July 27, 2022

Your Marketing Teams Biggest Struggle | Original Research

We spoke with 100 marketing leaders and asked "What's your marketing team's biggest struggle?" In this roundtable discussion Benji, James, and Logan break down the findings.
Discussed in this episode:
How to beat the pervasive issue of shiny object...

We spoke with 100 marketing leaders and asked "What's your marketing team's biggest struggle?" In this roundtable discussion Benji, James, and Logan break down the findings.
Discussed in this episode:
How to beat the pervasive issue of shiny object syndrome
How to curate new ideas while executing your current strategy
The importance of setting goals and priorities 


Recommendations/Resources:
What the Heck is EOS?
Deep Work by Cal Newport
Transcript
WEBVTT 1 00:00:08.199 --> 00:00:12.880 Conversations from the front lines and marketing. This is B two B growth. 2 00:00:17.320 --> 00:00:20.960 Here at sweet fish and B two B growth, we place high value on 3 00:00:21.079 --> 00:00:27.039 experimentation in continued evolution. We want to help our clients create incredible shows that 4 00:00:27.160 --> 00:00:31.719 leaders proudly say are their favorite, and clearly that's also the vision here internally 5 00:00:31.839 --> 00:00:35.320 for our show, B two B growth. With that heart, today is 6 00:00:35.520 --> 00:00:39.640 our first try at something brand new. Last year we sat down with a 7 00:00:39.759 --> 00:00:44.679 hundred marketing leaders and we began an original research project to get a sense of 8 00:00:45.000 --> 00:00:48.799 where teams are actually at, and so we asked questions like what are the 9 00:00:48.840 --> 00:00:53.560 marketing KPI s your CEO is looking at regularly? What's the most overrated B 10 00:00:53.640 --> 00:00:57.320 Two B marketing trend? What technology are you looking to add to your tech 11 00:00:57.399 --> 00:01:02.600 stack? What's your most successful marketing channel? And we've compiled the findings to 12 00:01:02.679 --> 00:01:06.879 those questions and more, and today we're gonna Start to bring those to you, 13 00:01:07.280 --> 00:01:11.680 so you can expect an episode each week dissecting this research for the foreseeable 14 00:01:11.719 --> 00:01:15.640 future. I want to say a special thanks and give a shout out to 15 00:01:15.760 --> 00:01:19.000 all the leaders who gave us their time. They answer these questions, and 16 00:01:19.040 --> 00:01:25.519 now we get to glean insights. So let's jump in enjoy this first episode 17 00:01:26.120 --> 00:01:36.480 on Your Marketing Team's biggest struggle. Friends, today we're here to tackle your 18 00:01:36.519 --> 00:01:40.840 team's largest hurdle and the thing we've heard time and time again that is a 19 00:01:40.959 --> 00:01:45.200 struggle. It's the pain point, the thorn in the side of your marketing 20 00:01:45.239 --> 00:01:49.159 team. We have the data. We're excited to share it. We asked 21 00:01:49.200 --> 00:01:53.000 a hundred B two B marketing leaders what their marketing team's biggest struggle is, 22 00:01:53.519 --> 00:01:57.599 and I'll tell you our findings in just a second. But before we get 23 00:01:57.640 --> 00:02:00.480 there, let me tell you who's here for the discussion. And we got 24 00:02:00.560 --> 00:02:05.719 James Carberry, founder and head of marketing, Purrett sweet fish and Logan Lyles, 25 00:02:05.799 --> 00:02:09.479 vp of revenue and innovation. Guys, glad to have you here on 26 00:02:09.560 --> 00:02:14.360 B two B growth for this exciting conversation. This is gonna be Super Fun 27 00:02:14.560 --> 00:02:16.800 at this original research has been a long time coming, so I'm glad that 28 00:02:16.840 --> 00:02:21.199 we're finally getting to start putting getting to to put some insights out into the 29 00:02:21.199 --> 00:02:23.520 world. Thanks for having me back on the MIC. It's been a while 30 00:02:23.560 --> 00:02:27.360 since I've actually been on the show. Benji. People are like, Oh 31 00:02:27.400 --> 00:02:29.639 yeah, look, and I know you from B two B growth, that 32 00:02:29.840 --> 00:02:32.599 that new host is a lot better. Just heard that earlier this week. 33 00:02:32.719 --> 00:02:37.039 Just well, thanks for dusting off the MIC and I don't know about that, 34 00:02:37.080 --> 00:02:40.319 but I appreciate the EGO boosts. So I want to start with lived 35 00:02:40.360 --> 00:02:44.879 experience and then we'll get to the data. The data, however, you 36 00:02:44.919 --> 00:02:47.120 say