Hello, and welcome to The Get.
Speaker:I'm your host, Erica Seidel.
Speaker:The Get is all about recruiting and leadership in B2B SaaS marketing.
Speaker:This season we're looking at how SaaS marketing orgs are changing
Speaker:in both seismic and subtle ways, and we have so many people who are
Speaker:dedicated listeners of The Get.
Speaker:Just this week, I've heard from a bunch of CMOs who have said, wow, I listened
Speaker:to The Get and I learned this interesting thing, or I heard this interesting
Speaker:take, and then I walked into a meeting and put in practice what I learned.
Speaker:That is awesome.
Speaker:My guest today is someone you will learn a lot from.
Speaker:I'm speaking with Monica Ho, CMO of SOCi Monica is impressive in many ways,
Speaker:but one thing that will immediately stand out to you is that she has
Speaker:bucked the trend of short-lived CMOs.
Speaker:She has been in her role for a whopping seven years and eight months as revenue
Speaker:has grown more than 10x, from about ten million to over a hundred million.
Speaker:We're going to dig into that experience.
Speaker:If you haven't heard of SOCithey're all about AI-powered multi-location marketing.
Speaker:They're purpose-built for franchises and multi-location brands, and their
Speaker:platform helps those customers to centralize data, protect their reputation,
Speaker:and drive results at the local level.
Speaker:Today, we'll talk about Monica's journey leading marketing as the business has
Speaker:scaled how she structures her org, the role of AI in her org, her approach to
Speaker:hiring, and, of course, advice she would give to her earlier self and to others.
Speaker:Monica, welcome to the show.
Speaker:Thank you, Erica.
Speaker:I loved hearing your take on SOCi That was perfect.
Speaker:[Laughing] I always do a little research before I get started
Speaker:so that I can say it just right.
Speaker:I know there's a ton of work that goes into those words.
Speaker:I know you guys have evolved your positioning over time.
Speaker:We have.
Speaker:You nailed it.
Speaker:The multi-location specialty and that we help scale at the local
Speaker:level is really what SOCidoes.
Speaker:I love it.
Speaker:Love it.
Speaker:Great.
Speaker:So give us a little intro on you and maybe a fun fact.
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:So as you mentioned, I'm CMO at SOCi I've been with SOCialmost eight years.
Speaker:Prior to that, I'd spent around seven years in a CMO role at
Speaker:a startup out of New York.
Speaker:So, really love the tech scene.
Speaker:I live in Austin, Texas.
Speaker:We moved here about six years ago, and I've been married for twenty-four
Speaker:years and I just sent my youngest off to college at Texas A&M.
Speaker:So just enjoying my new empty nester life.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:As your heart floats somewhere else, it's a different evolution.
Speaker:I have some friends in the same boat.
Speaker:And they were like, oh my god, what do I do now?
Speaker:Well, you talk with me about your career.
Speaker:It's great.
Speaker:So you've been in your role for almost eight years, and, again, I think this is
Speaker:so unique because as we all see there's so much in the press and just in reality
Speaker:about people being in and out of their jobs in fifteen months, eighteen months.
Speaker:How have you stayed in the job through so many different iterations of scaling,
Speaker:and does it feel like different chapters?
Speaker:Can you talk about that for a while?
Speaker:Yeah, so I think I've stayed in the role as long as I have at SOCiand even
Speaker:in prior roles, because of two things.
Speaker:I'm very comfortable in a constantly changing and evolving environment.
Speaker:If I'm not in a changing environment, I produce that myself.
Speaker:That is just something I learned, a skill, early in my childhood.
Speaker:I also think it comes down to being able to execute at multiple
Speaker:levels of the organization.
Speaker:So in a scaling company, a fast-growing company, when you're early stage,
Speaker:you have to be very tactical.
Speaker:You have to roll up your sleeves.
Speaker:You have to get your hands dirty.
