FINITE: B2B Marketing Podcast for Tech, Software & SaaS
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FINITE: B2B Marketing Podcast for Tech, Software & SaaS
#8 - Talking personalisation with Hannah Stewart, VP Global Marketing at Yieldify
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Hannah Stewart is VP Global Marketing at Yieldify, a customer journey and website personalisation software.
Our host Alex Price sits down with Hannah to explore her role at Yieldify and dig into personalisation as they discuss where to begin, what the future could look like and how Hannah runs B2B marketing at Yieldify.
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Hi everyone. And welcome back to another episode of the finite podcast. So today I'm going to be sitting down and chatting with Hannah Stewart. Hannah is currently the VP of marketing for a personalization SAS platform called Yieldify just got lots of interesting thoughts on personalization, of course, but how we use and store data and how personalization is rolled out across some really interesting use cases, but also how she does B to B marketing herself. And also the interesting fact that she's just taken on responsibility of managing a team of BDRs too. So touching a little bit on sales and marketing alignment and what it means to really have sales and marketing working side by side, within an organization. So I really hope you enjoy and hopefully catch you at a finite event. Soon,
Speaker 2The finite community and podcasts are kindly supported by nine three X, the digital agency working exclusively with ambitious fast growth B2B technology companies, visit[inaudible] dot agency to find out about how they partner with marketing team a B to B technology companies to drive digital growth.
Hannah’s background in marketing
Speaker 1Hey Hannah, thanks for joining me. Thank you very much for having me. I'm looking forward to chatting with you about all kinds of stuff randomly from your current role through to all the different personalization stuff you do at Yieldify. But I guess as always a quick intro background experience to date would be fascinating for everybody to hear
Speaker 2Who will try and give you the cliff notes version. So I started my career in agency. I was on the BTC side beginning, so I was at Weber Shandwick for awhile and then Nelson Bostok. And that's where I started working in technology. So I had a number of clients like Samsung and later HTC, which really whetted my appetite for getting into tech. Yeah.
Speaker 1And was that more on the PR side as an agency or marketing or
Speaker 2PR? It was PR I spent a lot of my time pitching to very unwilling journalists. The first ever story that I had to pitch was all about men's hair regrowth in regional areas of the UK. So that was really a baptism of fire. And I think that was probably what tempted me to move over to client side after a while. So I went client side about six years ago when I started working for monetize, which was a FinTech business. It got sold about a year and a half ago. And that's when I moved from the communications side into marketing generally. So moved into product marketing while I was at monetize and then went to Yieldify in a product marketing role nearly four years ago, started the product marketing team at Yieldify and then ended up taking over the whole of the marketing function about a year later. So it's been nearly three years of running marketing at Yieldify, which I think in startup years is like 30 years worth of stuff. Yeah, pretty much, pretty much. And when I look back on all of this stuff that I've done and learned in that time, it's quite overwhelming, but yeah, that's me in a nutshell,
Speaker 1I know I interested in people's education and kind of getting into university, any relation to marketing or
Speaker 2Like many marketers, literally none. And so I studied history at university, mostly medieval, so has next to no bearing whatsoever on what I do day to day, but I guess there's always that sort of translation of things like storytelling and being able to craft narratives that help communication. Exactly.
Speaker 1Good writing skills. Yeah. I'd hope. Yeah. Lots of time in the library. I'm sure.
Speaker 2Yeah. Research skills for sure. Absolutely. Yeah.
Working with external agencies as a start up
Speaker 1How do you look at, um, the agency landscape now having been inside obviously more PR agencies? I don't know whether you work with a PR agency now unify or not, but you know how they run on the insides client, agency relationships and your current role. Does that make you more open to working with agencies less open and like, how do you view things?
Speaker 2Very interesting question. I, up present don't work with a lot of agencies I have in previous jobs monetize, you know, we used to work with a PR agency there. We actually had to present at Yieldify. I only use one part of that is for, you know, reasons of budget constraint, and what's practical for us as a business. But also I think part of it comes from being a startup where things move very, very quickly. I find it often quite difficult to be able to take an agency with us on that journey when there's so much change internally and you're pivoting and you're shifting every couple of months, it's very difficult to keep somebody who's external to your business up to speed on all of that to them
Speaker 1Before you got much more agility from in house.
Speaker 2Yeah. I mean, that's not to say that I wouldn't want to take on an agency in the future. Like absolutely. I would love to do that. Cause there are certain elements of specialism that you just can't get when you're trying to do everything in house with a small team.