it all right. So lived experience. Both of you have spent time 37 00:02:47.159 --> 00:02:53.280 building teams. You spent time around marketing and the question that we posed at 38 00:02:53.319 --> 00:02:58.800 a hundred marketing leaders I'll now pose at you. What is our marketing team's 39 00:02:58.919 --> 00:03:01.360 biggest struggle? And, James, why don't you take the first swing here? 40 00:03:01.759 --> 00:03:07.240 Yeah, I think it's lack of prioritization. There's so many things you 41 00:03:07.280 --> 00:03:14.520 can do to win in marketing today. You can win leveraging a B M, 42 00:03:14.560 --> 00:03:19.639 you can win on social, you can win through podcasting, you can 43 00:03:19.680 --> 00:03:24.400 win by having a phenomenal Seo Strategy. Like there's just so many ways to 44 00:03:24.439 --> 00:03:30.000 win and and that's overwhelming, I think for marketing leaders. It's like you 45 00:03:30.039 --> 00:03:32.520 hear about a new strategy, you hear a new thought leader come onto the 46 00:03:32.560 --> 00:03:37.599 scene out of nowhere, and I know for me personally, like I hear 47 00:03:37.639 --> 00:03:40.520 Alex Harmosey talking about, like how we need to build a better offer, 48 00:03:40.879 --> 00:03:45.759 like we've got to focus on the offer, and then you hear Chris Walker 49 00:03:46.240 --> 00:03:50.919 going on and on about creating demand and and like you hear Gary v talk 50 00:03:50.960 --> 00:03:54.159 about how you need to document instead of create, and all of them makes 51 00:03:54.159 --> 00:03:59.719 sense and all of those things are working for each of those people and and 52 00:03:59.759 --> 00:04:03.560 like how do I take pieces of that and develop our own strategy and our 53 00:04:03.560 --> 00:04:09.520 own focus? And it's hard, like you end up, it's just really 54 00:04:09.560 --> 00:04:14.639 easy to not have a clear, coherent vision of this is how we are 55 00:04:14.639 --> 00:04:19.160 going to win, especially someone like myself who is taking in and ingesting a 56 00:04:19.199 --> 00:04:24.879 ton of content and just seeing that there's way more than one way to win. 57 00:04:25.000 --> 00:04:27.800 You've got people saying building a category is the way to do it, 58 00:04:27.920 --> 00:04:31.120 creating demand is the way to do it, have an irresistible offer is the 59 00:04:31.279 --> 00:04:34.120 way to do it, and it's just it's just a lot like well, 60 00:04:34.120 --> 00:04:38.519 okay, like now we just need to pick one and go yeah, look. 61 00:04:38.560 --> 00:04:41.480 And what's your kind of lived experience around this? What do you feel 62 00:04:41.519 --> 00:04:45.399 like? Is that that struggle, that hurdle, similar to that but a 63 00:04:45.600 --> 00:04:50.279 little bit different, is sticking with something long enough to determine is it a 64 00:04:50.519 --> 00:04:54.720 success. So now some of that comes in the form of what James has 65 00:04:54.759 --> 00:04:57.680 talked about. All right, we're doing this. We're gonna go all in 66 00:04:57.720 --> 00:05:00.920 on original research and that's going to be a pillar to our content strategy and 67 00:05:00.959 --> 00:05:04.160 it's going to lead to these others and then we're going to prioritize these two 68 00:05:04.240 --> 00:05:09.959 channels to push out those those insights. Right. But then two months into 69 00:05:10.000 --> 00:05:13.839 that, something happens. Either there's a new idea, you hear something that 70 00:05:14.079 --> 00:05:16.839 we need to pivot on, or something just happens in the business. Right, 71 00:05:16.879 --> 00:05:20.120 it's not always just shiny objects syndrome. Sometimes, if you're in a 72 00:05:20.199 --> 00:05:26.959 high growth organization, especially one like ours that's bootstrapped in high growth, sometimes 73 00:05:27.040 --> 00:05:30.879 there are factors that just make you have to pivot and you don't really know 74 00:05:31.480 --> 00:05:36.279 was that successful, was that on the right track? And so that prioritization 75 00:05:36.439 --> 00:05:43.240 from just the shiny objects syndrome, paired with changes in the business and priorities 76 00:05:43.319 --> 00:05:47.360 even beyond marketing, can create this mixture of just I don't know what to 77 00:05:47.439 --> 00:05:51.720 do. I don't know if what we've done is working or did work, 78 00:05:51.879 --> 00:05:57.600 or should we keep doing it? So I think sometimes we talk about prioritization 79 00:05:57.639 --> 00:05:59.519 and it's