Learn from Stephen Gold, Chief Sales and Marketing Officer (Previous) at SparkCognition about finding success within a long sales cycle.
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(upbeat music)
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- Welcome to Pipeline Visionaries.
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I'm Ian Faison, CEO of Casping Studios,
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and I am joined by a special guest.
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Steven, how are you?
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- I'm doing fantastic, Ian Franks.
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- Excited to have you on the show.
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We're gonna chat marketing.
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We're gonna chat spark cognition,
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everything in between, your background,
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Right now, to learn about the number one
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First question, Steven, who is your first shop marketing?
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- Yeah, you know, it's a bit of a loaded question
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because you would think that the title
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would somehow resemble marketing, but I would tell you,
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coming out of grad school,
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I started a business in retail.
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And I think every marketer at some point
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should spend a stint in retail,
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'cause it's an amazing vertical, amazing environment.
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You're working with the public,
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and pretty much everything you're doing
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is really thinking about your customer,
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the value you provide, how to create a compelling story,
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how to engage, how to meet them where they are.
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And so why my title itself wasn't marketing,
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pretty much everything I did every day
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surrounded, you know, traditional marketing aspects.
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- And flash forward to today,
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it tells us what it means to be not just see 'em though,
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but chief sales marketing officer at Spark Ignition.
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- Yeah, it's, you know, it's so funny because,
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you know, sales and marketing are so conflicted.
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You know, one has a, you know,
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a nice orientation on the here and now,
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and get the deal done.
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And the other is gotta be looking forward
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to the next prospect, to the next customer,
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you know, to the position, to the narrative, to the message.
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And it's interesting in that straddling the two,
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you find that balance, you find that purpose.
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There's an advantage because you see the results
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of the investment and the effort on the marketing side,
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as it kind of flows, you know, downstream into sales.
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You see from a sales point of view,
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the type of support that marketing can provide
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and the benefit it has.
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I love the straddled position between the two.
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- You said it exactly how I always think about it,
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which is sales is responsible for closing the deal.
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Like, that is the job.
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And marketing is responsible for all of the other stuff
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to get the deal to that standpoint.
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In addition to hopefully moving the deal,
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you know, along with the help of the sales rep.
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And I think it's so funny because so many people
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have built these sales organizations
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that have all these different moving parts
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that have nothing to do with closing deals.
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And I find that kind of funny.
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- It is.
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And I think it depends, at least in part on industry,
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it depends on part on the organizational maturity.
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Younger organization, scrappy organizations,
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you're gonna find sellers doing a lot of different roles
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from mature organizations, big companies.
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They're very focused on, you know,
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probably that one activity in the process.
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And so I've spent time on both sides.
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I've spent time in the valley and startups.
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And you have spent time in New York with IBM
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and two different ways of looking at what you just talked about.
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You know, what's the job?
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Neither one, by the way, right, both of them correct, right?
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It just depends where that organization is in their journey.
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- I definitely agree with that.
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I also, I would push back a little bit
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on sort of like both ways correct.
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I think that there are certain responsibilities
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and like specifically I'm thinking about like outbound,
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for example, I think outbound is like
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specifically a marketing function.
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I don't think it's a sales function,
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but you have sellers doing outbound, which is fine.
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But you can put it wherever you want.
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You can have the people in sales or whatever.
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But like that is marketing.
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Like those people are creating demand for the product, right?
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Like you can have sellers doing it,
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but that is a marketing, that is what marketing is.
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- There's no question.
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And I mean, you certainly pull people in more directions
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when you're an evolving organization,
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a smaller startup, a growth business.
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And I think the difference I would draw is one of process
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in that that smaller company,
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you don't have as much process.
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You don't need as much process.
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You have 70, 80, 90, 100, 200, 300 people.
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Coording that activity is very different
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than in a large enterprise where you have two, three,
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four hundred thousand people.
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And so you're right though.
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I mean, the activity you do may have a different label.
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Marketing is still marketing and sales is still sales.
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And if you take a marketer and you stick them in an event
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and they're talking to a customer about the offering
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and asking about their need, well, that's sales.
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- Yeah, good point.
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Okay, let's get to our first segment, the Trust Tree.
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This is where we go and feel honest and trusted.
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You can share this deepest, darkest pipeline secrets.
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Tell us a little bit about what does Spark cognition do
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and who are your customers?
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- Yeah, we design, develop and deliver AI applications
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for the industrial sector.
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So as a consumer, we're very much aware
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that AI is all around us.
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We see it in forms of autonomous driving
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and chatbops and search engines and virtual assistance.
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It's not quite as obvious to most people
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how AI is playing a pivotal role in industry.
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And so what we do is we help organizations
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using the data that they have in all forms,
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recognize when an asset is gonna fail.