Speaker 1That's a really interesting observation though. Cause that's yeah, I think that's something that when we work with startups and we're usually looking at them bras being a good fit, it's kind of series a series B and beyond where there's kind of some kind of established nature of process and the marketing maturity around the operations and yeah, just a little bit of stability. Whereas in the earlier stages, that level of like things changing, like the wind actually makes it hard for us as an agency too. Cause we, I think we just find it really tough to, to kind of have a team just constantly wrapped around the client, working, you know, to average every time something changes just being there operationally and commercially too, it makes it really tough to structure something that works for both parties
Speaker 2Difficult because the amount of time that, you know, you have to spend embedded in the business in order to get to know what they're already doing, I can imagine from a resource and hours perspective as an agency, that's not necessarily the most efficient way of being able to spend your time. So, you know, I think in a slightly bigger business in a couple of years time, we would be in a better position to take on some, some external help in order to do what we do.
Speaker 1Makes sense. So tell us about unify and the platform and how it all works.
Speaker 2Sure thing. So Yieldify is website personalization. Um, we work predominantly with eCommerce businesses. So across retail, across travel financial services, to a certain extent, to help them implement personalization on their website, a much faster rate than any other solutions in the market. We work with about 500 odd clients worldwide. So we're a London born and bred business, but we now have offices in New York, in Sydney and Singapore as well. So really kind of expanded globally very quickly and have a lot of clients like marks and Spencers. Like Domino's like mom Montblanc really with the focus on delivering a fully managed solution to them that allows them to execute personalization much more easily, much more quickly than any other solution. Right.
Speaker 1Cool. And what's the journey been for you to fight in terms of its initial founding? Is it raise money along the way?
Speaker 2Yeah, so I mean, we were founded six years ago, so Jay who's, our CEO founded the company with his brother and initially the business was working on a sort of performance based model. It was very much coming from the affiliate marketing space in that time, which was very interesting around the time that I joined the business. About four years ago, we were just shifting away from that. So moving on to fixed fee contracts and establishing a really new and stable platform that we then launched just around the time that I joined called the Yieldify conversion platform. So that's really been the sort of transition of a business model over the last six years of moving from something that is quite fast paced CPA based to something that is a very sort of solid SAS solution. And I've kind of been there for a lot of that transition. It's been a very interesting journey
Speaker 1I can imagine. And so your role day to day, we were talking before we click record that you've taken on some more responsibility. Just tell us a bit about what the VP of marketing, which is kind of still your job title, but what does it include in terms of what the new stuff you're doing as well?
Speaker 2Yeah, sure. So I guess up until about a month and a half ago, the VP marketing role was looking after all of our marketing activity for Yieldify. So that is all based in London. My team is all based in London, but we look after the executions in the U S Australia, Singapore, and I have a team of three working underneath me to do that. And it's everything that you would normally expect from a B2B SAS business, content, marketing, email, marketing events, digital the rest. But as of about a month ago, I've also taken on the remit of looking after our business development team as well. So that has extended my team by about another 200% or say looking after all of our BDRs, who again, you know, based in each of our offices worldwide. And the reason for that has really been, you know, wanting to have a complete view over how all of our opportunity generation works as a business, whether it's cold, outbound, or whether it's working with inbound. I think the idea of a really linear funnel is not really how things work in practice. Exactly. Everything kind of crosses over everything to be knitted together, as you're trying to nurture a prospect to the point where they want to take a meeting. So to me, it never really made sense that these two functions operated separately, they need to be completely integrated together. And so I sort of raised my hand and stepped up to the plate about a month ago. And I've been trying to gradually work on that integration ever since it's a fun and exciting challenge, but I think it's one that a lot of different SAS businesses are starting to do. It's not uncommon anymore for marketing to have business development underneath it's mantle. So, you know, interested to see how other people have done this sort of thing in the past.
Speaker 1Yeah. I think it's coming up more and more we're saying before we started recording again, that I had another episode that we recorded with a chief revenue officer and the whole rev ops subject coming up more and more regularly. But I think, you know, we've done a finite event before on sales and marketing alignment as a whole subject. And I think it's just something that everybody is starting to recognize there's massive answers to do, being better connected. And I think if there's a, an umbrella above both of them, then make sense to manage it that way.
Speaker 2Yeah, exactly. And it's also just me being a control freak. So yeah, no, that's fine. You can keep that in.