just like, oh, we're a bunch of, you know, 80 00:05:59.600 --> 00:06:02.680 distract acted marketers that are onto the next thing. It was clubhouse and now 81 00:06:02.680 --> 00:06:08.920 it's Tiktok and tomorrow it's something different. But there are real challenges to that 82 00:06:09.000 --> 00:06:12.720 prioritization that James was talking about. That does have to do with picking a 83 00:06:12.839 --> 00:06:16.079 channel and sticking with it, but also the other factors in the business that 84 00:06:16.160 --> 00:06:21.160 surround those decisions and those priorities to the word that keeps resonating in my head 85 00:06:21.399 --> 00:06:29.439 is bandwidth. Like you have all these ideas, you have internal things you 86 00:06:29.480 --> 00:06:31.519 have to execute on, you have the old plan you were running before. 87 00:06:32.480 --> 00:06:35.079 How do you and then this goes to the word you guys are both using. 88 00:06:35.160 --> 00:06:40.879 How do you prioritize effectively and where do you spend your bandwidth? How 89 00:06:40.959 --> 00:06:43.839 much of it goes to new ideas? How much of it goes to the 90 00:06:43.879 --> 00:06:46.920 way that has been working? How do you talk about the new things you 91 00:06:46.959 --> 00:06:49.839 want to try to the market, to inform them of where you're going, 92 00:06:49.959 --> 00:06:55.560 while also executing the thing that got you here? And when you're asking all 93 00:06:55.560 --> 00:07:00.879 those questions at the same time, overwhelmingly what we saw at the response to 94 00:07:00.920 --> 00:07:03.319 this data is what we're all hitting on. The word ends up being focused. 95 00:07:03.639 --> 00:07:09.480 Like we struggle to figure out how to focus. And so when you 96 00:07:09.639 --> 00:07:13.639 zoom out on and I'll read some of the specific responses here, when you 97 00:07:13.759 --> 00:07:17.279 zoom on out on what they're saying, they're saying we don't know where to 98 00:07:17.319 --> 00:07:21.399 focus. We have so many priorities or things we could be doing. And 99 00:07:21.439 --> 00:07:27.160 again, it's not just like shiny objects syndrome all the time. It's just 100 00:07:27.439 --> 00:07:29.600 there's a lot of ways you end up in a lack of focus. So 101 00:07:29.839 --> 00:07:33.879 I'll read some Ben Slater said they have an ambitious team. So capacity becomes 102 00:07:33.920 --> 00:07:36.959 an issue. Right, bandwidth? Did they bite off more than they can 103 00:07:38.040 --> 00:07:42.240 chew? Adam Goyet, I have to say real pause, real quick. 104 00:07:42.519 --> 00:07:46.639 I struggle with last names, so there's a good chance I get last names 105 00:07:46.639 --> 00:07:49.240 wrong here. No, Goyette is right. I do know Adam, so 106 00:07:49.319 --> 00:07:53.079 you're good. Good. If I get one wrong and you know it, 107 00:07:53.120 --> 00:07:58.000 correct me. But Adam Goyette, focus on the projects that are really significant 108 00:07:58.120 --> 00:08:03.240 for us. Andrew Haley, learning how to do things at scale and to 109 00:08:03.360 --> 00:08:07.439 communicate, to add the right amount of process but not get bogged down. 110 00:08:07.680 --> 00:08:11.680 And again that becomes like that focus. That's the word that resonates there. 111 00:08:11.759 --> 00:08:15.800 Charlie Fashiona, who I anyone want to take a shot at that last name? 112 00:08:16.319 --> 00:08:20.279 Finding enough time in a day. Again, what do I focus on? 113 00:08:20.360 --> 00:08:24.959 And so when you hear those responses, I think there's part of us 114 00:08:24.000 --> 00:08:28.120 that goes, we're not in this alone. Then the other part of the 115 00:08:28.120 --> 00:08:31.399 discussion is like, okay, so where do we go from here? There's 116 00:08:31.399 --> 00:08:35.480 a lot of ways you end up in a lack of focus. But as 117 00:08:35.519 --> 00:08:39.840 you're thinking of this, like what do you feel is the remedy, James, 118 00:08:39.840 --> 00:08:43.200 like what is there some things you found? Yeah, when? So, 119 00:08:43.240 --> 00:08:46.360 when we first got this insight back, as timmy was was digging into 120 00:08:46.399 --> 00:08:50.960 the data and and we were talking about it the other day, the thing 121 00:08:50.000 --> 00:08:54.240 that I was actually really encouraged by was, you know, the problem of 122 00:08:54.320 --> 00:09:00.120 focus can actually be solved in a very tangible way by what we do for 123 00:09:00.159 --> 00:09:03.519 our clients. And and obviously