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Help them understand the best course of action to take
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to address a problem.
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Help ensure that workers are kept safe
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and come back the next day.
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Something as simple as helping them retain knowledge
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is people age out and retire from the business.
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These are all really good problems to solve with AI
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and that's exactly what Spark cognition does.
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- I'll share some stats.
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147,000 cameras under contract with Spark cognition
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visual AI advisor.
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9.6 gigawatts renewable energy capacity enabled
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by Spark cognition industrial AI suite.
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I mean, some real world impact AI
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solving for your customers.
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- Yeah, it's a great point that these are not science experiments.
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AI has been around for a long time.
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It's been around almost 70 years now.
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And I think over the course of the last couple of years
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as organizations have wrestled to the ground,
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the big data problem has, as they've gone through various
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proof of concepts and pilots,
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you know, we're now moving into that next phase
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where people are actually incorporating this technology
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into their everyday business, their everyday practice,
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their everyday process.
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And it's important.
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I mean, we don't have enough people
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to maintain the level of productivity we need.
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And so technology is a great place to turn to augment it.
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- Who's in that buying committee?
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Obviously, these industries are so different
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with energy manufacturing, government, education,
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retail, transportation.
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I mean, yeah, I imagine completely different buyers
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of what do these committees look like?
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- Yeah, I mean, the way probably to look across
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that are these industries, you know,
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we're often engaged certainly with senior leadership,
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with the C-suite, not unusual to find
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that this is a CEO-led initiative.
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There's a tremendous amount of emphasis
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from the board and the community on adoption
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of these types of technologies.
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You're gonna see the, you know, certainly the COO,
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the CIO, the CTO, you know, often evolve.
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But really where I think the rubber meets the road
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is line of business.
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It's solving a problem.
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It's not about IT adding another asset,
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another software solution.
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It's really about the people and charge of the business.
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In a manufacturing environment,
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it's a plant manager or vice president of operations,
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you know, in a school.
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It's gonna be a superintendant or the board itself.
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When you look in oil and gas, again,
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depending whether it's upstream, midstream or downstream,
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the titles may be different,
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but each of the individuals we work with
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are running the business,
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they're trying to solve a problem,
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they're trying to move faster, be more productive.
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And so much of what we do is actually centered around
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the domain itself and not the technology.
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We don't lead with, you know,
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talking about machine learning and natural language.
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We lead with, you know,
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how do we help you get more out of an asset,
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like a pump or a motor or a centrifugal asset?
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- Yeah, it's crazy.
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I mean, not to go super deep into this,
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but the areas of waste that we can start to look at
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with AI, you know.
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What I was talking about this day or time,
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I just put in new stuff in our garden.
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And I was running the lines to automate, right?
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So that we had on after on the,
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do the sprinklers or whatever.
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You know, and you just think of like,
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these are, you know, pretty dumb sensors.
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There's no sensors in the ones that I put in right now, right?
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But, you know, you just think of, you know,
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this times, obviously the scale of
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types of customers that you're looking at.
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I mean, AI is able to, you know, detect
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obviously massive things.
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And it puts you as a marketer,
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I think in a really interesting position
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where like you can educate your customers on potentially,
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I mean, millions, hundreds of millions of dollars
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of waste over time horizons that are, you know, pretty vast.
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And it's just a great place to be anytime your marketer
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that's educating your customers about themselves.
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- I love that.
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And, you know, I was talking to just a friend
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other day and he says, well, what you do
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doesn't really have an effect on me.
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I said it does.
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I think I'm a great example.
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We were working at working with a big bottler
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and part of what we were looking at was energy,
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water and electricity consumption.
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And we were able to identify and reduce
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the water and energy loss, you know,
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by upwards of 20%.
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What does that really mean?
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Well, it means a couple of things.
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One, it means that it's less expensive
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to run the process, which translates to lower cost
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for the manufacturer, which translates
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to more competitive prices of the shelf.
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But it also really impacts sustainability.
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But if you can help one company, one plant,
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save that much in the energy side,
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it's an incredible benefit to the broader society.
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So there's a lot of goodness that comes from, you know,
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what technology can bring, what AI brings.
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- Well, that's some of the hard parts
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that I think people are having with AI, right?
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Is like telling those stories or they have been,
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obviously you've been in doing this,
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you know, for a while, Sparklar Ignition
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have been doing it for 10 years.
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So I think you have your stories down pretty well.
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But I think for a lot of the people
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like trying to figure out, you know,
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what are these use cases that you can really
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sink your teeth into and how,
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and it's super important, right?
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It's gonna change everything.
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I was just reading a use case today where it's like,
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you know, scientists have been using AI, you know,
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this style is like 1.7 million researchers
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or you know, using AI to look at all sorts of different stuff.