Speaker 1I want to dig into a bit more of the personalization side of things. Obviously you're rolling out for clients and doing all kinds of interesting things with brands that you work with. I guess it also interested how it works for you in terms of whether you're using it within Yieldify across kind of the rest of your marketing, because yeah. We get to dig into kind of some of the channels you use and what you find effective, I guess, just at a top level protection on the B to B side, I guess the possible what is personalization for you and for Yieldify and maybe how you're using it within unify.
Speaker 2Yeah. So I think, you know, answering the question of what does personalization mean to us? I actually think that it's not too different from a B2B and a BTC perspective. I think personalization is just about making something relevant. So that personalization is a very broad spectrum. When you look at it, you know, you can go detailed down to the nth degree of doing one to one personalization and that's incredibly resource heavy that can require a huge amount of investment in terms of time, as well as budget. And that's great, but I don't think you necessarily need to go down to that level in order to create content and deliver experiences that are relevant and that's the end game with all of this. So I think that applies to what a lot of B to C companies are doing, but also for us in a B2B space as well. So for us, as Yieldify in terms of what I do in our marketing activity, I, at the moment I don't go down to that one to one basis. We're not equipped with the resource to be able to do that. But what I'm trying to do is create experiences that are relevant. So just segmenting more effectively and just gradually getting smaller and smaller in those kinds of segments that we talked to creating content that we can adapt to all of those different personas so that, yeah, sure. It doesn't have someone's name on it every single time, but it doesn't need to, as long as it's relevant content and it's relevant experience that to me gets the unresolved personalization.
Speaker 1I think that's a nice holistic view of, but if you take relevance and work backwards from there, cause then you've got just a complete sliding spectrum of depths to which you can go, I guess obviously one-to-one is kind of the absolute end, but one that many or very few businesses have actually supported
At what point should you think about personalisation?
Speaker 2Sophia. And this is sort of conversation that we have with our clients a hell of a lot as well, because you know, you see a lot of solutions on the market and they can get you to that one to one stage. But I mean, that might be nine months before you see time to value that might be expert users that you need to have. And the question is what return on investment is that going to give you? And one of the reasons why as Yieldify and what we deliver for our customers is unique is because we tried to simplify it as much as possible so that you can get that going much quicker and much more easily and still get that return. You don't need to go to an incredibly intricate level of detail in order to deliver something that feels personalized.
Speaker 1I'm interested in kind of the starting point. Cause I think we're in a world now where marketing's obviously become a very technical discipline in itself. There's no shortage of tools and Scott Brinker's massive diagram of 7,000 logos or whatever it is that gets referenced. I know I want a job. I'm sure he's got some help now. So that landscape is kind of growing rapidly, but then some players argue with their kind of consolidating that and areas of different MarTech tools. What's the kind of starting point. Cause I think, I guess how advanced, or how progressed do you need to be in your own marketing operations and journey and team size and structure to have someone saying kind of nailed all of the more traditional things that marketers are really busy doing before you then even have a chance to take a breath and go, now let's look at personalization because it feels like it's one of those things that so much to get nailed first before it's kind of like the icing on the cake. If you've got the resource to do it, is that the kind of situation you find your own clients in and what's the kind of process for getting buy in to actually implement and do.
Speaker 2Yeah. I think thinking from our client's perspective, the challenge in all of that is that it's increasingly a consumer expectation that you'll see personalization. To some extent the experiences will feel relevant, will feel personalized, which is often in stark contradiction to what they say about wanting to share their data. But I guess that's another conversation we can have later on. And I think that quite often means that you don't often have a hell of a lot of time to, as you say, get the basics right before you can move on to some element of personalization. But I think actually that that's okay. You know, going back to what we were saying about the fact that personalization is a spectrum, it means that you don't have to go whole hog into something very intricate, very in depth, straight away, you can start with some very simple approaches and do stuff iteratively. So, you know, with some of the work that we might do for our clients, the easiest thing that you could do with your website is start differentiate the experience for new users versus returning users. Those are two very broad spectrums, but that's already an inroad that you're starting to make that you can do relatively easily. And then from there with the level of testing that you might do understand where you need to take that next. So you can do, I think you can start small and work upwards, so you don't need to have absolutely everything right. Straight away, cause like everything with personalization as an extension of optimization, it's all about testing.
Who is responsible for personalisation?