Speaker:Then, as the business grows, you have to be willing to let go, and you've
Speaker:gotta become a lot more strategic, take more of that oversight role, and
Speaker:you're kind of guiding the organization, but you're looking further out.
Speaker:Your role absolutely changes.
Speaker:I think you and I talked before, my title has not changed, but over
Speaker:the last seven-plus years, I've probably had four different roles,
Speaker:four to five different roles.
Speaker:At every major level, I feel like I've had a different job.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So much to dig into there.
Speaker:Not to be too like a therapist, but you mentioned your childhood.
Speaker:Was there something about your childhood?
Speaker:Did you move around at a lot?
Speaker:Were you military brat, kind of thing?
Speaker:What made you like that?
Speaker:Because I feel like as we go through our lives, it gets harder, you build,
Speaker:and you build, and then sometimes you're in a maintaining mode for a
Speaker:while, and you're basically saying, I wanna break that maintenance mode.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So my background, I was raised by a single mom.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And my mom was married way too young and had children way too young.
Speaker:We lived in a house where she had two jobs.
Speaker:She was a waitress.
Speaker:She worked two waitressing jobs.
Speaker:We spent a lot of time with our grandparents, and then we also
Speaker:moved around a lot because my mother suffered from mental illness, so
Speaker:she was in and outta the hospital.
Speaker:So we would jump around a bit between family members, my grandparents,
Speaker:and then sometimes my father.
Speaker:In going through that, you learn how to adapt to change really, really quickly.
Speaker:And you learn that no one's gonna tell you what to do next or where you need to be.
Speaker:You just have to figure things out.
Speaker:One of the things that got instilled in me at that early age, just watching my
Speaker:mom and moving around as much as I did was a successful life has to be earned
Speaker:and re-earned over and over again.
Speaker:You're successful at something doesn't mean you're going to be successful for
Speaker:the rest of that tenure or whatever.
Speaker:I liken that to the CMO role.
Speaker:I had a great year.
Speaker:We crushed our goals.
Speaker:Guess what?
Speaker:No one cares anymore.
Speaker:What am I doing next year?
Speaker:What am I doing this next quarter?
Speaker:And that earned and re-earned concept is just really instilled in me.
Speaker:I really like that.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Thank you for sharing that.
Speaker:It's so interesting how the foundation of somebody's life and the values that we
Speaker:learned growing up can really shape us.
Speaker:It's a question I ask in interviews sometimes, what are the values you grew up
Speaker:with and how are they affecting you now?
Speaker:And to your point, it's like you're only as good as you were yesterday.
Speaker:This is what an ex-boss of mine used to say.
Speaker:"You're only as good as you were yesterday." But I love your
Speaker:way of earning and re-earning.
Speaker:You've had these different chapters, have they roughly corresponded to scale?
Speaker:Were there moments of, oh, we hit twenty million and things are different?
Speaker:Oh, we hit fifty million and things are different?
Speaker:Or in your mind, do those chapters align with different moments?
Speaker:I think they aligned with different revenue chapters of our business.
Speaker:When I first came in, I was the first CMO.
Speaker:We had two people that were doing marketing at the time, and my
Speaker:job was about building our tech stack and a demand gen engine.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And so I was very much pushing the buttons, pulling the levers.
Speaker:As we then got out of that, ten to twenty-five million, we had to start
Speaker:executing a whole different strategy.
Speaker:We were looking different business targets.
Speaker:We were primarily selling to smaller, mid-market brands when I first started.
Speaker:As we got to twenty-five million, looking to go the fatter mid market and up market.
Speaker:And so we started executing ABM, which came with a lot of different changes.
Speaker:I had to hire different team members, and I had to restructure the org a bit.
Speaker:Then from twenty-five to fifty, we did something similar.
Speaker:We started executing a very different strategy, and then from fifty to a
Speaker:hundred, that was also very different.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So at every one of those stages I've had to rethink my organization.
Speaker:I've had to rethink our go-to-market strategy.
Speaker:And along the way we've also had some changes in leadership, as well.