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But anyways, there's so many different use cases,
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but as a marketer, it's about telling the story to the,
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you know, to the person who needs to hear that exact story.
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- Well, and you know, you touched on something
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really important in, you know,
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in the line of work we're in, education is so critical.
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You know, if you think about it,
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most products you don't need to explain
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to the consumer professional what it is or what it does.
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- Right.
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- You can hold up an iPhone and I understand the purpose
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of its existence.
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But when you talk about AI,
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people tend to batter it about as if it's one thing,
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but it's so many things, it mimics, you know, human abilities.
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So from a marketing point of view,
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the ability to tell a story, to help educate,
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help engage, to help make this relatable.
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It's a complex science, so you have to simplify it
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and make it relatable to your audience.
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- Okay, so I know this is a big question,
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but how do you describe your marketing strategy?
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- When I think strategically,
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it's about how do we engage our audience?
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How do we educate the audience to the comments a moment ago?
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How do we motivate them?
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And then ultimately, you know,
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how do we bring that to close?
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And, you know, the engagement part I think is
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probably more emblematic of what marketers do.
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You meet the prospect with the prospects are,
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you do it through outreach, you do it through influence,
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you know, you do it through a variety of mechanisms.
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The education is a bit different
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than maybe what some marketers have to face.
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Education is, you know, more fundamental in complex,
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well, you know, not well understood products.
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So, you know, there's a content piece to that
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that weighs heavily, that we have to narrate.
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There's ways in which people experience information
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through rich media, videos, podcasts, you know,
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short form content and social media.
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We think a lot about that education.
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We think a lot about motivation.
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It's interesting, but, you know, I always joke that,
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you know, people don't spend seven figures
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when they're completely confused or intimidated.
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And so, it's really important that we align
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and understand the motivation of the business,
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of the individual, the decision maker,
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and that we address those concerns head on.
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And so, being able to articulate a value,
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being able to provide a more interactive experience
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is really important.
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And then we try to, as a marketer, you know,
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take them from top of funnel all the way bottom of funnel.
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So, we don't get the luxury of just dumping them
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at the top and run and say, now it's a sales problem.
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You know, we have a long sales cycle.
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It's not a news or a goat, you know, six, nine, 12 months.
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So, we've got to stay with that prospect that whole time
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and we have to find a meaningful ways
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to continue to dialogue and interact.
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So, the strategy really, you know,
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kind of centers around that notion
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of engage and educate, motivate and close.
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- And is there anything different about your marketing team?
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Obviously, you run marketing and sales
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for the biz.
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So, your total org is a little different.
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But anything specifically without your marketing sales team,
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that might be a little different than the average.
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- I think the way we work together,
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it's probably different.
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You know, we are not siloed operations.
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You know, we are very much aligned in effort and activity.
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I think that's an important aspect.
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So, we push hard on that kind of cross-functional collaboration.
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Maybe more so than in other industries largely,
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'cause again, you know, we're gonna be with that prospect
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for a long time and through multiple interactions.
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And so, the team is very unified.
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- Love it.
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- All right, let's get to the playbook
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where you open up that playbook and talk about the tactics
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that help you win.
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What are your three channels or tactics
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that are your uncutable budget items?
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- What's interesting about that is it's not what I would have
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predicted coming into the business.
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I think it's again, probably a representation
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of the audience and where they are in their journeys.
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So, we find situations where we can get an extended period
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of time in front of a prospect to be valuable.
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So, things like webinars turn to be really important.
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And historically, you're like,
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yeah, when I go to a webinar to learn more about a stapler,
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of course not.
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I understand what it does.
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I'm not gonna invest that kind of time.
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But our audience, because of what's at stake,
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spends a considerable amount of time with us.
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And so, that's one vehicle that's critical.
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Events turn out to be critical.
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Historically, I would tell you that as a marketer,
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the returns from an event were relatively low for us.
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Again, being out in a market, being able to actually interact
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and talk to a customer, being able to expose our brand.
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When you're a Fortune 500, you take for granted,
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the value of the brand behind the marketing effort.
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But when you're nimble, when you're scrappy, when you're smaller,
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getting the brand out in front of the business
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is really really important.
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So, I would say that's number two.
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And then probably more contemporary social media,
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clearly is a vehicle that allows us
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through a variety of formats to interact with our audience.
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We think very thoughtfully about how do we use different vehicles?
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So, if I think about it, those are really the three vehicles
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that we would use.
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- I love it.
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Yeah, you mentioned that this might be a little different
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than what you originally thought it would be.
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Why do you say that?
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What do you think sort of maybe you went in thinking?
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- You know, I think you go in, you know, you say it a lot.