this is biased because we're a podcast agency, 124 00:09:03.600 --> 00:09:11.000 but if your focus is on creating your market's favorite show and you are rallying 125 00:09:11.080 --> 00:09:18.200 your resources around creating your market's favorite show, there are things that are natural 126 00:09:18.320 --> 00:09:24.360 byproducts of that show that fuel all of the things that typically would be seen 127 00:09:24.519 --> 00:09:30.120 as competitive to a particular strategy. But when you're focused on creating this great 128 00:09:30.159 --> 00:09:35.360 show that is fueling micro content for social it's allowing you to build community, 129 00:09:37.080 --> 00:09:41.279 it's allowing you to create demand because if you're doing your show right, you're 130 00:09:41.320 --> 00:09:43.559 taking your brand story, your points of view, you're pressing them up against 131 00:09:43.639 --> 00:09:50.320 market input and then you're you're pushing that content into your market. So you're 132 00:09:50.360 --> 00:09:54.000 creating demand. You can do a B M depending on how you do the 133 00:09:54.000 --> 00:09:58.399 original research or your guest strategy, if you're if you're building content with your 134 00:09:58.440 --> 00:10:07.840 ideal buyer. So there's so many different pieces around executing your markets favorite show 135 00:10:07.919 --> 00:10:13.039 and being the person that hosts and runs your markets favorite show that touch all 136 00:10:13.080 --> 00:10:16.080 of these other things. So when I first heard it, that's where my 137 00:10:16.080 --> 00:10:18.679 my mind initially when I was like, man, how incredibly blessed are we 138 00:10:20.000 --> 00:10:24.440 as a business to be championing this because, as I think about it for 139 00:10:24.519 --> 00:10:26.480 us, I'm like, what if we were to solely focus on B two 140 00:10:26.480 --> 00:10:30.399 B growth? And I think about all the different things we've been able to 141 00:10:30.480 --> 00:10:33.200 do with that. We've been able to build marketing squads on the back of 142 00:10:33.240 --> 00:10:37.799 that by inviting our guests to join us in micro communities. We fuel our 143 00:10:39.120 --> 00:10:43.120 linkedin content with videos like what we're recording here from an episode of B twob 144 00:10:43.200 --> 00:10:46.840 growth. But we're also getting the massive benefit of having this long form content 145 00:10:48.000 --> 00:10:54.159 that people can consume passively and build affinity toward our brand by spending just volumes 146 00:10:54.200 --> 00:10:58.440 of time with us. So that's that's where my head went. I think, 147 00:10:58.480 --> 00:11:01.559 even zooming out from there, that's why pillar content becomes so crucial, 148 00:11:01.759 --> 00:11:07.080 because then you know where you're centering your focus and then essentially the planets that 149 00:11:07.240 --> 00:11:11.519 orbit around that, and that's what you want in your strategy. That's why, 150 00:11:11.600 --> 00:11:18.480 even organizationally, when you have those goals that everyone is behind for your 151 00:11:18.559 --> 00:11:22.000 marketing team, that's why that gets harped on right like. Then we know 152 00:11:22.679 --> 00:11:28.200 what the main focus is. It's interesting to use the podcast as an example 153 00:11:28.240 --> 00:11:33.600 because I think it does it solidifies so much of the rest of the strategy. 154 00:11:33.720 --> 00:11:35.679 Yeah, that's really good. You guys. I'm thinking three things. 155 00:11:35.919 --> 00:11:43.639 One is around this pillar or hub content at the center of your strategy. 156 00:11:43.080 --> 00:11:46.639 The second is around something you just alluded to, Benji, is goal setting 157 00:11:48.200 --> 00:11:52.159 that I think has been transformative, a work in progress, not perfect here 158 00:11:52.159 --> 00:11:54.159 at sweet fish. And then the third is something kind of granular. But 159 00:11:54.279 --> 00:11:58.320 to take the first one that we were talking about is, if you think 160 00:11:58.360 --> 00:12:03.399 about your podcast or something else that you're already that you're already doing, being 161 00:12:03.480 --> 00:12:07.080 that pillar or being that hub in the middle of your strategy, and your 162 00:12:07.080 --> 00:12:11.759 other strategies are spinning off from that, your a b m strategy, your 163 00:12:11.799 --> 00:12:16.000 research strategy, your SEO strategy, right instead of all those lining up and 164 00:12:16.159 --> 