Speaker 1Okay. And so do you typically find that there's a fairly kind of standard digital marketing manager type role that you're working with within the brands you work with? That's responsible for personalization, who's kind of owning it
Speaker 2Generally. What we find with the clients we work with is that we're working with the e-commerce directors and managers. So owning the onsite experience is actually really interesting because you know, they're not necessarily, and it very much varies in the type of organization, but they're looking after the onsite experience, somebody else might be looking after acquisition. And really the challenge with all of this in terms of personalization with the website is how do you line up the onsite experience to what somebody is experienced on their way to that site? So you're trying to bring these two different roles together, sometimes aligning that approach. But yeah, generally for us, it's, it's the econ guys and so a little bit more on the UX side than it would be necessarily on the marketing side. So
Speaker 1Interesting. Yeah. And do you find that they usually have buy in and budget from the rest of the business to go and start using tools like this? You know, they've just got an eCommerce budget and part that's allocated to the overall experience and they're happy to experiment or does it take a lot of, kind of, I don't know how you typically onboard a new client, but as I kind of use cases and demos and give it a try on your site and if it works, they kind of gradually scale up from there.
Speaker 2Yeah. I think there's not often a ring fence budget for something like personalization as yet, particularly I would say in the kind of client that we generally work with, who are more in the mid market, I think is a different question when you're talking to a more enterprise business. So, you know what we're generally seeing when we talk to a lot of more mid market businesses is they have a level of testing. They have a level of optimization. They're familiar with a lot of those tools in that space and they have some budget towards it, but personalization is kind of the next step from there. So there is an education process that goes with it. There is a need to be able to show to the client the potential return that you can get from this. And that is always a really interesting question with personalization because it can take a lot of money. It can take a lot of time. How are you going to measure a return on investment in very concrete terms? It's sometimes quite challenging. And so that's usually the case that we have to meet to be able to say, it's not just a better experience, but it's a better experience. It is going to end up in more conversions, greater average order value or increased amount of leads. So that's usually the education part,
Speaker 1Which is an eCommerce. Love's usually a set up to track that kind of data. And I think most brands are that level of maturity. They're probably going to know what those things are, right? So hopefully the business cases start to build eventually does it
Speaker 2Does, but quite often that's seen through a lens of, you know, some very basic website optimization. So, you know, this is beyond just doing things like changing the placement of the buy now button. And this is Stein to like, if you're going to invest extra money on top of that sort of stuff, extra resource on top of that stuff, what could you then expect to see as an additional return on top of that? So, I mean, it's changed a lot in the time that I've been at Yieldify certainly, and it's becoming much more established, but I still think we've got a little bit of a wait.
Speaker 1You mentioned data. And the fact that people are kind of expecting personalized experiences these days as part of the overall customer experience they have, but equally at the same time, people want to give away last data. And obviously at GDPR recently, and I think we're in a winter, particularly data aware era now with all the Facebook and Cambridge Analytica and new documentary on Netflix by that recently, it feels very topical. I mean kind of feeds into the question, which was what's the future of personalization and how does kind of consumer view of how much data they're willing to share impact that? Do you think
Speaker 2It's so interesting because I mean, some of the, I think that comment that I mentioned before came from some of our own research that we did very recently, we were looking at the travel industry and understanding what purchase journeys were like when people were booking travel online. So trying to understand what they were looking for and personalized experience comes out almost on top of that, but then asking them the same question of what are they willing to exchange their data for. So are they willing to exchange their data for things like discounts or early access to things or some kind of privilege or membership, or are they just not willing to share that data at all? And even looking at some of those drilled down segments, like, you know, are we looking at us consumers versus UK, huge contradictions in all of those? Absolutely huge. And I think there's an irony in all of this, that despite everything that has come out very, very publicly about Cambridge Analytica, about the use of data, there is still a little bit of a lack of understanding maybe about how that data is used and what personalization really means a disconnect in a consumer mindset about what you give in order to get what you get. So I honestly couldn't say where I think it's going to go next, to be honest. I think, you know, we are a year after GDPR. I don't think there's been a huge amount of suffering in terms of what businesses are able to do and not do as a result. Like we did a piece of research on this as well and finding the actually for retail in particular, they've managed to kind of get their databases to the same level they were before GDPR. So whatever they lost when they had to delete data, they've been managed to recoup in the year since. So I don't think it was the doom and gloom that everyone predicted it to be. I mean, it was kind of very much talked about as a cataclysmic event that is going to destroy all of us and that's proved to be a bit of scaremongering. So really, to be honest, I think we, we could find ourselves creeping back into capturing more data and that feeds itself.
