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G'Day, everyone.

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It's Michelle J. Raymond, back again with another episode and this week

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listeners, I'm excited because we have a fabulous guest who comes

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with 20 years plus of B2B marketing experience, and she is gonna share the

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ways that you can get some quick wins.

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Moni Oloyede, thank you so much for joining us.

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So happy to be here, Michelle.

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Thanks for having me.

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When I came across, first of all, your Substack newsletter, which I'll be

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dropping, any of the details so people can reach out and connect with you

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directly on LinkedIn or Substack or all of the cool resources that you've got.

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The thing that kept popping up was that you are passionate about

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getting back to good marketing, which is marketing fundamentals.

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I'm excited to talk about it, but we're gonna do that right after this quick word

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from our podcast sponsors, Metricool.

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Okay, Moni, we're gonna go straight between the eyes because my first

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question that I have for you, and it comes up when I'm talking to my clients,

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is that I'm confused "is marketing to serve stakeholders or am I old fashioned

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in thinking it's for customers."

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When you peel back the layers and really look at it, you're really

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serving stakeholders, honestly.

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You're serving executives, you're serving board members.

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That's what those metrics are about.

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That's what all those numbers are about.

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'cause your customers don't care about those things.

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So you're serving board members?

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I know that that's what's going on because when people reach out to me, the first

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thing that they say is, we need help insert, let's say, getting more Company

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Page followers because our chairman, our CEO, our someone else from outside of that

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particular department Has seen that we've got less followers than our competitors,

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and so the strategy then bends around.

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Somebody else said this, but like honestly, where should we be focusing

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and what's like one proactive thing that we can do to take this back

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into control and serve our customers?

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It's so, it's so classic and I, listen, I sympathise with the, the practitioner or

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the people who are on the ground, because I'm sure they've had this conversation

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a thousand times internally of like.

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Why are we doing this?

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Why can't we just do that?

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Are you sure this is the way?

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like we've all tried to steer the ship in a different direction to no avail.

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So the, the advice that I give my clients and to, to the business owners

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that I talk to is like, let's focus on kind of getting customer research.

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Let's focus on validating that this is the right direction to go.

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One of the things that you can do is start with the good old form, right?

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So, for example, on a form, we say first name, last name, company title.

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That's all kind of wasted space.

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We have a bunch of data providers out there that can pin all that data for you.

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Instead, let's ask the essentials email, first name, last name, and then

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let's use that space to qualify or validate why they're taking the action.

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So if you have a white paper, for example, let's ask, are you downloading

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this white paper 'Cause you're dealing with X problem, Y problem or Z problem?

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or you downloading this paper 'cause you're trying to solve X

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problem, Y problem or Z problem.

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If you have that kind of qualitative information, you can inform the next

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step or you can then say, Hey guys, let's create this type of content.

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Because the problem is really the Z problem, right?

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It's validating information.

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Yeah, and it's actually using analytics to solve a problem that you are actually

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looking into, not reverse engineering.

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And I'm not gonna go into analytics just yet because I'm gonna save that

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for later on because there is something that I Think is even more important for

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our listeners to understand that we need to be measuring the right things and

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getting back to marketing fundamentals.

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There's something else that came up in your content that I found myself

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nodding away to, and that was all about the power of niches or niches

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depending where you are in the world.

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I'm on team niche, so we're gonna stay there, but I think one of the

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issues that I have found is that when clients are talking about, yeah, I

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know my niche, they're business owners, it's just not gonna do it for them.

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When do you see this and what's a better alternative that can help

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people really get those wins when it comes to their marketing on LinkedIn?

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Michelle, I see it all of the time.

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Okay.

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Every from, listen, I deal from small business owners, startups

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to enterprise level companies.

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Everybody's scared to niche down, and their biggest fear is that they're

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going to alienate or lose customers.

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Right?

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That's always the fear.

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Actually the opposite is true.

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Right, because if you're talking to everyone, you're talking to no one,

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that's the benefit of niching down.

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You have to, and the biggest companies do.

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I always give the example of, let's say Apple, right?

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You think Apple is like, oh my God, their customer base,

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everybody, everybody has an iPhone.

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They talk to everyone.

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They really don't.

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They have a very particular audience that they speak to.

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They speak to predominantly males, predominantly in that sort of mid

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20 to late, early forties, late thirties kind of demographic.