Speaker:That also made the job a little bit different.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Fascinating.
Speaker:I've talked on this podcast with other people about this idea of
Speaker:somebody being like a Sherpa.
Speaker:If they've done a scale journey before and they're doing it again, it's like,
Speaker:okay, I've been up this mountain.
Speaker:But, each time the conditions are different and maybe the switchbacks you
Speaker:take or the particular route is different.
Speaker:Or the people that you're sherpaing or going on that hike together are different.
Speaker:What would be your advice for somebody who's facing a similar
Speaker:scale journey, as so many people are?
Speaker:All my searches are like, oh, we're twenty million, we wanna get to fifty million.
Speaker:We're three hundred million.
Speaker:We wanna get to a billion.
Speaker:Any advice for somebody doing that, aside from earning and
Speaker:re-running, like you said before?
Speaker:Yeah, I guess I would say if you're on a scale journey, nothing replaces hard work.
Speaker:I remember when I left my last post at the company out of New York and
Speaker:I came to SOCi At that company we'd scaled over 150 million, and now
Speaker:I was going back to ten million.
Speaker:I was like, oh, I miss that.
Speaker:I wanna get back into it.
Speaker:And I remember arriving at SOCiand I was like, what the eff did I just do?
Speaker:Oh my god, this is so different.
Speaker:Because it was so different, and it was still hard work.
Speaker:It was just different work.
Speaker:So knowing that you're gonna do some hard work is one.
Speaker:The other is, in any role that you're taking in a scale journey, aligning
Speaker:everything you do to revenue, everything.
Speaker:Priorities align to revenue, my metrics align to revenue.
Speaker:My team, we always have a very strong partnership and cadence
Speaker:with the revenue organization.
Speaker:Early, early in my career, I did work a sales role and that gave me
Speaker:a lot of empathy and understanding for what sellers have to do.
Speaker:So that alignment with the revenue and the marketing organization
Speaker:has been really, really important.
Speaker:Got it.
Speaker:Got it.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:I've seen that situation as somebody they've scaled before and then
Speaker:they say, oh, I wanna do it again.
Speaker:And always on the recruiting side, you say are they really ready?
Speaker:Do they really remember what it's like when they have two people on
Speaker:their team and maybe their marketing automation is a total disaster?
Speaker:That's hard.
Speaker:You mentioned the aligning to revenue.
Speaker:Can I ask how that happens at, say, on the brand level?
Speaker:I could see where demand connects to it, but for a function that is traditionally
Speaker:less focused on revenue, how do you make that connection between long-term
Speaker:marketing impacts and current revenue?
Speaker:I always like to look at how it ties back to revenue, how it ties back to a metric.
Speaker:So when I look at the branding side and looking at some of the things
Speaker:that we're doing today, my team, my branding and comms team, and my demand
Speaker:gen team, they have shared objectives.
Speaker:So on the branding and comms side, they own our earned channels,
Speaker:so website and all those things.
Speaker:There's a percentage of website traffic that we expect to convert.
Speaker:That's owned by my B&C team.
Speaker:In terms of when you think about more modern marketing, we've really
Speaker:leaned out of traditional PR and media sponsorships and things like that,
Speaker:and we're heavily leaning into social.
Speaker:When you look at social, not just the amount of people that are
Speaker:seeing your content, but then engaging with your content and then
Speaker:continuing to follow all of that.
Speaker:To me, as we've grown in our digital channels, it does circle back into
Speaker:our inbound is getting better, our demand gen engine's better.
Speaker:So I just find ways to tie those two together.
Speaker:Even though it's really hard to draw a straight line to revenue, there's
Speaker:ways that you can tie it back.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Great.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:Can you talk about a piece of career advice you'd give your pre-CMO self?
Speaker:It's interesting 'cause I just remember my last role when I
Speaker:was at the company in New York.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The company is called GroundTruth.
Speaker:It was the first time I had a CMO seat, and first time I was
Speaker:asked to be in board meetings.