Speaker 1We're going that way with a lot of the stuff I receive anyway, in the way I see people doing things I kind of, I don't know what you think, but have this view that it's almost inevitable that there'll be some kind of body responsible for. And I know we've got kind of the ICO and kind of different things, which has been around a long time, but almost a group of people responsible, really making clear how data is used and enforcing a whole new kind of visual way of displaying that. And the reason I say visual is because I think the bit that people often, the reason it's so complicated is that, you know what data you've given Facebook, but we can't see and understand then kind of where it's going and where it ends up and how they're taking it and doing X, Y, or Z ad with it and then cross referencing it with something else and then drawing. And it's almost like if there was some kind of standardized framework for the visually displaying that, or somehow just making it really clear so that anybody could just be given it almost a diagram of that data from Facebook and just get it. If that makes sense. I think I still have some thinking to my own as to how
Speaker 2I think that's really interesting because like with everything that came out around GDPR and what we now have to do as businesses at capture data is all about having very transparent policies live on websites that anybody can access it. Yeah.
Speaker 1Which in reality is like a 10,000 words
Speaker 2And it's completely impenetrable. And, you know, unless you have a background in a law B digital marketing, you're not going to understand it well, indeed or a history degree, medieval history in particular, it's not going to be something that is easy to translate. I don't know. It just, it makes me think that actually one of the interesting questions about data use of data and the apprehension around it typically coming up, something like Facebook and Cambridge Analytica is that I think a lot of the fear and rightfully so has been about what happens to your data and how does it get shared with other third parties? Like I think everyone accepts that, okay, I'm on Facebook, I've agreed to share some data with Facebook. A lot of the issue then comes with, okay, who is Facebook sharing that data with without me knowing, and there should be a very sort of clear cut way of being able to show that to a consumer. Because then I think actually saying that I'm capturing your data, I'm using your data to give you a better experience on my site is going to provoke much less apprehension as a result because people know what they're getting into. If you make it clear. Yeah.
Speaker 1Yeah. I saw a really interesting thought when I was at South by Southwest this year, a guy that it was a good trip who is working with Tim Berners-Lee I believe I forgot the name of it, but I'll drop a link underneath the podcast episode. Who's working on a system whereby effectively you are the owner of all of your data and you let all the different tools is into that data. So instead of how traditionally you would give Google a set of data to give Facebook a set of data, all the other things that you use, your data and that all store individually, and then you'd use API to basically connect them to each other. You become the single kind of owner of all your data and the tools all come by year. So it kind of centralized it. It's almost like a block ask approach to keeping your data stored centrally and just letting things in. And it was really interesting because then you get kind of native integrations between all of the things that you use. So there's no need for kind of horizontal API is to connect between them individually. Everything just comes into you and go. So yeah, I'm using my hands a lot, as I'm telling you, it might be useful for people listening
Speaker 2And would that then imply the as, as a user and as the owner of all of that data, you have the means of being able to withdraw it or would,
Speaker 1You've got absolute control. I gather that it's 10 burners and he's been actually using this himself for a long time. Cause he's got the technical skills to just hack away at himself. But yeah, there's a whole new platform or product that's kind of going that way. And they gave some really interesting examples of how you could create a notebook in your note taking tool and say, this is where meeting with Hannah, for example, and because your Google calendar also had access to that, you would just kind of know and offer to link that notebook with, or, you know, there's a lot of interesting connectivity that comes out and working that way as well. So
Speaker 2It's fascinating. It's also quite terrifying in its own way. Cause I mean, effectively, that's almost like replicating your entire digital identity.
Speaker 1Yeah. I think it's kind of that approach where you can have your online wallet and everything's, everything's stored in one place, but it gives you a lot more control because everything's just in one in one little hub.
Speaker 2Yeah. And that level of transparency I think is, you know, there's, there's obviously a reason for it. I have no idea how many cookies I've agreed to on different sites, for example,
The B2B marketing strategy at Yieldify
Speaker 1Anyway, I'm sure we could talk about data all day. Yeah. I'm keen to dig into how you actually do your own kind of B to B marketing stuff at Yieldify I guess. Yeah. You're working with some big brands who must've come across, you somehow events, all the different channels that you use. Are there any kind of standout things, things that you think are worth mentioning things that worked really well or even really poorly for you in the past?
Speaker 2Oh yeah. I mean, there's, it's interesting because of how much, I guess has changed in the, in the last three, four years about how we do marketing at Yieldify. And I think that's not anything necessarily unique to us, but a lot of the changes that are happening in the market, I think a case in point for this kind of thing is trade shows. For example, you know, as Yieldify, we've sort of done the rounds of a lot of things like e-commerce trade shows in the U S and in the UK and in Australia and really over the last year and a half, I would say we've seen a lot of them decline in the value that they give us.
Speaker 1So there was a point at which maybe it was really much newer and new to the market.