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Very educated, tech savvy.

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Like you see it at the conferences, you see it on kind of the online who that's

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an archetype of a person is very niche.

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Those people are their evangelists and they tell everybody else about the phone.

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That's how marketing really works.

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You find your niche audience, you evangelise these people to

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tell everyone else around you.

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It's called word of mouth.

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The most powerful piece of marketing that we actually have.

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Niching down is your best benefit, because that's how you speak directly to

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the pain point and the desired outcome.

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Look, I hear you.

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I have this podcast and I have another one called the LinkedIn Branding Show,

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where we often talk about niching, but I have a confession, Moni, and I think you

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are the right person to share it with.

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I know this stuff.

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I hear this stuff from other people and I nod my head and I agree with them, but

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when it came to my own marketing, when I just reviewed my website over the holiday

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break, I had to rock in the corner and say, I'm not taking my own medicine.

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People in the world know me for all things LinkedIn Company Pages.

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That is my area of expertise.

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That is a thing that they come to me.

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Do you think if you found my website that you would even really see

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the word Company Pages mentioned?

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No.

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No, no, no.

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I decided that it would be great to just be the LinkedIn person when

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it came to my website, so I get it because I've been there and done that

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myself, even though I know better.

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So this is definitely not hating on any of the marketers out there because I

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think it's scary because your brain says.

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No Moni, If I cut off all of this market, I'm gonna lose sales.

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As opposed to if you narrow in, you're gonna win more.

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Like it's just so against what your brain tells you.

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Counterintuitive.

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Absolutely a thousand percent.

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I think the reason why is because a lot of people don't understand that the

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marketing's in in the message, right?

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And the message has to resonate and connect.

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And the best way that you can do that is get as specific as

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you can about your audience.

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The way that I go about it with my customers and the people that I coach

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is like, let's use descriptive words.

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Don't give, get away from demographics, right?

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Use more descriptive words.

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Passionate, excited, frustrated, and like let's go into what the issue is

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deeper from a psychological standpoint.

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And then that's how we kind of use that language to speak

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to those types of people.

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And then we can go further and further and further and further.

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Because it is a process, right?

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You just don't jump to Company Pages, right?

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You start with LinkedIn and like, what's the real issue here?

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What do I hear over and over again?

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What is this problem?

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And then you kind of go deeper right?

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You do if you follow your own advice, and I'm pleased to say that What do you know?

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This is gonna be mind blowing.

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After I took my own advice and that of many smart marketers out there

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and actually narrowed in my website, which then led to the branding on

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my Company Page, the branding on my personal profile, the content that I'm

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putting out, these podcast episodes.

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What do you know?

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Guess who they're talking to now?

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My ideal audience, guess who's been booking more high quality calls with me.

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This stuff is amazing.

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Yeah, it's crazy.

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It's bananas.

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And you just pointed out a, an excellent point was that a lot of

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companies, especially B2B organisations, because they're so broad, they

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attract people who aren't their ideal customer profile all the time.

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And they waste cycles with people who are never gonna buy from them or not

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the right person to buy from them.

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Right.

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Which probably leads us into the next question that I have, and it's one that,

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because I came from 20 years of B2B sales.

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I have never sat internally in a B2B marketing team.

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So when people start talking MQLs and all these other bits of jargon, I have

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to tell you, my eyes glaze over a little.

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But I know that that's a big deal.

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But is the problem that marketing's kind of been reduced to just focusing on MQLs?

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My gosh, Michelle, we can be here for like six hours on this topic.

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Yes, it is a major problem.

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It's one of the biggest pet peeves that I have about kind of B2B marketing

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currently, is that you're reduced to these analytics in a way of, the only

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way to prove your value is through leads, MQLs, and then ultimately how that drives

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pipeline, which then ignores All of the myriad of things that go into marketing.

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We just talked about niching down your audience.

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We just talked about messaging branding's in there.

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Market positioning is in there.

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There's so many different things in these volatile markets that are changing.

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Just look around you.

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It's nuts, right?

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All of those things play a factor and it gets reduced down to an MQL, which

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means what exactly in an organisation?

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What's qualified, right?

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That that definition gets changed day to day within an organisation, let

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alone across many organisations, right?

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It's kind of nuts.