00:12:20.440 you know, looking at six different columns and and you're going back and forth 165 00:12:20.480 --> 00:12:22.840 and what do I focus on? It's focus on that hub in the middle 166 00:12:24.200 --> 00:12:28.720 and then the execution goes out from there. So I think that that makes 167 00:12:28.759 --> 00:12:33.480 it a little bit less overwhelming. And you know something that Justin Simon at 168 00:12:33.600 --> 00:12:37.799 metadata talks about a ton is that so many marketing teams are trying to create 169 00:12:37.919 --> 00:12:43.240 new content and they don't spend enough time thinking about repurposing and distributing. This 170 00:12:43.320 --> 00:12:48.279 hub and spoke model really addresses that because you're focusing on that hub or that 171 00:12:48.360 --> 00:12:52.639 pillar in the center and then the other pieces become easier to repurpose and to 172 00:12:52.720 --> 00:12:58.360 just focus on a consistent distribution strategy. Right. The second piece for us, 173 00:12:58.399 --> 00:13:03.480 since we had opted e O s, the entrepreneurial operating system, we 174 00:13:03.600 --> 00:13:07.840 found that setting rocks, which are the quarterly goals right. Some some teams 175 00:13:07.879 --> 00:13:11.399 are used to okay RS or other goal setting formulas, if you use for 176 00:13:11.559 --> 00:13:16.120 d x or something like that, but having quarterly goals has really changed the 177 00:13:16.120 --> 00:13:18.799 game for us. Now we've found that you can't just set quarterly goals. 178 00:13:18.840 --> 00:13:24.120 You have to create a system for setting those, for accountability, for review. 179 00:13:24.159 --> 00:13:26.120 There's actually more that goes into it than you would actually think. I 180 00:13:26.159 --> 00:13:31.039 understand why there are tech companies built around okay RS and e o s and 181 00:13:31.080 --> 00:13:35.279 those sorts of things now, but about ninety days is the time that it 182 00:13:35.320 --> 00:13:39.399 takes to lose energy, to lose focus, to use the word of the 183 00:13:39.519 --> 00:13:43.480 day. And so, whether it's e o s or something like that, 184 00:13:43.639 --> 00:13:48.720 a system for goal setting and execution in your marketing team, paired with that 185 00:13:48.840 --> 00:13:52.080 hub and spoke model of your content in the center that feeds the rest, 186 00:13:52.399 --> 00:13:56.039 really can be a great combination. And then I think the third thing to 187 00:13:56.120 --> 00:14:01.279 get really granular. I heard something about this on the customer experience podcast with 188 00:14:01.480 --> 00:14:09.039 Ethan Butte the other day is talk about talking, talk about your communication strategy 189 00:14:09.120 --> 00:14:11.840 internally, because marketing teams are doing creative work, they're doing a lot of 190 00:14:11.840 --> 00:14:18.879 different things. So I think marketing teams are especially susceptible to communication fatigue, 191 00:14:18.919 --> 00:14:22.000 to channel overwhelmed. Right I'm slacking someone about this, I'm texting someone about 192 00:14:22.000 --> 00:14:26.600 that, I'm calling, we're emailing here. So on your team, set 193 00:14:26.679 --> 00:14:31.799 some priorities or set some kind of bright line rules for hey, this is 194 00:14:31.000 --> 00:14:35.720 where we communicate, what we communicate about in a sauna. This is what 195 00:14:35.759 --> 00:14:39.080 we use slack for, this is when and how we text each other. 196 00:14:39.159 --> 00:14:43.240 Not to be kind of dogmatic about it, but to set some bright line 197 00:14:43.320 --> 00:14:48.559 rules that allow you to focus and get the deep work done that needs to 198 00:14:48.600 --> 00:14:52.639 happen. I love all three of those Logan. I think that's some key 199 00:14:52.679 --> 00:14:56.960 insights and it had this question rolling around in my mind. I am so 200 00:14:56.000 --> 00:15:03.279 guilty of always thinking in questions. But I under where are people currently asking? 