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I can focus on digital marketing.
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I can focus on outbound campaigns.
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I can drop in a nurture stream.
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I can do lead scoring.
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You check the boxes of all the buzzwords,
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and things will be good.
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You know what, those didn't work for us.
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And so you experiment.
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You know, you trial different things
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and different combinations.
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And again, when you have an extended sales cycle,
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it's never one and done.
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It's not like one thing's gonna make it happen.
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You have to find the combination of things,
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and you have to find where those things fit into the funnel
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to be effective.
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And so to certain extent, you're in the kitchen
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messing with the recipe to try to get that ideal meal
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and that perfect taste.
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- I'm a little obsessed with this sort of like the 95,
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five sort of rule of people are only, you know,
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in market for 5% of the time in 95% of the time they're not.
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We, Caspian Studios has sales cycles similar to yours
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where like someone wants to build like, you know,
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a podcast series or a video series or, you know,
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a fiction series or anything like that.
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It's like, it's usually about a 12 month sort of thing
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just because, you know, maybe they could do it in six months,
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but usually, you know, you gotta figure out
19:52
a bunch of different things that are gonna happen
19:55
and it's usually pretty high-vis because of, you know,
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it's gonna be a big sort of production.
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So we're in the same scenario as you are
20:03
with longer sales cycles and just general complexity, right?
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And so this sort of, this 95% of time,
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I think that makes perfect sense that you would say
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that your top three are the most human centric things,
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the most long-form things, right?
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It's like, so I just released this,
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my sort of new thoughts on this, my strategy of this idea
20:27
of like shorts, shows, and moonshots,
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and that's basically kind of exactly what you're saying,
20:31
which is like shorts are all the things
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that people consume at entertaining, you know,
20:35
they hopefully see it, you know,
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once a day, once a week, you know, somewhere in there.
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The shows or the webinars, these things that they can get
20:42
really deep, rich information from and then,
20:46
and events are the same way.
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And then, you know, moonshots are hopefully something
20:49
that can, you know, get them standing up every now and then,
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you know, and it's just, it's interesting that you'd say that
20:55
because I think the more complex the buying,
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the buyer is in the buying cycle and the more complex
21:02
the product, the more you need to lean on those type
21:04
of deep experiences.
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- Yeah, absolutely.
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So what's working within those?
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Like when you launch this webinar thing,
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is there ways that you're trying to do that stuff?
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Is your events, is it sort of like old school events,
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you know, taking, you know, a bunch of people golfing
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or, you know, like what's working?
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Industries are different.
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- But when you think about it, you know,
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it's really about story-calling, you know,
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first and foremost.
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So when I look at a webinar, it's about the audience
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and it's about the story tell, it's about the value create.
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And so I think, you know, just doing a webinar,
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first party, third party, you know, executing it,
21:44
sticking up on on 24 or a platform, yeah,
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and anybody can do that.
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But to hold somebody's interest for 45 minutes, right?
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And what we found is that there's not a single format.
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We actually use right now four formats.
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So we have a format that's really more educational,
22:04
more, we have one that's more topical,
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we have one that really is featuring customers.
22:10
We use these, these variety of formats.
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And I think that's a formula that's working really well.
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When we think about events, you know,
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unfortunately it's not golf,
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and it's not the wine and dine.
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It's, you know, we all have short attention stands.
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And the last thing, the last thing anybody want to do,
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if they're walking some trade floor,
22:34
is to stop and listen to a sales pitch.
22:37
And so what we have found is that we actually use AI
22:42
to engage the audience.
22:44
And so one aspect is our visual AI,
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where we literally have a camera running.
22:51
And so as people come up, the AI is able to recognize them.
22:55
It's able, depending on the models that we're running,
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we can detect certain articles, a briefcase,
23:04
a backpack, a computer, a hat, and people are fascinated.
23:10
Right? It's almost the, you know,
23:13
if you've ever been to one of these,
23:15
one of these fairs or circuses that have these mirrors
23:19
that are oddly shaped and they make you look at ball
23:21
or short or thin.
23:23
And it's kind of that phenomenon.
23:25
People just stop.
23:27
And, you know, the minute they stop,
23:30
it's our opportunity to engage.
23:32
And so it's not intended to be a gimmick.
23:34
It's really intended to stir their curiosity
23:38
as to, you know, the art of the possible.
23:40
Hey, if you can do this, you know, at a trade floor,
23:44
could you do this to my factory?
23:45
Could you recognize a forklift?
23:47
And could you recognize a forklift in a person?
23:49
And can you predict when the two of them
23:51
are going to intersect?
23:52
Turns out that that's a very common accident.
23:55
And we can and we can do that.
23:58
Can you detect a spill of the floor
23:59
so someone doesn't slip and drop fall?