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It to me feels like, and again, I'm not coming from experience, and

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if anyone is listening or watching this over on YouTube, drop it

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in the comments and let me know.

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Like, what is the challenge that you have within your

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business when it comes to MQLs?

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Are you sitting here nodding your head going, yes, this is the problem?

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Because as you've just said, the consequence is You've jumped over so many

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of the first, and I would say even more important foundational steps to get to the

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end points and adjusting based on that.

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And I thinking then is the consequence to this, we forget about things

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like brand and then just become in a competition with our competitors

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to see who gets the most form fills.

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Like what happens if we don't get this right and focus just on MQLs?

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Yeah, it's, I mean, there's, there's so many issues that are a result of

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this sort of overly focusing on MQL.

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One of them is that Again, we've now reduced marketing's function

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to leads, which then reduces our function to only promotion, right?

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Normally there are four Ps, right?

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Product placement, price, promotion, and now we're just the promotion.

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So all of those other three things are now functions of other departments.

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Other people take care of those things and then dictate them to marketing, and

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you see the results of those two as well.

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It's like a simple one is price like marketing's supposed

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to be Responsible for price.

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Now that's sort of like finance or maybe the, the engineer product teams,

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the executive teams take care of that.

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And in a lot of B2B organisations that I've worked in, you have

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8,000 SKUs because of it.

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Like, you know, you discount this thing and now you got this SKU.

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And we're coming up with this because we haven't done the market research

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to understand what the proper price of this product should be.

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Right.

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Just one example.

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So the other problem with it is in a B2B setting we know that's a buying committee.

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So again, what's a lead?

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know that the buying cycle is longer because the price point is higher.

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So it's like, are we saying that somebody is qualified because they clicked on

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four emails and downloaded a white paper?

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They're now gonna buy a half a million dollars of software.

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That's what we're saying, the logic breaks down very quickly when

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you start to sort of poke at it.

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So even in the best case scenario, how is this really gonna work and be able

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to prove that you are doing your job?

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In any way you look at it, it's kind of not.

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So you screwed yourself and to your larger point, we now have an entire

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generation of marketers who assume that the job of marketing is to

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create content and get leads, and they don't understand the four Ps.

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They don't understand branding, they don't understand market

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analysis and positioning.

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All that stuff is gone, right?

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So they go, the C level goes, I need a strategy.

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And you just come up with a content plan and some tactics.

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That's not a strategy.

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Yeah, I see it all the time, like when I'm doing Page Audits and I'm looking

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going, every single post is some kind of lead gen style of posts, which is

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Mm-hmm.

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Go to our events, sign up for our form, we want something from you, so we can put

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you in our funnel, is essentially what I would, you know, summarise them as.

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And people are so aware of that now, and it's not that I don't

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want to hear from marketers.

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When it, I'm ready and it's the right type of thing and it's valuable,

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I'm absolutely ready for it.

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But the content that I see is literally someone else in the business.

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Wants you to go and do a post about this.

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You know, we've got a trade show coming up, so make sure you tell everyone

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we're at Stand J 22 in Hall this, and we'll be there for three days.

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And it's like, who cares?

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Like your whole industry is posting exactly the same thing.

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And this is where I think when we're being driven by the wrong things.

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And by people outside of our departments, then everything

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falls over the LinkedIn content.

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But as you say, those marketing fundamentals.

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They go out the window and then we say, LinkedIn's broken.

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You know, because we're not achieving our goals.

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And so this is why I really wanted to have this conversation with you

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today, is to say, look, we gotta get back to what we know works.

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Those four Ps, I don't know how long they've been around for, but

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long enough to be proven right.

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Right, right.

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And just to jump back to our first conversation, right.

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This is back to if you serve the customer, a lot of these issues go away.

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The lead gen is serving the stakeholders.

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If you understand the customer, which we don't, right?

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We really don't.

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We don't understand what they really value.

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We don't understand how to build relationships with them.

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We don't understand consumer psychology.

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None of that stuff is done.

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If you understood all those things, then you would know how to bring them along.

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We don't, like you said, how do I get them in my funnel as quickly as

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I possibly can to throw them down this magic lead scoring thing that's

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gonna make them to MQL tomorrow?

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I need to tell you that.

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My next question, listeners, I am literally pulling the pin on the grenade

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and I'm about to toss it and know that this is going to cause a mini blow up

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because there's something else that I watched, a whole video that you had.

