DTNT - 610 - Frank Vella
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Jay: We are back for what might be one of my favorite episodes that we are ever putting out there because we have an incredible human being here. We have a friend of mine here, so who is here? We have the CEO of Constant Contact, Frank Vella. It's Constant Contact is one of the most iconic.
Jay: Platforms in the history of digital marketing, they help over a half a million businesses and nonprofits power their marketing since 1995. Now, when you're in 1995, like, oh, they've been around forever. What's the big deal? No, they are the wildest growth story. They got this injection of $400 million in private equity money from Clear Lake Capital and Serious Capital, and Frank is leading this company into.
Jay: The future and the platform is not just, oh, great, I know what they are. No, they do all the stuff on social media, but in email, they have 97% deliverability for a company at that scale helping hundreds of thousands of companies sending out billions of emails that have 97% deliverability is bonkers and frank.
Jay: Is also Bongers. Okay. His roots, okay, is from an immigrant family, a blue collar immigrant family, and this guy disappointed his family massively. They wanted him to be an accountant. He said, screw that. I'm going into sales. And he worked his way up the ladder and he had leadership positions at HP Enterprise and Xerox and GE Capital and Microsoft.
Jay: And now he's the CEO of this amazing growth engine. I am so excited to have him here. Frank, welcome to the show.
Frank: Jay, it's a pleasure. Uh, you've been talking to my mother, actually. I know. There I have video, I have video of it. Um, it's an absolute, uh, pleasure to be here, Jay. Thanks for the warm welcome.
Jay: Well, okay, I gotta ask you the most random question ever because when I was digging into all things, Frankie, you've had done all these wild things. I wanna know though, uh, what was actually your first job? Like, were you like a paper boy or something? Like, did you have a cool first job?
Frank: Uh, cool. No, but I had a first job, uh, probably simultaneously you talked about my background. Um, uh, we were hardworking. Uh, family, um, that was primarily blue collar. I, I needed to go out and earn my own money. And, uh, one summer when I was old enough to tell a lie about my age, I, I had two jobs. Um, one was called a Carney.
Frank: I worked at the carnival. Uh, you remember when you would go to the carnival and, uh, you'd buy your kids? Or, or, or you'd see? Uh, orange juice in a little container shaped like an orange and apple juice. So I did that. I sold orange juice and apple juice out of a cart. And, and then I worked at a, uh, KFC fry
Jay: Oh wow. I love that. Oh my God. If I
Frank: I love that too.
Jay: that is so good.
Frank: It is so good. I got fired from KFC 'cause I ate too much of what I cooked. A true story.
Jay: That is incredible, uh, fired from KFC, but here you are now, you've done it all. And you know, when we say constant contact, what I think of what the world thinks of is small businesses. That is who you, uh, empower, help all the things. And the big thing going on on the planet right now is AI. And I have a hot take about AI and small business.
Jay: I wanna know what you think. Here's my hot take. I think that AI is the single biggest advantage small businesses have ever had to compete against big companies in the history of small businesses. Is this a ridiculous statement, or all small businesses can be wiped out by AI or do you think they have an advantage now?
Frank: You are hitting it on the head. We know the same customer. Jay and AI is the superpower for small business and and that might sound daunting, right? Um, because, uh, taking a line from your podcast Do This, NOT That! the do seems to be, well then I have to go and learn and teach myself how to use AI and vibe code.
Frank: And the do not is do not do that. Use tools that empower you to do what you do best, but now you can compete with anybody in the world regardless of their size because you can have leverage, uh, as a small business and that leverage comes through the tools you use. That use AI behind them to make, to get easy enough for you to use.
Jay: So in your recent small business report that you released, it said 81% of small businesses are using AI. I don't understand though, is that like, uh, uh, like you said, they're studying, trying to figure out how to do everything and, and in a sophisticated way, or how are they actually, how is a small business owner out there actually using ai? Yeah.