24:02
We can do that.
24:03
Can you detect a door that's been propped open
24:06
that for security reasons should be closed?
24:08
We can do that.
24:10
And so it's really starting this conversation
24:14
in a way that's a non-threatening type environment.
24:17
- I absolutely love that about just starting the conversations.
24:23
So are you doing, are these owned events?
24:26
Are these ones where you're, you know, paying for a booth?
24:29
Is it combination of both?
24:30
- It's a combination of both.
24:32
When we do our own event, so it's interesting.
24:36
We actually have an R&B center.
24:39
And it's a 50 acre campus multi building.
24:43
And we typically will do it there
24:45
because we can bring them to an environment
24:47
and make it very immersive.
24:49
So rather than just, you know, a talking head or a panel,
24:53
we literally allow them to get personal with the AI.
24:56
They will experience drones and they will experience oil fields
25:01
and they will experience an F-16 and maintenance repairs.
25:06
And it's not talking about, it's the physical things
25:10
that are there that we can show them,
25:11
that we can immerse them into an understanding
25:14
of how technologies being applied.
25:16
And to me, you know, that's invaluable.
25:19
You can't get that type of return anywhere else
25:23
then to put someone into that environment.
25:25
- And what about the people that you're putting
25:29
in the webinars and the events, you know,
25:32
on social posting about that?
25:34
Like, who are the types of people within the organization
25:37
that you want to sort of carry that message?
25:39
- It's the business owners.
25:41
It's the plant managers, it's the operators,
25:45
the operation folks, it's the quality control,
25:48
the folks charge with inspection.
25:51
It's the health and safety personnel.
25:54
Anybody who's touching the business,
25:57
whether it's a factory or a refinery or school or else,
26:01
you know, we wanna get to the people that ultimately
26:05
are charged with that part of the business,
26:09
that own that part of the business.
26:10
The person who says, "I own the output here."
26:14
And ultimately, you know, this all rolls up
26:17
to what's important to the business to the C-suite.
26:21
- Are you like co-creating the content
26:23
and the webinars and the events like with those people,
26:26
like with your prospects and customers,
26:28
where do you have like designated people
26:30
from your team that are going out and doing it?
26:33
- Yeah, it's both.
26:34
I love to have a customer or a partner participating.
26:38
You know, we do that at our own events.
26:41
We'll put, you know, the customer up on stage
26:43
to tell their story.
26:45
We'll have them participate in demonstrations
26:47
to show how they're using the technology.
26:49
We'll bring them on webinars and, you know,
26:53
have them talk to a topic that's important to them
26:56
and how it relates to the employment of AI
26:59
and how they've used it.
27:00
I mean, nothing is going to be more compelling
27:03
to a prospect than hearing from their peers,
27:06
what they've done and what work and what didn't work.
27:09
- Yeah, completely agree.
27:11
And I think that that's part of the thing
27:12
with the complex sale,
27:16
and especially with the industries
27:17
they all are working with,
27:19
that like they really want to hear from their peers.
27:21
What about what's not working?
27:25
What's something that you're most cutable budget item?
27:27
- Probably what I would call traditional communications.
27:32
- Hmm.
27:33
- You know, public relations, you know, a great example.
27:36
Not that the medium's not good.
27:38
It's just out of touch with where people are.
27:41
We all have a bit of ADD, you know,
27:44
we have a short of pension span.
27:45
We can't, you know, we're not reading long form content.
27:49
We're not even reading short form content.
27:51
You know, give me three bolts,
27:53
seven warroves in a picture, and I'm much happier.
27:56
I think some of the,
27:58
I'm gonna call the old world mechanisms,
28:00
just don't work in the new society.
28:04
And I think that's true, whether you're selling AI
28:06
or you're selling automobiles, I think.
28:08
People's behavior is just different today.
28:10
- I wholly agree that you gotta,
28:13
you gotta just jump and grab it.
28:15
- What about your experimental budget?
28:17
That little 5, 10% you got set aside.
28:19
Any experiments that you made in the past year,
28:21
ones that you wanna make next year?
28:23
- Yeah, you know, we try to set actually
28:27
a little bit bigger portion aside,
28:30
probably more in the 15 to 20,
28:32
in part because we serve different industries,
28:35
and the little behavior across industries isn't the same.
28:38
So we don't have the luxury of just doing one industry
28:41
and saying, oh, we'll try three things.
28:43
If we try three things,
28:44
we gotta try three things across multiple industries
28:46
and it picks an incredible amount of lift to do that.
28:50
- Probably the one thing that we experiment the most
28:53
is the combination of activities
28:58
and the outcome that they derive.
