:34
scale and ultimately spreadsheets and the processes that go
24:37
along with spreadsheets are not scalable.
24:40
So that's when you need to look to your larger tools, your
24:43
enterprise tools.
24:44
And I think that's why ultimately everybody ends up with
24:47
Salesforce and high usage of LinkedIn because those two have
24:51
proven to scale.
24:53
And I think you kind of have the network effect with both of
24:57
those.
24:58
All right.
24:59
Any other thoughts on like go to market strategy or any other
25:02
go to market type things that you've seen best practices?
25:07
Well, whenever you talk about strategy, you need to have an
25:12
alignment.
25:13
So strategy and company culture typically come from your
25:16
CEO.
25:17
The strategy and the culture is a reflection of theirs.
25:22
And then that needs to be tied in with your value proposition
25:25
and your product so that you go to market and your outreach all
25:29
aligned with that same strategy.
25:32
And so for us, we have a very tight niche.
25:35
We have a very tight focus, you know, a laser focused outreach.
25:40
But that's just for us.
25:42
If you have different companies that are, you know, have broad
25:46
application across B2C, you're going to need a completely
25:49
different outreach and you may need a different strategy and
25:52
you may need a different culture within your company.
25:55
So I think the key is to align your CEO's vision and your
26:01
CEO's strategy and culture with your revenue ops and you're
26:04
going to market plan and how all of that is communicated out to
26:07
the market.
26:08
That all needs to be in sync and all needs to be collaborated
26:12
and all the different teams cooperating together to present
26:17
a single unified vision and value proposition.
26:20
All right, Todd, let's get to our final segment.
26:23
Quick hits.
26:24
These are quick questions and quick answers.
26:26
First question.
26:27
If you could make any animal any size, what animal would it be
26:32
and what size would it be?
26:34
Well, maybe, maybe you could do something with bees.
26:42
So bees are pretty amazing animals.
26:45
They are incredible at collaborating and cooperating.
26:50
And, you know, these little teeny creatures with very little
26:53
individual strength can accomplish so much and get so much done
26:57
through really tight cooperation and really good communication.
27:02
And I think kind of a good metaphor or aspiration for any team
27:08
that has a complex problem.
27:10
If you can cooperate and communicate as well as bees,
27:14
you probably have a good chance of being successful.
27:17
In the world needs more honey.
27:19
So, you know, more honey is always good.
27:22
Yeah.
27:23
Yeah.
27:24
And more pollinators.
27:27
Do you have a rev-ops misconception or perhaps a prediction for us?
27:36
I say the biggest rev-ops misconception comes to bee-dee folks.
27:41
Everybody, I think, thinks they're the fun guys or the fun gals that are
27:45
at the party and buying drinks.
27:48
And while the engineers are back at the office working their butts off,
27:51
the bee-dee team is out schmoozing clients.
27:54
And while schmoozing clients is absolutely a part of the job,
27:58
you know, that's the icing on the cake.
28:00
All of the extremely detailed planning and research that goes into
28:07
who exactly you're going to schmooze and what exactly you're going to tell
28:10
them when you have them at that nice dinner.
28:12
You know, all of that work kind of gets overlooked.
28:15
But I would suggest that bee-dee and sales and CS and all of the research
28:19
and preparation that goes into that outreach often gets overlooked
28:24
because all they see is the fancy dinner.
28:26
So I say that's a big misconception.
28:27
There's a lot of work that goes in before you get to ideally sit down
28:31
with your prospect at a nice dinner.
28:33
If you, or do you have a favorite book or podcast or TV show or something
28:42
like that that you're checking out and you recommend?
28:45
You know what?
28:46
The bold favorite that just came up in conversation recently is the
28:50
Challenger sale.
28:51
It's a great book and most people in sales or business development
28:56
have read it at some point.
28:57
It's Dixon and Adam Sender, the authors.
29:00
And it's just a classic approach that says, you know what?
29:06
Your client isn't always right.
29:08
And sometimes you need to challenge your client and help them take a new
29:12
perspective to grow their business.
29:15
And you can use that to help move from transactional into
29:18
relationship-based conversations.
29:22
But it is a little bit different perspective and one that's, I think,
29:27
worth finding on your shelf and rereading.
29:30
I love it.
29:32
That's a great one.
29:33
It's such a good book.
29:34
I really do.
29:35
I feel like they need to challenge your sale like 3.0 that's mixed
29:40
with our today's go-to market, which is a little bit crazier.
29:43
That's probably a good idea.
29:44
If they updated that with some new use cases, that would probably
29:47
be great.
29:48
I bet that would sell.
29:49
Well, especially with like everyone on earth being available on
29:54
LinkedIn and like how to do things the right way and how to scale
29:58
efforts and what social selling is now and all that sort of stuff.
30:03
Like there's an element to that Challenger sale that I think is
30:08
pretty fascinating.
30:09
But yeah, great, great, great shout.
30:11
One of my faves.
30:12
Excellent.
30:13
Any final piece of advice here that you would have for someone who's
30:16
newly leading a go-to market team?
30:19
Focus.
30:22
Every startup fights the challenge.
30:24
You get all sorts of people bringing new ideas and things that you
30:28
can do.
30:29
And you can only do so many things.
30:31
And every startup has limited resources.
30:33
So maintain your focus.
30:35
Stay focused on things that you can do right now.
30:39
Don't let yourself get pulled in too many directions at once.
30:43
Awesome.
30:44
Todd, thanks so much for joining.
30:46
Great to have you on the show.
30:48
For our listeners, obviously, if you're in the connected car
30:52
space for your OEM or service partner, check out adenauto.com.
30:55
Any final thoughts?
30:56
Anything to plug?
30:57
Thank you so much for having me on.
30:58
It was a great conversation.
31:00
Awesome.
31:01
Thanks, Todd.
31:02
Thanks, Todd.
31:04
♪♪
31:13
(upbeat music)