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It's in your featured section.

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I watched the whole thing on YouTube.

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Let's talk about.

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Marketing attribution and its role in this craziness.

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Now, it's is not something that I've ever been responsible for in the business.

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Again, this is why I've got you here with your expertise, but is marketing

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attribution the saviour for all of these problems, or is it sending

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us further down the wrong track?

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So let me be very clear.

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Okay.

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I think this is Moni's Personal opinion marketing attribution

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is a complete and utter scam.

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Okay?

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It's a waste of time.

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It's a scam.

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It will never work.

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Don't it.

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Okay.

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That is, that is my humble personal opinion.

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I know it's a literal billion dollar industry, so it's going to

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like upset some people to say that, but I think it's a complete and

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utter scam and a waste of time.

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There is no point to doing marketing attribution.

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And just to be clear for like maybe people who don't know who are listening to this.

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Marketing attribution is the concept of attributing a kind of result, Most

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likely pipeline revenue to marketing activities because we know conceptually

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that there isn't one thing that is driving people, it's multiple things across.

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So the idea of attribution is you can give credit to multiple

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marketing tactics and activities to say how they are contributing

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to bottom line pipeline revenue.

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No, you can't.

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Look, I watched your presentation in this video, as I said, and the piece

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that got to me probably most was the fact that for all this digital

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tracking, it doesn't have any real ability to track anything that happens

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between two real humans face to face.

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Or non-digital ways.

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And as you said earlier, word of mouth is so strong and should be one

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of our big focuses, and yet a lot of these tools I'm thinking aren't

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capturing this type of precious data.

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I think this is the most critical data that we could gather, but it's missing

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in action when it comes to the tools.

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And I just wonder what you have to say about this, you know, that

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you can share with our listeners.

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Yes.

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This is a theme again, fundamentals, right?

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Because these tools can't track offline activity very well.

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IE word of mouth and conversations, or even just like networking

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engagements and stuff like that.

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It overemphasises the digital tactics and under emphasises the offline

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ones where the offline ones have way more impact than the digital ones.

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So we do a bunch of digital stuff in order to attribute right some

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revenue when actually they are not the most valuable things that are

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important from a marketing standpoint.

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So you end up spinning your wheels, even if everything kind of goes right, you

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still making assumptions about why someone is engaging with you to begin with.

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You assume someone's downloading your white paper or attending

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your webinar because they have intentions of buying from you.

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Says who?

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Where did you get that from?

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Like you just made that up.

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You just assume they're ready for your sales cycle.

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How?

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So it's it's an assumption based model to begin with because it

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assumes that every task that you're tracking has some impact on revenue.

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It doesn't.

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Right.

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Ouch.

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So you're setting yourself off to fail to begin with.

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Oh dear.

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Look, and I don't think anyone does this intentionally because

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you know, with all of the tools that are out there, they're pretty

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slick at their marketing in general.

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And I think to be fair to marketers, a lot of them feel like right now That

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they have to justify their existence with the large language models.

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AI coming for them.

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Everybody expects them to be experts at everything.

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Are you doing your job when it's really difficult to put

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a number on things like brand?

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You know, like, and, and so you know, this is, I can see why people are drawn

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to it and I can see the advantages, but as you said, I also see how this is taking

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people Down the wrong path, as far away as possible from these marketing fundamentals

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that I know in their heart they know are the right thing to be focused on.

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But trying to get that conversation across the line with other colleagues,

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I think is maybe where some of this tricky stuff comes from.

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What would you say to somebody that's struggling and listening

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to this and going, I absolutely agree with what Moni has to say.

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I know that she's right, but I can't have That conversation in my business

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'cause people aren't listening.

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I'm sure you've come up against it before.

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It is the number one response that I get.

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Right.

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It's like, I agree with you.

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You're right.

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I don't know how to have this conversation with my boss, C-level, whoever.

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Right.

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It's classic and I experienced that too.

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Like you're not alone.

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Like I was in corporate for 15 years trying to have these conversations

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and getting stiff armed in the face.

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Yeah.

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so I totally understand it.

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I think the thing that we have to do first is empathise.

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Right.

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One of the things that I had to do was be like, if I'm gonna put myself

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in C-level shoes, that pressure is coming from somewhere, right?