29:01
So we take her a lot with what, traditionally,
29:06
people would have said, oh, I have an interest stream
29:08
and I set it up based on time,
29:10
I set it up based on activity or action.
29:13
It's not that simple, right?
29:17
It's trying to figure out what's the right sequence
29:20
for a market or a type of buyer for a type of persona.
29:23
And we think of that a lot.
29:26
We do a lot of traditional AB and multi variant testing.
29:31
Now we move to a cookie-less environment,
29:36
things will get a little bit harder.
29:37
We look at AI as a tool to understand
29:42
can we predict behavior?
29:43
So our own technology opens up so much more
29:49
for marketers to learn, hyper personalization, right?
29:54
The ability to meet them in the moment
29:56
and deliver exactly what they need.
29:58
Sounds so simple and straightforward,
30:01
but in a B2B world, that's not as obvious as the consumer.
30:06
- It's so fascinating that you can sort of test
30:09
in one area and see if it, you know,
30:11
try to bring it to one of your other industries
30:14
and see if it'll work there.
30:15
Just way more complex than, you know.
30:19
Single verticalized company or something like that.
30:23
All right, what about AI tools other than, you know,
30:26
you have your own AI obviously
30:30
that so of course your company is all in on AI tools.
30:34
Well, ones are all used in that
30:36
that have been particularly valuable
30:38
or how do you think about, you know,
30:40
investing in AI for your marketing and sales team?
30:43
- It's less about the tool for us
30:45
and more about what it is we're trying to accomplish.
30:47
So we want to be able to predict customer behavior.
30:51
We want to be able to do that,
30:52
that personalization in the moment that we talked about.
30:56
We want to better understand, you know, product recommendation
31:00
and product for us is a bit different.
31:02
It's more feature led and capability than it is package.
31:07
And, but it's equally as important.
31:10
Social media, you know, being able to look at at sentiment
31:16
and understanding trending.
31:18
You know, all of these things are now almost embedded
31:24
as part of these tools that give marketers
31:28
an incredible, an incredible capability.
31:31
And I say AI, but it's AI, it's analytics,
31:35
it's reporting, it's the combination of things
31:37
that we can access.
31:40
So it's not AI for AI sake.
31:41
And I think that's one of the big things, you know,
31:43
learnings for our marketer.
31:46
Don't run to the shiny toy.
31:48
If you can do things in a very, you know,
31:52
easy, traditional, non-invasive way and it works, it works.
31:57
And I think, you know, it's easy to become
31:59
infatuated with the tool.
32:00
And you've got to look beyond the tool
32:04
to what is it you're trying to figure out.
32:06
And for us, you know, we have to pause
32:09
on it for a while saying, are we over-engineering?
32:11
Yeah, you know, the issue.
32:13
And do we need to back up and, you know, take a more holistic view
32:17
is how to get to the data that we really want to get to?
32:21
Yeah.
32:23
Any examples there of stuff that has helped her?
32:26
Yeah, I think probably the, at least for us this year,
32:30
is the how moments have come more from our website.
32:35
Experience, understanding the experience someone has.
32:38
And not just, you know, simple things, not just SEO
32:42
work and it's not just, you know, simply, you know,
32:47
time on page and bounce rates and all the traditional metrics.
32:51
It's really understanding for us the journey.
32:55
And we've worked really, really hard to improve it.
32:59
I'm not talking navigation.
33:01
I'm talking about how someone really is exposed to
33:05
and experiences and works through what we intend by design.
33:10
You know, if you put a work right up, what do you want to happen
33:13
when someone gets there?
33:15
And it's not the, oh, they go to the homepage,
33:17
then they go to the navigation bar, then they do the drop-down,
33:20
then they click on what, it's like, that's not the way it works.
33:24
Yeah.
33:24
And so we've learned a lot about ourselves and about our audience,
33:29
just diving into the website.
33:33
I gosh, I couldn't agree more.
33:34
It's very well said.
33:36
I, we've been thinking about that a bunch as well.
33:39
We're redoing some stuff to our website,
33:41
Casping Studios.
33:42
And it's, yes, the same thing, right?
33:44
It's just so complex.
33:45
It's so darn tricky.
33:47
All right.
33:48
Any other thoughts on budgets or budgetems or tactics or anything?
33:52
Yeah.
33:53
I mean, I think the one thought there, you know,
33:55
there's always a question, the proverbial question
33:57
hangs over Markler's heads that says, you know,
34:01
am I really getting a return on my investment?
34:04
You know, maybe we can cut the budget and, you know,
34:07
we're not going to feel the effect.
34:09
And, you know, marketing unlike other areas of the business,
34:15
it's probably harder to quantify the impact
34:19
because it touches so many parts of the business.