Speaker 2Yes. And I think a lot of this is, is a symptomatic of the fact that we're in a maturing industry. So, you know, e-commerce 10 years ago, this was a very new space making all of those connections was an opportunity that was only available in certain spaces. And these trade shows were hubs of those sorts of connections. Whereas now it's a much more established market in terms of being able to hear new ideas, meet people. There are so many different venues for that sort of thing in person, but also online as well, which diminishes the value of attending a trade show.
Using an effective content marketing strategy
Speaker 1Yeah. I was going to ask about if, if the market is maturing and there's more awareness of personalization does kind of, non-branded such SEO effectively become more of a thing for you. I think Dougal's recent figures were like 72% of B2B research starts with a non-brand, which for me, I mean, that's a huge and quite generous statement, but I guess we're at a point now where there are, you all kind of use the personas sitting in front of a computer going, I want to know about personalization. So typing into Google
Speaker 2And you know, like we've ramped up a lot of our search efforts over the last year to do that. And what has driven a lot of that is just an increase in content marketing. Um, so we publish a hell of amount of content. A lot of it just specifically geared towards search engine optimization, the kind of get that top of the funnel traffic.
Speaker 1Is it all written in tiny?
Speaker 2Yeah. Uh, we, we outsource a little bit, but as I'm sure a lot of people would empathize with, it takes almost as much time to edit that as if you were writing it from scratch. But yeah, we're lucky for the fact that we have a huge services team at Yieldify, so they're all subject matter experts. Um, so we have a vast amount of sort of intellect and resource that we can go to, to get content out of them. Yeah. We just make it sound nice afterwards. Yeah, we wordsmith it. So, you know, we, we've got experts in like travel retail and we often, you know, top up our clients for a lot of expertise as well.
Speaker 1I just find there's always so much knowledge inside our clients, but the marketing team was just like hammering them to get stuff out of them. And they're just too busy to write a blog post or share ideas I'm always interested in if there's, if there's a particular technique for extracting content,
Speaker 2Things that we quite often do, particularly with our clients is we'll just do interviews over the phone. Okay. So, you know, having a relatively short question set, do a phone call, which we then record and transcribe and it stays exactly. It saves a lot of the back and forth, and we try to maximize any opportunity where we get a client with us to kind of basically cut content in lots of different ways. So we have a lot of our own events, for example, where we'll have clients speak at them and then we'll turn that kind of presentation into content that we then publish, or maybe even potentially a webinar as well. So, you know, we're taking that one piece of thought leadership from them and spinning it out in three or four different ways to maximize all the touch points.
Speaker 1Yeah. I think that's why I love great content so much is that you can just, you can milk it for years potentially. Like if you create something that's truly evergreen, you've got all of your social content taken care of, you've got all of your demand, any kind of LinkedIn ads or whatever else you're running, everything kind of just feed from it. So I think we're going to see a big, bigger trend in our clients, as well as just investing more in like a big bang piece of research driven content that they can then get partner quotes and partner with people on and do events around the opportunities.
Speaker 2And I think the it's interesting that you say research driven, cause that's something that we've started doing in the last six months or so like really investing in, you know, uh, original research and that has seen great return. Yeah.
Speaker 1I think it's just the ultimate form of inbound content because it feeds everything, but it really does position you as the hub of the community as a thought leader, that's kind of the perfect way of doing it.
Speaker 2It's perfect for PR like, unless you have, you know, a big news story around a product or a client it's very difficult to get a headline unless you've got something completely original. Yeah.
Speaker 1Yeah. So then you can do PR and then you can do content marketing, which affects it is links, which helps us go. Like it just literally,
Speaker 2It's beautiful. It's almost like it's an integrated strategy. Um, one of, one of the fun things that we've actually just prepared and is going to be launching imminently is turning a lot of our research into interactive tools. So for example, we've just done a piece of research about how different eCommerce businesses are preparing for black Friday in peak season. So, you know, what are their strategies going to look like? How far in advance are they preparing? How long they're going to run their campaigns for that, we've got a huge data set, which obviously we can present in a report, press release or the rest of it. That's very nice. But what we then done is created a benchmarking tool. So effectively as another e-commerce marketer, you can go in and effectively answer the questionnaire yourselves, but it's going to spit out answers saying, okay, you've said that you're preparing two months in advance. You should know that actually the 77% have already started preparing. So there's something that I guess it is an element of personalization in many ways of taking what is a potentially generic set of research and making it hyper relevant to whoever is actually engaging with it. So we're going to be launching something like that early next week. And I'm really excited to see how it goes.