Speaker:And I remember being really excited about finally getting the CMO seat
Speaker:and being in the board room, because you always want a seat at the table.
Speaker:I wanna know what's going on.
Speaker:I wanna be part of the decision-making.
Speaker:I remember one of the board members pulled me aside after my second board
Speaker:meeting and he's like, you and I need to talk, you need to get outta your head.
Speaker:Kind of caught me off guard.
Speaker:I was like, I don't know what you're talking about.
Speaker:I really didn't say anything during the meeting.
Speaker:And he basically told me that's the problem.
Speaker:He's like, you earned a seat at the table and you're gonna lose
Speaker:it because you're not using it, and you gotta find your voice.
Speaker:What I learned from that is, again, you earn your seat at the table,
Speaker:yes, but then you have to make sure you have a voice and you've gotta
Speaker:keep earning that seat at the table.
Speaker:It goes back to what I said before, if I'm not coming with really good insight
Speaker:or an opinion or what we need next, I'm gonna lose that seat at the table.
Speaker:So if I went back to my pre-CMO self, it would be to get out
Speaker:of my head, find my voice.
Speaker:One of the things I remember so clearly was it was a room full
Speaker:of very big personalities, and I'm also a big personality, but
Speaker:I'm a little bit more thoughtful.
Speaker:I like to listen before I speak.
Speaker:There was no time for me to speak.
Speaker:There wasn't a pause, and what I learned is that I had to interrupt people.
Speaker:That's not natural for me, but in order to get my thoughts out, that was
Speaker:just an uncomfortable place I had to put myself in, and I got a lot more
Speaker:comfortable with it as I held that seat.
Speaker:I guess it's just finding your voice and making sure that you
Speaker:are using that to keep that board seat and to keep coming back.
Speaker:I'm also curious if you changed how you prepared for board meetings?
Speaker:There's the interrupting.
Speaker:I like that.
Speaker:It's very tangible.
Speaker:Was there anything else you did leading up to a board meeting that
Speaker:helped you find your voice when you were sitting in the board meeting?
Speaker:Yeah, with either one of my teams, it's always about having a reason
Speaker:to be there, so I feel like in my leadership team now, we do a lot of
Speaker:prep before the board meeting, so we talk a lot about our GTM motion.
Speaker:What did we say we were gonna do?
Speaker:What did we do?
Speaker:And not all the rosy stuff.
Speaker:But what didn't work?
Speaker:What got screwed up and what do we need to do about it?
Speaker:So there's a lot of prep that goes into that.
Speaker:And to be honest, it's not natural for a leader to be like, okay, let's not focus
Speaker:on the all the good stuff you just did.
Speaker:Let's focus on the bad stuff.
Speaker:Super uncomfortable.
Speaker:But a lot of prep goes into that and again, as you do it more,
Speaker:you get a lot more comfortable.
Speaker:Then the sessions are so much better because no one wants
Speaker:to talk about what went well.
Speaker:They wanna know what didn't go well and why did that get messed up?
Speaker:And what are you doing about it and what are you gonna do next?
Speaker:I always feel like I leave the board meetings learning something
Speaker:or with some sort of action item.
Speaker:So yeah, I think a lot of prep is essential.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah, I like that.
Speaker:And then you're not in defensive mode.
Speaker:You're in collaborative, problem-solving mode.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Very cool.
Speaker:Let's talk about your marketing org, and can you tell me if
Speaker:AI has changed your org chart?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Everybody's talking about AI and how AI should give you all this efficiency
Speaker:and should do all these jobs for you.
Speaker:There's a lot of truth in that, but AI's not a silver bullet.
Speaker:It's definitely impacted my organization.
Speaker:I think it's impacting a lot of organizations, but it's not as clean
Speaker:cut as people would think it is.
Speaker:In 2023, I remember this so clearly, ChatGPT just came on the scene.
Speaker:I did a 2H planning offsite with my team and I'm like, we're gonna hit AI hard.
Speaker:We're gonna figure it out.