34:24
And, you know, I think that the one thing is,
34:27
is marketers are constantly or should constantly
34:30
be thinking about how do I demonstrate
34:33
to my organization, right, qualitatively and quantitatively,
34:38
the value we bring.
34:40
And we work really hard to produce content internally
34:44
for consumption by other executive members,
34:48
by the rank and file.
34:49
You know, who doesn't want to work at a business
34:52
where the brand matters?
34:53
Who doesn't want to work at a business
34:55
where they're doing social good?
34:57
And, you know, we're a small company,
35:01
and 400, but it's still important that you get the word out, and it's not easy.
35:06
You have
35:06
to put a concert effort to do that. I'm curious, like, how do you think about
35:12
that? Because
35:13
I truly believe that there are things within marketing, there's activities
35:20
within marketing
35:22
that you just have to believe in your gut should be done. Webinars, for example
35:26
, you could
35:27
cut webinars. Of course you could. Anyone could cut your webinar function.
35:33
Nobody is going
35:34
to starve because you stopped doing webinars. But you also know in your gut
35:41
that X amount
35:42
of people are attending these, like, they are important to do, right? Also, you
35:48
can't
35:48
draw an ROI and say, our webinar program in a silo is worth X ROI. It just
35:55
doesn't work
35:56
at all. It just doesn't work that way. It's funny. I was talking to an
36:02
executive in the
36:03
business yesterday and they said, I hate webinars. I thought about that
36:07
statement. It's like
36:08
one, one, I don't know how you get emotionally charged over a webinar, but okay
36:13
. But the
36:14
point isn't whether we like them or don't like them. The point is, are they an
36:19
effective
36:19
part of the overall program that you're going to deliver? To your point, it's
36:24
not silo.
36:24
You can't just cut one thing and not have a domino effect in the model. It's
36:31
really a
36:32
hormone. I always joke with people. If you're not sure marketing is working,
36:35
stop doing it.
36:37
Here's the good news. If you were right, you probably saved yourself a lot of
36:41
money. If
36:41
you're wrong, you're in a serious state of trouble because you can't recoup
36:47
that time.
36:48
So for us, if you look at a 9, 12-month sales cycle, if you stop doing
36:52
marketing for 9
36:53
, 12 months, you will know whether or not it was working. But unfortunately, you
36:57
can't recover.
36:59
We're seeing this all right now in tech because the last 12 months, people have
37:04
been cutting
37:05
marketing budgets a ton and we're seeing quarters get missed and you say, yeah,
37:11
because your
37:11
brand didn't do a single thing for the market because you've got a bunch of
37:16
marketing spend.
37:17
I get it's a hard time. I mean, we kept budget on certain things too. It's
37:21
tough, but you're
37:22
going to feel it. One way or the other, you're going to feel it.
37:25
Well, when it goes back to what we talked about earlier, is if you cut your
37:27
budget and you
37:28
cut the activities and spend, then what happens is the downstream effect, the
37:33
seller now
37:33
has to go do marketing. Yes. And you don't recognize that that's what happened.
37:38
So, not only
37:39
your sales drop because you've distracted the seller from their primary mission
37:44
, but they're
37:44
ineffective at it too. That's not their primary vocation. They're not good at
37:49
it.
37:49
And I think what we've seen unequivocally in like Jason Lemkin has talked about
37:52
this and
37:52
start a plan is like, the good reps are still going to hit their quotas. Like
37:57
it's the bad
37:58
reps are going to be torched. Yeah. That's right. Yeah. Even the medium reps.
38:04
Just so much
38:05
of marketing is just not siloed. This actually is a good segue to our next
38:08
segment, the desktop
38:10
where we talk about healthy tension, whether that's with your board or your
38:12
sales team, your
38:13
competitor or anyone else. And you're sort of mentioning a desktop here of
38:17
somebody who
38:18
says, "Hey, I hate webinars." We get that a lot with like, "Hey, podcasts." Or,
38:21
"Hey, this."
38:22
Or you know, like, "Hey, events." Or whatever. And it's like, "Hey, yeah. Who
38:25
cares what you
38:26
like?" Because you're not the buyer of our product. So, that's fine. And the
38:30
whole point
38:31
of marketing is to engage people in the different mediums in which they do like
38:36
. So, then you say,
38:37
"Well, what do you like?" And they go, "Why like this?" It's like, "Guess what?
38:42
We do that too."
38:45
And that's the great, whatever we get that question of like, "Why don't really
38:49
like podcasts?"
38:50
It's like, "Well, 400 million people do. I don't know what to tell you. You don
38:54
't want to.