Frank: Well, first of all, they're using with the tools they use. Constant Contact is a great example. You use Constant Contact. Uh, we just once an some amazing recognition from G2, uh, the, the, the highest moving in rank, uh, this year or maybe for a long time, up 71 spots. And if you know G2, it's all user sentiment.
Frank: And the biggest user sentiment is you're so easy to use. For me, the unsophisticated, unsophisticated, technically small business. So whether they know it or not, AI is empowering. Uh, why it's easy to use AI is empowering that their, their, their emails or their social campaigns get out there, get, get engagement, and uh, and so that's one way.
Frank: The other is they are using it to leverage data, uh, about their customers or their market and just getting on, uh, uh, a ChatGPT or, or a per Perplexity and asking it questions and um, and that's giving them leverage and depth and data they just never used to have access to.
Jay: So, you know, along those lines, one of the things, you know, I've dug into your platform, it's, it's really cool and I'm not here making a commercial for Constant Contact, but, so I wanted to talk about. I wanna talk about platforms in general, right? Because you have this really big perspective of a half a million customers, and regardless of what any platforms anybody uses out there, there is a cohort of like 10% of the peoples, of using any platform, a company, using any platform that are getting the most out of it, that are crushing it because they're using the platforms a certain way.
Jay: And then there's the other cohort, the other end that are not what are. Companies, what are small businesses that are finding the most success on a platform like yours doing with their platforms? And what is it that, the ones that are not successful, what should they be saying? Uh, we need to do immediately.
Frank: Yeah. So small businesses think it's their job to be great marketers. They look around and I have to market, I have to get my story told, and I have to get out there. And, and the mistake is trying to take the entire burden of marketing upon yourself because the biggest constraint they have is time. Um, uh, our, our, our surveys actually show.
Frank: And if you're a, a woman owned business, you're 35%. Um, higher in saying time is, is, is a scarcity for you. So you don't have the time, you don't have the budget, you don't have the know-how. And, and so the mistake is trying to figure it all out. Um, leveraging, uh, a tool, any tool, um, uh, that lets you do your job better.
Frank: Um, but you gotta start with interacting with it. If I use marketing as an example. One of the stumbling blocks is, where do I start? What do I say? What, what am I gonna put on my social post? What am I gonna put on my email? Now, AI can do that for you. Um. We used to have this moniker, uh, that, that I've, I've pushed away, not because it was wrong, but because the times are different and it was, we'll help make you a better marketer. I've been a small business owner. I grew up in small businesses, and not once has my friend or my family or my relative who has a small business said Frank, make me a better marketer. They've said, make me a better restauranteur Make me a better accountant, make me a better lawyer, make me a better gardener.
Frank: And, and so leveraging the tools, um, to just do for you. Um, but you gotta start, uh, and a simple saying, can you create a campaign that tells, you know, my staff that I have the best roses 10 days before Valentine. Sure. The machine will do the rest. And, and, and now you can't stop there. You have to approve it.
Frank: It has to have your look and feel, it has to have your voice. Otherwise it's just generic. And people and, and systems are getting smart enough to weed out, uh, what sounds or feels like it's created by a bot, but it's, it's the kickstart to really get you going.
Jay: You know, what you just said I think is a really important framing, especially for small business owners that are out there, which is small business owners aren't marketing, they're not marketers. They have to do. Marketing 'cause you're so, right. When I talk to somebody that owns a small business, I say, what do you do?
Jay: They're like, oh, I'm a lawyer. I'm a real estate agent. I own a pizza parlor. I own a bike shop. They don't say I'm a marketer. So is is that what we're trying to solve for here is that you're trying to allow these small business owners to do marketing but not be marketers?
Frank: Yes. Simply Yes. And when you change the dialogue with a small business owner, and I'll sit across panels of customers, and I'll use the word marketing. So you have to market. You see the tense up. I, I don't have the money or the know-how. and you say, how about telling your story? Can you tell your story? Do you like to tell your story?