Speaker:I hired an AI trainer, got my team trained, we put in place AI guidelines.
Speaker:I gave everybody logins.
Speaker:And I'm like go figure it out.
Speaker:It's gonna make your job so much better.
Speaker:And it was interesting because nothing really changed.
Speaker:I really didn't see a lot of experimentation with any of the tools.
Speaker:I didn't think I was getting better copy or better campaigns.
Speaker:So it was like, okay, maybe we just need a little bit of-
Speaker:everybody's got their day jobs.
Speaker:Then we had this idea of AI specialists.
Speaker:Let's find out who's passionate about learning how to better leverage AI
Speaker:and bring efficiency into the org and let them lead trainings and use cases.
Speaker:So we did that.
Speaker:And then, honestly both of those ideas flopped for us.
Speaker:Throughout 2024, I was getting nervous.
Speaker:I feel like something should be happening with AI, but we really
Speaker:weren't seeing big impacts.
Speaker:Our tool set was evolving.
Speaker:Our marketing tech stack was getting more efficient, but like how we were
Speaker:applying it as a marketing team, we weren't doing much different.
Speaker:What I found really did change this year, at the end of '24 and going into
Speaker:this year, efficiency is a big deal.
Speaker:Everybody's trying to get more efficient.
Speaker:The market isn't great.
Speaker:So, it became more of a forcing function.
Speaker:It was like, okay, we've added all of these AI tools to be more
Speaker:efficient, but we're not seeing it.
Speaker:How about we don't backfill some roles?
Speaker:And how about we don't fill some of these roles?
Speaker:Two in particular, we have content roles, we had industry specialist roles.
Speaker:We took a good amount of them out of the organization.
Speaker:Now what?
Speaker:How are we gonna figure this out?
Speaker:Of course, it was a lot of fear.
Speaker:People were frustrated because we just changed everything.
Speaker:But the reality is, within a month or two, we were back to where we were.
Speaker:We had to learn how to leverage the tools.
Speaker:For instance, in the past we might have had an industry specialist
Speaker:that knew, say, financial services.
Speaker:All of our copy would be targeted to a financial service audience.
Speaker:Using AI tools, yes, you can train a GPT to write for that audience.
Speaker:But it's not just gonna work.
Speaker:You have to train the GPT, you've gotta set it up the correct way, or
Speaker:it's not gonna work out and you've gotta fine tune it along the way.
Speaker:So I think of it more of a finite investment in tools to train it
Speaker:and to get it ready, and then to get your teams using it.
Speaker:And then you do see efficiency from that.
Speaker:Overall, I hope that answered your question.
Speaker:I think more of a forcing function makes teams adopt quicker, and we have seen a
Speaker:lot of efficiency since this last year.
Speaker:It's funny 'cause when I recruit marketing leaders, I'm dealing with CEOs,
Speaker:and often investors, and they're not asking about AI skills in particular.
Speaker:They're asking primarily about efficiency, and however that happens.
Speaker:Often it is AI.
Speaker:But that's a good way to think about it.
Speaker:Some people have been talking about a diamond-shaped marketing
Speaker:organization where there's fewer earlier stage people in the org.
Speaker:Has that been a thing for you as well, this upleveling of jobs?
Speaker:Yeah, I think where AI has helped, it's allowed us to create
Speaker:more strategists than doers.
Speaker:So you don't need as many people to do certain things.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:However, I will tell you, I was just having this
Speaker:conversation with one of my VPs.
Speaker:We had a really, really strong intern program this year, and what came of
Speaker:that is wow, the interns actually taught us a bunch of things about
Speaker:ways that we should be approaching some of these newer channels.
Speaker:And it was interesting the energy and the creative ideas that were coming back
Speaker:into the organization because you're introducing this younger generation.
Speaker:What you just said before, Erica, is true.
Speaker:AI is allowing us to not have so many doers, but bringing that younger
Speaker:talent into the org is still important.