201 00:15:03.720 --> 00:15:05.720 What should we stop doing? Like, where's the meeting? Where that 202 00:15:05.759 --> 00:15:09.159 shows up, and how does it show up? Where do you actually go 203 00:15:09.240 --> 00:15:13.679 back and forth with the team on we've been running this for a long time 204 00:15:13.080 --> 00:15:16.039 and now it needs to change or shift, and it doesn't mean like, 205 00:15:16.159 --> 00:15:20.639 okay, we were using written content and now we don't use written content at 206 00:15:20.679 --> 00:15:24.559 all, but we're renegotiating how much written content we come out with or having 207 00:15:24.679 --> 00:15:28.879 like, for us, around B two B growth, going from five episodes 208 00:15:28.919 --> 00:15:31.879 to three, or what's the future look like? That makes the most sense 209 00:15:31.919 --> 00:15:37.440 in this current season, where you have that recurring conversation, matters a lot 210 00:15:37.679 --> 00:15:41.399 because the more that you have these like new goals, new things that you 211 00:15:41.440 --> 00:15:45.480 want to do, they again we'll run into a bandwidth issue, you're going 212 00:15:45.559 --> 00:15:50.919 to run into a capacity problem if you don't have a conversation around what can 213 00:15:50.960 --> 00:15:54.559 you actually manage right now. So that question to me and finding a place, 214 00:15:54.639 --> 00:15:58.639 a recurring meeting where that question can be asked becomes really compelling and I'd 215 00:15:58.679 --> 00:16:03.360 say if you're a marketing leader, you need to be the one who initiates 216 00:16:03.360 --> 00:16:07.080 that. There are probably members of your team who are thinking that, but 217 00:16:07.120 --> 00:16:10.960 they don't want to be the one to say should we stop doing this webinar 218 00:16:11.039 --> 00:16:14.919 series because it was the VPS idea right. It's gonna be hard for them 219 00:16:14.919 --> 00:16:18.559 to raise their hand and say maybe we should next that right, but if 220 00:16:18.840 --> 00:16:21.879 you, as the leaders say look, everything is on the table. What 221 00:16:22.000 --> 00:16:26.720 should we think about stopping right now? And I think you'll be surprised at 222 00:16:26.720 --> 00:16:32.080 what your team may bring up if you're the one who prompts that m that's 223 00:16:32.120 --> 00:16:37.320 what I love so much about e o s. two is it creates a 224 00:16:37.440 --> 00:16:42.519 system. It creates rhythms for surfacing those issues. So in in the weekly 225 00:16:42.559 --> 00:16:48.039 what they call Elton Level Ten meeting Um that departments have and that the company 226 00:16:48.120 --> 00:16:52.600 leadership team has, that anyone can can bring up an issue to throw on 227 00:16:52.639 --> 00:16:56.960 the issues list and they call it the I D s list because it's identified. 228 00:16:56.960 --> 00:17:02.120 You first have to identify what is the root issue and then you discuss 229 00:17:02.200 --> 00:17:06.319 it and then you solve it, and when you solve it, that issue 230 00:17:06.319 --> 00:17:11.000 should not pop back up on the list. And so what I found as 231 00:17:11.079 --> 00:17:17.960 the CEO is really having to over communicate that people put issues on the list. 232 00:17:18.559 --> 00:17:22.359 Like, don't be afraid to put issues on the list. I cannot 233 00:17:22.359 --> 00:17:26.720 be the only one seeing issues. Across the business everyone's seeing issues. But 234 00:17:26.960 --> 00:17:30.880 to your point earlier, can I bring this issue up because it was James's 235 00:17:30.880 --> 00:17:33.680 idea six months ago, and if I say that it's not working then you 236 00:17:33.720 --> 00:17:37.640 know, or I don't really want to rub my boss the wrong way, 237 00:17:37.720 --> 00:17:41.400 because I know they were really championing this thing. And so that's what's so 238 00:17:41.440 --> 00:17:45.640 cool about us, the Rock Setting piece of Eos, just the way they 239 00:17:45.640 --> 00:17:49.640 do quarterly rocks and and annual that roll up to annual rocks that are roll 240 00:17:49.720 --> 00:17:53.319 up to an annual annual goals and then a three year picture and a ten 241 00:17:53.400 --> 00:18:00.839 year plan like that's transformed our business. But the weekly like rhythm and cadence 242 00:18:00.039 --> 00:18:04.960 of meeting discussing these issues. But you're not going to get the most out 243 00:18:04.960 --> 00:18:10.599 of those meetings if you're not invited constantly, like making sure everybody knows, 244 00:18:10.640 --> 00:18:15.720 like you are responsible for bringing issues, any problems you see across the business, 245 00:18:15.759 --> 00:18:18.319 like we're not going to talk about them if you don't bring them. 246 00:18:18.359 --> 00:18:23.000 And so to your point, Benji, it's like that idea of like somebody 247 00:18:23.079 --> 00:18:26.960 needs to bring an issue to say, like what what do we need to 248 00:18:26.960 --> 00:18:30.279 stop doing right now, like I'm