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The board or the private equity or whoever wants their money,

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like they gave this company a lot of money and they want it back.

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So that pressure is coming from that, right?

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So that's, that's one.

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Number two is communication.

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What I had to understand is the, they don't fundamentally understand

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marketing, so the only way they can communicate the fact that I need to

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know what you're doing so I can then communicate that back is through money.

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That's the only way they have to communicate that with.

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They're looking for validation.

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They're looking for, if I give you money, how do I know that you're not wasting it?

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Okay.

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That's what they want to know.

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You can do that through validation.

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It's your job marketer to move the perspective.

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Okay?

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It's right.

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This perspective right now is all on analytics and you know, pipeline revenue.

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What they really just want is assurance and validation.

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If you kind of work through what I said like.

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some feedback from your prospects, not your customer, your prospects,

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the people you're going after of this is the right issue.

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This is the problem.

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This is psychological, emotional, right response that they are

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looking for, and you can feed that back into your marketing.

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It gives some assurance that like, okay, we now understand we have to do.

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Here's the campaign that we're gonna run.

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This is what we're gonna be expecting from it.

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If it doesn't work, we have the problem.

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We just need to tweak these sorts of things and then move forward.

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Then we can crawl, walk, run to getting you to the actual revenue.

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And guess what?

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You'll be focusing on Your audience, your actual customer's, prospects,

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getting real information from them, and that's gonna help you be

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successful at marketing ultimately.

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And that's all I want for our listeners of this podcast, is them to be successful

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at marketing and generate the results that the business is looking at.

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So I appreciate you expanding on that.

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There's one last thing that I want to talk about, which I, I know

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you're also passionate about this.

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Sometimes out there in B2B land, it could be the B2B Institute, it could

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be the Edelman Research Institute.

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There's all kinds of places that information comes from, but

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sometimes there's some B2B stats that get thrown out there that

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become gospel and we run with them.

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And one of those ones is that, you know, 70% of the buyer's journey

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is done before they reach out, that we all wanna be self-serving,

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we don't wanna talk to people.

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And I think that sent marketing down a path as well that

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maybe isn't really beneficial.

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Can you talk through your views on this?

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'cause I really enjoyed actually making myself stop and think, how

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is this driving my behaviours?

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Just as much as what I'm guiding my clients.

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Are we going down the wrong path if we just take this as gospel?

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Yeah, I think it's the, probably the most widely misinterpreted stat in, all

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of B2B marketing, because you're right.

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What people hear with that stat is that, you know, 70% of the buyer's

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journey is already done before they reach out to a sales person, is

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that I need to create more content so they can research on their own.

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What that stat really means is I don't want to be sold to, so I'm gonna

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avoid you as much as possible until I'm ready to actually buy something

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because Everybody knows as soon as I fill out this form, I'm gonna get

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8,000 emails and I'm gonna get hammered with a bunch of sales calls, right?

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It's like, and I'm not ready for that yet.

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I'm not ready for that level of pressure, so I'm just gonna wait.

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They would love to talk to a salesperson, right?

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I need information.

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I wanna know what the price of this thing is, you know, and I wanna

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know the features, I wanna know how it compares this other thing.

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I'd love to talk to somebody about that, but as soon as I do, I know I'm

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opening the floodgates to get hammered and pressured because salesperson

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gotta make quota and they're gonna be on my neck for the next however long.

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Right?

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So the understanding is they're not trying to self-educate.

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Okay?

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They're trying to avoid being sold to and pressured, and that's

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the interpretation of the stat.

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Yeah, it's a little challenging in my mind.

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Again, coming from the sales side of things.

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I did see in a world where you have access to so much information that people

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had done a lot of the research before they came to me, that was just a given.

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And we were talking more about logistics, like you said, like it

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could be pricing, when's it available?

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You know, should I take this model or that model?

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And you know, I worked in an industry, the beauty industry in manufacturing

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and You know, our sales cycles were probably 18 months to 24 months

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in general, so a couple of years.

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So of course people were doing their research along the way just in case,

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or getting ready for when they may actually need it, or they may never have

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reached out, I wouldn't have known, but it was just something that I thought.

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We always seem to default to more content as being the answer.

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And when we do more of the wrong things I remember when I was younger, you know,

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and Lil's gonna laugh at me because I refer back to my childhood athletics days.

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It was my whole, like my glory days.