Speaker:We were just talking about opening up two more junior level roles to
Speaker:support two of our teams just to get some more of that new thinking,
Speaker:creativity into our organization.
Speaker:But the org itself, if I were to say, where were we in '24 versus '25?
Speaker:I absolutely have less headcount as a result of a better tech stack,
Speaker:efficiencies that we've gained.
Speaker:I don't think all of it's AI, but a good amount of it is.
Speaker:Is there an example of one of these interns actually saying something or doing
Speaker:something that you say, ooh, wow, that was a good idea, I hadn't thought about that?
Speaker:It's not anything surprising, but we've been playing a lot with our social
Speaker:channels and trying to have a little bit more fun with our branding and
Speaker:TikTok is one of those newer channels.
Speaker:You've gotta approach TikTok in a very different way.
Speaker:It's so funny, but all of the content that our interns produced had so much better
Speaker:engagement than anything that we're doing.
Speaker:They were a lot more, I don't know, they had a lot more fun.
Speaker:They knew how to use a lot of the native tools within TikTok
Speaker:that my team wasn't leveraging.
Speaker:It was interesting.
Speaker:It was almost like reverse mentoring.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Having that younger generation in and playing around with some of
Speaker:our marketing, it was fascinating.
Speaker:I don't know if that's a great example, but that's one that
Speaker:was like man, that makes sense.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That's great.
Speaker:For context, can you give an overview of the size and structure of your marketing
Speaker:org and what functions you have now?
Speaker:I know you said it's maybe a little different than it was previously.
Speaker:Yeah, so my org's pretty much the same.
Speaker:I still own the same function.
Speaker:So I own demand gen, branding and communications, marketing
Speaker:operations, product marketing, and our sales development team.
Speaker:That's my structure.
Speaker:At the beginning of 2024, I had seventy-one total headcount.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Today I'm at fifty-three.
Speaker:So the org has come down, what is that, twenty-five percent?
Speaker:A lot of that is due to restructuring.
Speaker:We restructured my demand gen team.
Speaker:I think our tool set has gotten better, so we didn't need as many doers for
Speaker:some of the strategies we're executing.
Speaker:A really big area of efficiency, though, has been in my sales
Speaker:development organization.
Speaker:Where we've really improved our headcount, our SDR to AE ratio with better tool sets,
Speaker:and getting more efficiency through tools.
Speaker:We've used Nooks, primarily, and Clay.
Speaker:That's really had a big impact and brought a lot of good efficiency with it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Thank you for sharing.
Speaker:On this podcast, people keep talking about the importance of experimentation
Speaker:and finding micro pockets of demand by experimenting deeply in certain ways.
Speaker:Can you talk about how CMOs should drive a culture of experimentation on their teams?
Speaker:You shared one example before with the kind of force it [laughing].
Speaker:But any other thoughts there?
Speaker:Yeah, planning with your leadership team is really important, and making
Speaker:sure that you are setting your plan and your goals for what your team should
Speaker:be doing, but then carving out a piece of what do we need to improve upon?
Speaker:What should we be thinking about?
Speaker:And it could be one test, it might be a few tests.
Speaker:We're running a couple of tests right now where we're trying to get a lot
Speaker:more efficiency in our ad creatives.
Speaker:So we're testing tools and we're testing agencies just trying to
Speaker:see what is the right setup for producing multi-variant ads.
Speaker:Another one is, I've got my SDR leader, my DGM leader, and my head of mar ops.
Speaker:We've been talking a lot about additional efficiencies in our demand gen functions.
Speaker:It's really interesting, a lot of the things that my SDR leader and my
Speaker:DGM leader were saying, hey, there's an AI tool that could get this done.
Speaker:And my mar ops leader's coming back saying, well, that's
Speaker:just marketing automation.
Speaker:I can do that for you.
Speaker:So it's just really interesting.
Speaker:It's making sure your teams are collaborating.
Speaker:Carving out a little bit of your plan for testing and learning is so essential.