feeling overwhelmed, drama, obser everything that 249 00:18:30.319 --> 00:18:33.680 somebody else on my team is overwhelmed, like what do we need to stop 250 00:18:33.680 --> 00:18:37.640 doing? And the more we can not only make it okay but make people 251 00:18:37.839 --> 00:18:44.400 like know how critical that bringing issues to those meetings are, so that that's 252 00:18:44.400 --> 00:18:45.680 what I like. The structure of e O s, to me, is 253 00:18:45.720 --> 00:18:56.119 phenomenal because it creates space for those kind of questions to be asked. Hey 254 00:18:56.160 --> 00:18:57.880 everyone, if you've been listening to be to be growth for a while, 255 00:18:59.000 --> 00:19:03.079 you know that we are big proponents of putting out original, organic content on 256 00:19:03.160 --> 00:19:07.000 Linkedin, but one thing that's always been a struggle for a team like ours 257 00:19:07.279 --> 00:19:12.319 is easily tracking the reach of that linkedin content. That's why we're really excited 258 00:19:12.440 --> 00:19:17.960 about shield analytics. Since our team started using shield, we've been able to 259 00:19:18.000 --> 00:19:22.880 easily track the reach and performance of our linkedin content without having to manually log 260 00:19:22.920 --> 00:19:27.880 it ourselves. It automatically creates reports and it generates dashboards that are incredibly useful 261 00:19:29.240 --> 00:19:33.440 to determining things like what content has been performing the best, what days of 262 00:19:33.440 --> 00:19:38.000 the week are we getting the most engagement and our average views per post. 263 00:19:38.160 --> 00:19:45.000 Shield has been a game changer for our entire team's productivity and performance on Linkedin. 264 00:19:45.200 --> 00:19:48.839 I highly suggest checking out this tool if you're publishing content on Linkedin for 265 00:19:48.880 --> 00:19:55.000 yourselves or for your company. You can get a ten day free trial at 266 00:19:55.000 --> 00:20:00.839 shield APP DOT AI, or you can get a discount with our Promo Code 267 00:20:00.160 --> 00:20:04.240 B. Two B growth. Again, that's shield APP DOT AI, and 268 00:20:04.319 --> 00:20:10.920 the Promo Code is B, the number to be growth. All one word 269 00:20:11.240 --> 00:20:15.039 for a discount. All right, let's get back into the show. So 270 00:20:15.079 --> 00:20:18.720 that that's what I like. The structure of e o s to me is 271 00:20:18.759 --> 00:20:25.640 phenomenal because it creates space for those kind of questions to be asked. Yeah, 272 00:20:25.680 --> 00:20:29.079 for anybody that's not familiar with the e O s, just Google level 273 00:20:29.119 --> 00:20:32.599 ten meeting, even if you're not adopting e o s like we have here 274 00:20:32.599 --> 00:20:36.920 at sweet fish, what James is talking about here with the ID s list, 275 00:20:37.000 --> 00:20:41.519 the issues lists and the way that you can structure a meeting to encourage 276 00:20:41.519 --> 00:20:44.599 your team to bring up issues. I'm glad you said that, James, 277 00:20:44.640 --> 00:20:49.000 because just last week you mentioned to me and two of our directors that, 278 00:20:49.079 --> 00:20:53.920 Hey, I noticed you guys haven't put any issues on the list for next 279 00:20:53.960 --> 00:20:57.319 week's meeting. It wasn't like, Hey, make sure you don't bring up 280 00:20:57.359 --> 00:21:00.559 anything and complain in next week's meaning. It was like you need to bring 281 00:21:00.640 --> 00:21:03.839 something because I know that you're experiencing issues, and that was a good example 282 00:21:03.880 --> 00:21:08.160 of what I was mentioning earlier that oftentimes it needs to come from the leader 283 00:21:08.240 --> 00:21:12.000 to create those prompts. If you Google level ten meeting and look at some 284 00:21:12.079 --> 00:21:17.799 examples out there, you can start implementing an issues list for your marketing team 285 00:21:17.920 --> 00:21:22.200 that could foster exactly what we're talking about here. I'll give two books. 