Frank: Oh my goodness. Tell my story. Let me tell you my story, Jay. Um, I'm a baker. I'm a third generation baker in my family, and I've done this. And my specialty is that, and I've learned this way, and I trained under, and you get it. Oh, tell your story. Well, that is your marketing and you're connecting with a community and an audience, um, that is relevant to you.
Frank: So, so that's what marketing is for the small business. And, uh, and so when they shake that fear. Now they need a tool to help them tell their story. And, and, and that's an important step and tools that were never available to the small business are now ubiquitously available to everybody. And, and that's where we come back to the original question.
Frank: AI, is it relevant? Heck yeah. It's the superpower for small business that's gonna let them look and feel and sound like anybody else out there?
Jay: So the, uh, the stat that blew my mind the most, and we'll put, we'll put it in the show notes. You guys released this thing recently called The Small Business Now Report, and it said 68%. Of small businesses are expected to increase their budget in 2026. Now, here's the thing I wanna ask you. You've had a lot of important jobs, you know, high up in all these organizations, all this stuff.
Jay: And invariably when you've had these jobs and, and small businesses are out there, sometimes the economy goes up and down and sideways, whatever. Uh oh. Revenue's not looking good. And what unfortunately a lot of companies do is the first thing they say, okay, we gotta cut back. Let's cut. Our marketing budget because you're not firing people, so that seems like an easy thing to cut.
Jay: Um, but when you, you all are seeing marketing budget spend go up for small business, is this surprising to you? Like why, why do you think this is?
Frank: Yes. Uh, I, I, I will bluntly say it was surprising and that's why it's the headliner. We call it the counterintuitive boom. What's happening? Uh, you cited some stats. The first stat is 41% of the small businesses we poll said. They're afraid of inflation and their biggest concern is higher costs. And, and so now you counter that with, so your biggest concern is higher costs in inflation.
Frank: And then 68% of them say they have or are planning to increase their marketing spend, and they know that they need to tell their story. They know that it was hard to get customers. They wanna keep them. They wanna stay in touch with them. They want to know that as a small business, they're part of a commun community.
Frank: Remind that community. Most often a consumer has a better experience with a small business than a large business. Remind them of that. And, um, we all know that as human beings, right? You walk into a coffee shop and, and you get a blank stare. Um, what are you having versus Hi Jay, same as yesterday. Regular order.
Frank: Yes. And then a conversation on whatever it is next, the weather, the kids, um, the car, race, whatever. And, and, and that's a much better experience. And so how you enable your business to communicate and connect with that audience is the difference and the smart, um, the smart small businesses are figuring that out.
Frank: The opposite of, but is it really surprising? And where the answer to that is no is if you just look back at the start of the pandemic 20 20, 21, um, what we saw was resilience. That, and then we looked further back every time there was a downturn in an economy. Every time things got tough, small businesses did better.
Frank: And what's the why behind that? The why behind that is, well, it's always tough for a small business. It's always a grind, and I'm always running lean and I'm always feeding my family and employing, you know, um, friends and, and, and my customers are friends and so they just hunker down. And resilience is, is the pure definition of small business.
Frank: They, they get through it.
Jay: Oh my God. Resilient. That is, that actually is the word, uh, because it's not easy. It's, it's just not, it's a grind. And I'm so glad that your report is showing that. Small businesses are still growing their marketing spend. 'cause for my entire career, I've never understood, oh, things are tough. Let's cut our marketing budget.
Jay: How is that possibly gonna get you more sales like, like does, does that frustrate you as much as it frustrates me.
Frank: In small companies or big companies, y you know, um, sometimes I'll have this, this discussion with a financial guy and, and, and say, so let me get this right. Your path to growth is saving your way to growth. You don't have to say anything else, right? The sarcasm around that embraces the truth and. You can't save your way to growth.
Frank: Now let's, let's continue this, this thread though, and what they're finding is smarter money, not harder money. Um, you have to get smarter at how you deploy your money and, and where, and how it's concentrated, and that's what they're figuring out better than they ever have.