Speaker:We do this a lot with the team and they have a ton of fun with it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So that's important.
Speaker:I don't think it's anything earth shattering, but it's just important
Speaker:to make sure you're doing it.
Speaker:Yeah, that's a good example.
Speaker:I like how you get into specific examples.
Speaker:It's awesome.
Speaker:Can you talk about how you hire?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Our hiring process hasn't really changed with AI.
Speaker:I know I've seen some really horrible videos of people now getting
Speaker:interviewed by AI and it messing up.
Speaker:Outside of using AI to help us better match applicants to the qualifications
Speaker:of the role, that's game changing because you have so many applicants and then just
Speaker:getting it down to the folks that are most qualified, AI's awesome at that.
Speaker:The overall interview process is largely human led.
Speaker:I feel like it has to be.
Speaker:Especially, at least SOCi we're remote.
Speaker:You are not sitting in the room with me, but I think seeing people,
Speaker:their mannerisms, how they speak, how they critically think, depending
Speaker:on the type of questions you're asking them is really important.
Speaker:So a lot of that is still done the traditional way where we have a screener.
Speaker:There's probably a person in my team that's interviewing
Speaker:ahead of me and then it's me.
Speaker:That's still done that way.
Speaker:I definitely expect different things out of applicants in terms of
Speaker:their testing and learning with AI.
Speaker:And in other roles, I expect them to be pretty, almost having a point of view
Speaker:that they might be sharing via LinkedIn.
Speaker:They might be sharing that through their posts and different things like that.
Speaker:Let me pause.
Speaker:Does that answer your question?
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, that's helpful.
Speaker:When you talk about a point of view on LinkedIn, are you talking about an AI
Speaker:point of view or just a point of view in general about their function and how they
Speaker:see their function and how it's evolving?
Speaker:First, as a marketer, I think it's a shame if you have a really great
Speaker:applicant on paper and you go to LinkedIn and they don't know how to
Speaker:use the tool for their own branding.
Speaker:I mean, LinkedIn is for marketing yourself, and you go to a profile and they
Speaker:haven't posted, they don't have a picture.
Speaker:That's a shame, and I expect that.
Speaker:I'm in digital marketing.
Speaker:I expect you to know how to use these tools for your own benefit
Speaker:and the benefit of your company.
Speaker:I don't typically give interviews to people if I don't see them
Speaker:interacting online in a way where they understand how to do it.
Speaker:I just hired a head of product marketing and I remember going
Speaker:through the candidates and they all looked great on paper.
Speaker:The way that I actually gave people interviews was I
Speaker:checked out their LinkedIn.
Speaker:I wanted to see if they were talking about AI, if they had a point of view
Speaker:on it, and using their posting for that.
Speaker:And for folks that were dead, like they didn't say anything,
Speaker:they didn't get the interview.
Speaker:To me, I just feel like you should, in a product marketing role you're applying
Speaker:to a digital, ajentic company, you better be out there and have something to say.
Speaker:If not, you're just probably not the right person for the role.
Speaker:That's fascinating.
Speaker:It makes me remember a person I placed several years ago, this is
Speaker:like, thirteen years ago, who was a whiz in marketing analytics.
Speaker:And he had no, almost no LinkedIn presence, no picture, nothing was updated.
Speaker:I just met him through a friend and he said, oh, it's because
Speaker:recruiters just ping me all the time.
Speaker:I just focused on the job and everything.
Speaker:But that was a more behind the scenes job.
Speaker:I see your point that if you're gonna be in product marketing, you might
Speaker:be an evangelist for the company.
Speaker:And if you look at what the company does, yeah, it makes sense.
Speaker:That's very interesting.
Speaker:Is there a particular question you ask in interviews that you
Speaker:find particularly revealing?
Speaker:I love a particular string of questions.
Speaker:There's three in particular.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:And they're super basic, but the way it's asked changes the
Speaker:candidate's brain on what I'm asking.
Speaker:So I ask who their most recent boss was?