Using marketing automation for personalisation
Speaker 1Yeah. Because I, what about personalization? I mean, I know obviously e-commerce kind of focused, but you're using bits of the platform on your own website. I think you use HubSpot to write into the marketing automation. Yeah.
Speaker 2Yeah. So we use our own technology on our site to do quite simple things. You know, like if we have traffic from the U S or the UK, we'll have different messages that might point them towards events that are happening in their location, or particularly on key pages of our blog say that are related to product announcements or product updates, we'll have CTS. Then that then take someone to a demo just depending on what the URLs are. So it's quite a simple way of being able to redirect those customer journeys, but we do also use HubSpot's chat functionality as well, which I think has improved massively since I first started using it when it was first launched. So that's been, that's been a useful tool for our business development team to be able to engage,
Speaker 1Have chat on the website.
Speaker 2We've started, we have some basic bots as well, that kind of triage the conversation, qualify it a little bit. And then as soon as it gets handed off to a real life BD, there's a certain level information there. So they know how to handle that conversation when HubSpot first launched that functionality. And it must've been at least six months ago, the bots were not very good and I stopped using them, but they've since done a lot of work to it as far as I can see, which has made it much, much better. So now I have slightly different bot conversations and rules depending on where that chat appears on the website. So someone's engaging with a case study. It's going to ask slightly different questions to what if someone has just landed on the homepage to be able to take that conversation.
Speaker 1Yeah. We're apps for agency partner. My Manor HubSpot said that our mashes, their CTO, cofounder pioneers like chat boys, his absolute focus. And to the point of, they almost thought apparently he was going to sell HubSpot and start a chat bot company, apparently that he was so in. So fixed. So I assume that the progression of the chat bot functionality is coming right from the top.
Speaker 2I mean, you know, I feel like it's, it's the latest trendy thing. So I don't know whether that's down to Dharmesh or not good for him actually read it really interesting LinkedIn posts from him today, which I don't know. I don't know whether I should say it cause I'm about to laugh at it, but it was his big thought for the day that he was saying that the term flexible working was not something that's truly reflective of the fact that, you know, you're, you're still available, but you shouldn't be separated by distance. So is there a better way that we can turn this? They was talking about Tom geo flex. Oh yeah.
Speaker 1Could come up with a tablet. Yeah. Interesting. You mentioned too that obviously you've got offices. Was it Sydney, New York and Singapore and Singapore, which I think in itself has interesting challenges just in terms of like managing other people on the ground that doing marketing or is everything centralized, but then how you working with
Speaker 2Centralized? Um, so, so the marketing team is always in London and I think that's been a conscious choice for us. Like whenever we've grown the team, because we're a very small team. So we're not in a position yet where we can say have a global hub team sat in London, but somebody who is just responsible for the U S or somebody who is just responsible for Australia, we're not at that scale yet. So that's why it's still kind of being kept in London. But in order to make everything work, you know, we just have very close relationships with sales and BD teams out there again. Hence why it's kind of made sense for me to take on the BDR remit because when it comes to things like executing events, we're relying on basically other people to carry the stuff. But it does mean that I often take trips out there whenever necessary, but we also work with a lot of partners as well, which has been particularly helpful in the U S if a partner has got marketers on the ground, then we will do as much as we possibly can remotely. But we know that we've got an expert who can help make sure that things run smoothly.
Speaker 1Let's finish by talking about that and the new BDR responsibilities, I guess. Yeah. How's it gone so far? What are the challenges that we've talked today about sales and marketing? I haven't being a hot topic. Yeah. Account based marketing to some extent falls under that. But yeah, I'm just interested in the overall top level view so far. How far in any a month and a bit
Speaker 2Just over a month. Yeah. Where do I start? I mean, I think the, for me it's been good so far, cause we've always had a really good relationship with our BDR team,
Speaker 1Which I think is a kind of ultimate starting point. Right?
Speaker 2Exactly. Like it's not something that I can say. We've always had a Yieldify, you know, there's, there's not always the perfect relationship between marketing and sales, but we have that now and it's been massively beneficial. I hope to both sides, certainly to myself,
Aligning marketing and sales
Speaker 1I need for like trust building exercises where they fall back into blindfolded or any of that kind of stuff. Yeah.