Jay: Okay. That's good. I like that. I, I'm, I'm gonna, I'm gonna use everything you just said. All right. Before we run outta time here, I wanna completely switch gears. Um, somewhere else. So you, you, you have thousands of employees. You've hired a zillion people in your career, all the different things. Let's talk about, I wanna talk career advice for a minute here.
Jay: Uh, uh, you're out there. Maybe you are a small business owner. Maybe you're a marketing manager. You're trying to get to that next level. Maybe you're out there, you're looking for a job. You, you got laid off, you're trying to break in. What? What is Frank's secret Career advice. What should people be doing that they're not doing?
Jay: What? What would you tell some young person out there do more of this and less of that?
Frank: Just do it. Um, if, if I use me as, as, as an example, um. I, I, I didn't have the luxury of mentors and pedigree and, um, I'm not the smartest guy in, in any room. Uh, but I knew through my upbringing if there was an opportunity, you had to seize upon that opportunity and capitalize on it, whether it was through hard work.
Frank: Uh, whether it was having the right skill sets, whether it was asking the right questions and getting the right help, uh, you capitalize on opportunities and, and so, you know, as a CEO I get asked a lot, well, can we review your five-year strategy? Sure, you can. But if you don't know my this quarter's plan and I can't do that, what I tell you about.
Frank: Two and three and four years from now doesn't matter. And it's the same for a small business, and it's the same for somebody running a career. Um, I, I had a mentor say, Frank, you want that promotion? We'll start acting like you're in that job today. And, and that's career advice. I, I give everybody. And, and by default you will rise, um, through the ranks and, and your work will be, your work will be seen.
Jay: I love it. I love all this inspiring stuff. And listen, Frank can't say this, but I can. Constant Contact is a ridiculous platform, especially for what it costs, okay? If you are a small business out there, you have not looked at Constant Contact. You are. Literally missing the boat. If you're a nonprofit, you are missing the boat.
Jay: Uh, I have a special discount code thing of of Bob. You go to constantcontact.com/j JAY, constantcontact.com/j. I asked Frank to hook me up. You hook that up. And the other thing, if you like Frank, get, get excited. He doesn't even know it yet, but he's gonna be on stage. At GURU Conference. Okay. The world's largest email marketing event in November.
Jay: It is free, it is virtual. If you wanna tap into Frank's brain about all things small business, you wanna go to guruconference.com and register for this thing. And also, everybody connect with Frank on LinkedIn. The guy shares the best stuff. Frank Vella, we're gonna put it all in the show notes. Frank, uh, what else do you got for the world before we wrap up here?
Frank: Uh, well first thanks Jay. It's a pleasure to be here. Uh, you're right. We are friends. I feel like I know you better than you know me 'cause I get to watch your podcasts. Uh, but we share a passion for the small business and, um. And I think if, if, if you get acquainted with Constant Contact in any way, uh, the reason we're successful is our sincerity around making the small business success successful.
Frank: Uh, whether it's through great support, uh, online or telephone support, whether it's through great product, uh, uh, but, but it's all, it's all sourced through great people. And we're, we're, we're an amazing organization. I'm proud of, uh, the, the people and, and, and the product we have. And I know we have to do a lot of things better.
Frank: Uh, and that's that we have the same struggles as a small business. We didn't talk about this much, but yeah, you, you mentioned my career through, uh, some big companies. Uh, that was, you know, the stereotypical goal. Get a job, go to a big company. But my roots are small business. And, and, and before I even started, um, working in tech, I was setting up Constant Contact for.
Frank: My relatives, restaurants and, and, and car wash. Uh, and I saw what it did for their business. So, so this is a calling. It's, it's a match. And, um, I'm, so, I'm just so happy to be here and, and, uh, and it's a pleasure to talk to you.
Jay: Amazing. Alright, well we're gonna run this back. There's gonna be a round two. Thanks for being here, Frank. We'll see you at the next one.
Frank: Cheers.