Speaker:I ask them to tell me their name, and sometimes spell it for me.
Speaker:So who did you report to?
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Tom Johnson.
Speaker:Is it J-O?
Speaker:Okay, perfect.
Speaker:Okay, so what would Tom tell me about your superpowers as a marketer?
Speaker:What is your power?
Speaker:Because there's a name and it's your boss, they get really specific about, oh, he
Speaker:used to love this, and he would say that.
Speaker:And then my follow up question is okay, so then what would Tom tell
Speaker:me about your areas of opportunity?
Speaker:Again, it gets into a very specific, oh, my last review, he
Speaker:brought this up, and here's why.
Speaker:It gets away from the generic what are your strengths and weaknesses?
Speaker:Because everybody's got an answer for that.
Speaker:But when you ask somebody about somebody's perception of you then you're
Speaker:trying to put it in that frame, I think you just lose that whole structure.
Speaker:Oh, of course my strength is this, and I'm gonna turn my weakness into a strength.
Speaker:Some really interesting things come out.
Speaker:I just have found that to be really enlightening.
Speaker:If I'm hiring for a manager, I always ask them how they avoid surprises?
Speaker:I leave that pretty open because I think managing people is one of
Speaker:the hardest roles, and I love to hear what people come up with when
Speaker:I say, how do you avoid surprises?
Speaker:It could be from your employees, it could be from the market, but
Speaker:I always love those questions.
Speaker:That's so cool.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The first one it's kind of top grading light.
Speaker:Do you guys do a full top grading, or whatever the methodology is, do
Speaker:you do that or is it you're taking just that piece of the threat of
Speaker:reference trekking to the interviews?
Speaker:We did the whole training on Who, which
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:-was awesome.
Speaker:But I've taken bits and pieces of it that I love, and that one in particular
Speaker:just seems to always, I always get such good insight out of that question.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It's the specifics that come up and then you have to interpret the specifics.
Speaker:I really like that.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:I like your other one too.
Speaker:So finally, this season we're looking obviously at how SaaS marketing orgs are
Speaker:changing in both seismic and subtle ways.
Speaker:How would you describe these changes in a sentence?
Speaker:And it could be something seismic, something subtle.
Speaker:What's a big takeaway for where we are as an industry in SaaS marketing leadership?
Speaker:Over the last year I think there's been seismic shifts because of the
Speaker:speed at which everything is moving.
Speaker:When you look at your organization, we talked a little bit about this,
Speaker:but I think the roles are changing.
Speaker:Job functions are changing.
Speaker:Marketing stacks are changing because the tools are evolving really quickly
Speaker:and I think, as I mentioned before, being able to adapt to a quickly and changing
Speaker:environment is becoming a core competency because of how quickly things are moving.
Speaker:And I think that's not gonna change.
Speaker:If you look at the speed at which things are now evolving, we are at a pace we've
Speaker:never been at and it's not slowing down.
Speaker:So we've just gotta get used to this new speed.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:And earning and re-running the seat.
Speaker:I love that.
Speaker:Thank you so much.
Speaker:Monica, it's been great having you on the show.
Speaker:Thank you so much, Erica.
Speaker:It's been a pleasure being here.
Speaker:That was Monica Ho, CMO at SOCi Stay tuned for the next episode of The
Speaker:Get coming in a couple of weeks.
Speaker:Thanks for listening to The Get.
Speaker:I'm your host, Erica Seidel.
Speaker:The Get is here to drive smart decisions around recruiting and
Speaker:leadership in B2B SaaS marketing.
Speaker:We explore the trends, tribulations, and triumphs of today's top
Speaker:marketing leaders in B2B SaaS.
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Speaker:For more about The Get, visit TheGetPodcast.com.
Speaker:To learn more about my executive search practice, which focuses on recruiting the
Speaker:make-money marketing leaders, rather than the make-it-pretty ones, follow me on
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Speaker:The Get is produced by Evo Terra and the team at Simpler Media Productions.