Speaker 2Yeah. They, they invite us out for drinks and everything. Yeah. They took us to crazy golf. I mean, wow. But so, you know, we had a good starting point when I first started to get involved with BDR and really a lot of the exercises for me over the past month have been fact finding. So, you know, the team essentially in a nutshell have not had a manager for a little while. And so for me, it was an exercise in, okay, what processes do we have right now? What's going on? What's everyone doing? And trying to find those points where we can move step by step incrementally, into slightly coming into line. You know, this is one of those cases where you can't change horses white, the way through the race, we've got targets to hit. We can't revolutionize everything overnight. So understanding what differences can we make week one, week, two, week three in order to, to make some change while still keeping ourselves on track. And it's been fascinating. It really has because it's not only working with a different team with different goals, but the difference between marketers and their mindset and BDRs and salespeople and their mindset is in many ways, worlds apart, you've kind of got one group of people who are very much target and commission-based one group of people who aren't and the motivations that come out behind that. I just really interesting to see play out in real life.
Speaker 1Yeah. Do you think the videos understand what marketing is and recognize it as being necessary or do they have the view that actually, even if marketing didn't exist, they would just hit the phones and LinkedIn message and they wouldn't actually need marketing. I think that's too extreme by the way.
Speaker 2It does. There's somewhere in the middle. There's somewhere in the middle. Cause I think they do understand what marketing is for, but what I've been finding to be the place where more education is needed is just the detail and the intricacies of that. Particularly thinking about what we talked about at the start, this conversation of the fact that, you know, the funnel isn't really linear. Like it's not as if a lead is going to come through from marketing and it's straight away going to turn into an opportunity. Boom, done. There might be a content lead that comes through from marketing and it might need a longterm piece of nurtured by a BDR and then they might need to be invited to an event and then they might need some other piece of sales, enablement content. So it's not as if that handoff just happens for me to be, it's constantly being passed back and forth and you have to work. And those are those bits of education that I'm trying to sort of work into our processes now. So kind of getting people thinking that we aren't two separate teams, but we actually worked one strategy. So there's a lot of detail involved in that. And a lot of spreadsheets and getting to know tools like outreach, which has been,
Speaker 1Yeah, I think one of my favorite often when we kick off a big new project for it, tech client on the B to B side, we will have a questionnaire, which is like a sales and marketing alignment one and the amount that we get and we send that to the sales team, kind of with the intention of them, feeding back all of the things that they need from marketing, all the things that they need on the website, URLs that they need to quickly be able to send prospects to all of the things that marketing actually sometimes just haven't even realized that sales or would make sales more effective if they had. And it's my favorite bit of an entire project almost. It's just finding out all these things, which we then just feed back into the top of the funnel with marketing and suddenly like a, that question now in itself almost achieved some degree of alignment, but then you give everybody the resource, they need to go and achieve what they need to see moving forward.
Speaker 2Absolutely. I mean, I wish that I'd started doing this exercise a lot sooner, to be honest, because even simple things like thinking about how our BDRs work and where they effectively live day to day in terms of software has been eyeopening. So our team use outreach. We use Salesforce as our CRM. I use HubSpot. So what I'd been previously doing when we had, let's say a campaign like content campaign, I would be pushing all of those leads into a Salesforce campaign and then quite easily send over the report to the BDRs being like, here are your leads, they're all assigned off you go. Whereas realistically seeing how they work day to day, they don't engage with Salesforce that much, they live in outreach. That's where they are. That's what they do.
Speaker 1And outreach and Salesforce kind of natively connected quite well. I'm not sure.
Speaker 2So we've, we've ironed out some of the kinks. Um, but outreach, I think is, is, is a good tool. It's a good product. So what we started doing instead was actually using Salesforce almost like as the middleman using outreach and building cues and outreach based on content engagement. So building cues for things like content downloads, building cues, for case study views, building queues for website views, or like a follow up, it's not a workflow like a sequence, but this is just, it's a lead to queue the leads. So here's everyone who's engaged with this. As soon as you've qualified them, they move off of that list. Exactly. Yeah. And so, you know, different cues basically signifying different touch points and that is basically where they live day to day. So I've put the information in front of them that is relevant to how they work rather than what I just thought they should be doing as a marketer. So I think it benefits any marketer massively to just really get stuck into the BDR process. Hugely. Yeah.
Speaker 1Cool. It's been a pleasure talking. I feel like we could keep chatting for hours a line at some point. Thank you so much for giving up your time. Me a future finite event. Absolutely. Thank you. Thanks.
Speaker 3Thanks for listening. We're super busy at finite building the best community possible for marketers working in the B2B technology sector to connect, share, and learn. Along with our podcast. We host a series of events here in London, so make sure you had to finite got community to subscribe and keep up to date with upcoming events.