38:55
But any, you had any other memorable dust steps? There's always been a most
39:03
organizations
39:04
of friction, maybe a healthy friction between sales and marketing. And so, when
39:08
you have,
39:09
and I would advocate that you should have probably two different people,
39:14
because I think that that dust up is a natural process in which sales is
39:20
constantly testing
39:21
the value of marketing and marketing is constantly testing, whether or not
39:26
sales can actually
39:27
execute. And that friction is good. And I still try to invite that friction
39:33
among my direct reports. Because marketing shouldn't be doing activities that
39:40
aren't driving
39:41
the direction the business wants to go and executing on strategy. And sales
39:46
ultimately
39:46
has to be accountable for accepting what marketing does and executing on it.
39:50
And so, that,
39:50
to me, is the proverbial dust up in my career, as always, is sales marketing
39:57
interaction.
39:58
I think it's healthy tension. All right, let's get to our final segment. Quick
40:03
hits. These are
40:03
quick questions and quick answers. Just like how quickly someone can go to
40:08
qualified.com right now and
40:09
talk to a salesperson, you can help your company generate pipeline quickly. Tap
40:15
into that
40:16
greatest asset your website to identify your most valuable visitors and instant
40:20
. And I mean instantly
40:22
start sales conversations. Quick and easy, just like these questions go to
40:25
qualified.com to learn more.
40:26
Quick hits. Stephen, are you ready? I'm ready. Number one. Do you have a hidden
40:32
talent or skill that's
40:33
not on your resume? I do. I love woodworking. Oh, cool. What thing are you most
40:39
proud of building?
40:40
We've moved nine times and every time we move, I install a wine cellar. And
40:47
every one of them
40:48
has been very different. And so it's a fun project. Very cool. Love work with
40:55
my... When you work in
40:56
marketing, I think you need a hobby that's you work with your hands. Like, you
40:59
need to do something
41:00
physical because everything we do is digital. That's true. Do you have a
41:05
favorite book podcast
41:06
TV show that you recommend? My favorite podcast is called The Best One Yet. Oh,
41:10
I don't know that.
41:12
Oh, you've got to check it out. It's quick news stories. Oh, cool. New things.
41:20
Yeah, it's really good.
41:21
Oh, great. This sounds great. I'll check it out. If you weren't in marketing at
41:27
all,
41:28
we're business. What do you think you'd be doing? If I had the talent, I'd be a
41:34
professional
41:34
golfer, but that's probably not realistic. But to your point of working with
41:40
your hands,
41:41
I've always been fascinated by the construction industry. And I guess that's
41:48
another form of business,
41:49
but completely disparate, obviously, from technology or marketing or any of
41:53
that. That's the physical
41:54
aspect that's just to me fascinating. Perhaps make them wine sellers. There you
42:01
go.
42:01
What's your best advice for a first time CMO?
42:06
So I recently shared this with individual. I said, you know, when you move from
42:15
from having a
42:15
marketing title, director of marketing or demand gen or communication, whatever
42:21
, and you move
42:22
through the ranks, when you hit CMO, the world changes because it's no longer
42:27
just dependent upon
42:29
your skill set or your expertise as a marketer. You need to navigate the
42:34
organization now.
42:35
You're a leader in the business of culture and understand the dynamics of the
42:41
culture and the
42:42
corporation is really important. So it's one part skill. It's one part culture.
42:48
And you need to
42:49
learn to play nice. It's one part collaboration. And you know, you can get away
42:54
in a more isolated
42:57
area of marketing with not necessarily being collaborative. And you see that.
43:03
You see people
43:04
who often style themselves off. The, especially nowadays that we work from home
43:10
, it's even more likely
43:12
that you can enable yourself to be, you know, kind of this this independent
43:16
entity. But the CMO,
43:20
your job is balancing those things. It's not just good enough to be a great
43:24
marketer. You need to be
43:25
a great marketing. You need to be a great leader. You need to be a great
43:28
partner. And if you're not,
43:30
you're not going to survive. Steven, it has been wonderful chatting with you
43:36
today.
43:36
For listeners, you can go to spark cognition.com to learn more. If you're in
43:41
energy or
43:42
manufacturing or government or education or retail transportation and are
43:45
looking for some really
43:47
cool ways to use AI, go to spark cognition.com. Steven, any final thoughts,
43:51
anything to plug?
43:52
Yeah, I think the one thing I would share is, you know, we live in a data rich
43:57
world.
43:58
That's important, but trust your gut. I think too. Any action is better than an
44:05
action. So if
44:06
you're not sure, try it. If you fail, it's okay. You'll fix it. But never
44:09
getting started. It isn't
44:10
going to work. And then I'm a big, big believer in what gets measured, gets
44:15
done.
44:15
So if you're not going to track it and report on it, then why are you doing it?
44:20
Fantastic. Steven, wonderful having you on the show. Thanks again for joining.
44:26
Yeah, we'll talk soon. Take care.