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And I remember training with my mum who was teaching me, you know,

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and training me in the backyard.

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And you know, we were talking about how practice makes perfect.

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And she pulled me up and she said, no, perfect practice makes perfect.

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If you keep doing more of the wrong things over and over and over again,

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you don't actually get any better.

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You don't get closer to your goals.

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You don't break those records that you're looking to do.

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And so I find now that people, we've got so many tools That we can

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use to create content at volume.

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Like you've, you've got no one's business, it's never been easier to

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create more content, but if it's not the right content, it is literally useless.

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And I would say even sending you backwards, which You know,

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in, in today's world, we don't need any help going backwards.

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There's enough life pressures, world pressures, industry pressures

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that we just don't need that.

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And I think that's where I've been taking a second look at this, the

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answer, customer research, serving our customers, those marketing fundamentals.

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Is there anything as we wrap the episode up today, if I gave you one last thing,

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one last chance to share something that you're passionate about, what

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would you leave our listeners with?

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Yeah, I think I would love to give an example of like what it really means

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to sort of understand your customer.

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'cause I feel like people will be like, well, what do you

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mean I, I totally understand.

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Well, you know what I mean?

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I get it.

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And it's, you don't really understand how surface you are with it.

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So I spend a lot of my corporate time in cybersecurity.

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It's one of the toughest industries to market in.

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'cause that's a very.

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They're tough, right?

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They know all the games, you know, they're very skeptical.

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It's tough.

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One of the things that about cybersecurity is like, it's very technical.

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All the marketing is super, super technical around like, you know,

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internet of things and network security and all these high

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level terms and stuff like that.

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What people miss about that audience is that the psychology

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of it is 99% of the things right and 1% wrong, and that's my job.

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Like I screwed up.

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It's over.

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Like what's it like, that's your day.

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Do you know what I mean?

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It's like, you know.

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Nobody in this organisation really values what I do.

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But if something goes wrong, they're the ones that looking at me.

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No one looks at me when everything is right.

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They only look at me when something goes wrong.

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Right?

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That kind of thing, like marketing to that with that kind of understanding Will

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change the language in which you use the messaging to then talk to that audience,

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but you don't see it because we hang on the surface of all the technical stuff,

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and here's the, the technical problem and not the issue with the actual individual

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what I mean is, go back to human, right?

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Who is this person?

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They're a 3D person, right?

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They have feelings, they have emotions, they have Faults, they have motivations.

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They're what is their day to day like?

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What is those pressures like?

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What is the environment that they sit in and come from it from that

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point of view, that will improve your marketing tenfold, I promise you.

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Versus just, you know, they need a security set.

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There's a phishing problem, and now we need network security, right?

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Which is what everybody says and does.

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So that's just an example of like, what do I mean by really understand the person?

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'cause that's gonna inform your marketing and take you to levels that are,

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you're gonna dominate if you do that.

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Yeah, lead with empathy.

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Actually put yourself in their shoes and understand what is a day in the life

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of that person on the other side that You are trying to, you know, influence

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their buying decisions at some point or someone within their business.

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And I, I think that is the thing again, that you and I are just so

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aligned with that we keep skipping over the important parts, which is

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the people that we are there to serve.

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And this plays out in LinkedIn content when we're talking

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about marketing fundamentals.

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This shows up in the types of content that you're putting out there and

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the wording you use and who it's directed at, and it could even

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be the graphics that you choose.

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There are so many different ways

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Yes.

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that this is playing out, not just on your website, not just in your email

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campaigns, but also on LinkedIn as well.

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So Moni, thank you so much for everything you've shared today.

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I appreciate Getting the insight from someone that's worked on the other side.

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It's like a, a, a look for me into that world that I can't get

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because I've never been there.

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So I appreciate you sharing all your experience with the listeners.

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Thank you so much for having me.

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I appreciate it.

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I'm always down for a lively conversation So thanks for having me on, Michelle.

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We might have to come back and have those other six hours of

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conversations in another episode.

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But thank you so much.

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And listeners, I will be putting all the details on how you can connect with Moni.

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I absolutely highly encourage everyone to go and check out the presentation

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she did on marketing attribution because I think it's gonna have you really

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questioning some of the things that you may have thought were important, but maybe

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not as important as you once thought.

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So until next week listeners, cheers.