286 00:21:22.400 --> 00:21:25.839 What the heck is the OS? That's a book that you know we would 287 00:21:25.839 --> 00:21:27.400 recommend here. Clearly it's going to walk into the whole system. And then 288 00:21:27.440 --> 00:21:32.599 deep work by CAL Newport. From just a focused perspective as far as like 289 00:21:32.640 --> 00:21:37.319 I'm gonna Time Block out when I'm available to other people and like, that's 290 00:21:37.319 --> 00:21:40.319 more on a personal level. But if you can get a rhythm of deep 291 00:21:40.319 --> 00:21:45.160 work, especially if you live in the content marketing space where it's easy to 292 00:21:45.240 --> 00:21:48.720 just check social and then look up and be like where did I just lose 293 00:21:48.720 --> 00:21:53.200 forty five minutes, that book will help you really prioritize and figure out where 294 00:21:53.559 --> 00:21:56.240 you can focus. Logan. I wanted to ask you a follow up question 295 00:21:56.240 --> 00:22:03.039 on something you said earlier because you had mentioned one of our internal things that 296 00:22:03.079 --> 00:22:07.079 we can we can struggle with is not running an experiment for long enough so 297 00:22:07.519 --> 00:22:11.759 when we're talking about wanting to Nix something. I think the pushback I hear 298 00:22:11.759 --> 00:22:15.440 in my own brain that I'd love to hear you talk you riff on a 299 00:22:15.480 --> 00:22:18.880 little bit, is how do you balance the two, like, okay, 300 00:22:18.119 --> 00:22:22.880 it's time to kill this, versus we haven't run the experiment long enough to 301 00:22:22.000 --> 00:22:26.839 actually know if we're getting a result. Sometimes it comes down to where you 302 00:22:26.960 --> 00:22:32.880 started, because we can get really excited about something and we can even set 303 00:22:32.960 --> 00:22:34.720 up plan in place of okay, we're gonna do this, then this, 304 00:22:34.839 --> 00:22:38.200 then this, over the next ninety days or the next two quarters. But, 305 00:22:38.599 --> 00:22:42.039 whoops, we forgot to ask how are we going to measure success? 306 00:22:42.079 --> 00:22:45.440 How are we going to measure if we're on track or off track at thirty 307 00:22:45.519 --> 00:22:48.839 days in, at sixty days in, right, and just like a good 308 00:22:48.880 --> 00:22:52.880 sales rep would ask you if they're qualifying a situation, what does success look 309 00:22:52.960 --> 00:22:57.279 like if you were able to do this or use our product or start with 310 00:22:57.319 --> 00:23:00.839 our service to accomplish whatever you're trying to accomplish? You need to ask that 311 00:23:00.920 --> 00:23:04.079 of your team because just have you, just because you have a plan in 312 00:23:04.200 --> 00:23:08.039 place of what you want to do when, doesn't mean you've taken the time 313 00:23:08.079 --> 00:23:15.440 to identify the leading indicators and the success metrics that you want to look at 314 00:23:15.519 --> 00:23:18.160 to determine if you're on track or off track. So I think it starts 315 00:23:18.160 --> 00:23:22.119 with not skipping that step initially. Right, and then you can look at 316 00:23:22.200 --> 00:23:26.400 some patterns, like maybe you're like, well, we've mixed a few things, 317 00:23:26.440 --> 00:23:30.759 like four things over the last year that we were only forty five days 318 00:23:30.920 --> 00:23:34.559 into. Right, okay, then maybe you need to swing the pendulum to 319 00:23:34.599 --> 00:23:38.400 the other side. As most things in life, I think there's wisdom in 320 00:23:38.599 --> 00:23:41.960 moderation and in the middle, and so if you notice that you're swinging to 321 00:23:42.039 --> 00:23:47.720 one side of starting too many things and mixing them quickly, then you probably 322 00:23:47.720 --> 00:23:51.000 want to err on the side of moving the other direction. If you're sticking 323 00:23:51.039 --> 00:23:55.039 with things too long and noticing that, Oh Dang, we look up and 324 00:23:55.279 --> 00:23:57.920 Oh, I can't believe we're doing it because that's the way we've always done 325 00:23:57.920 --> 00:24:03.400 it. How did get there, then you probably need to air on the 326 00:24:03.440 --> 00:24:07.559 other side. So looking at those patterns of your team's performance and the way 327 00:24:07.559 --> 00:24:10.920 you talk about things, I think can help Logan. You just mentioned something 328 00:24:11.119 --> 00:24:15.759 that made me think of this. You know, at least my my responsibility 329 00:24:15.880 --> 00:24:21.559 for adding in our organization for adding, a lack of like for creating and 330 00:24:21.720 --> 00:24:25.519 a culture of of lack of focus. So much of it comes down to 331 00:24:26.240 --> 00:24:30.279 like what you had mentioned around you know, it's the newness of an idea, 332 00:24:30.559 --> 00:24:33.720 and so I'll hear somebody talk about something, I'll think it's brilliant. 333 00:24:33.039 --> 00:24:37.960 And what's so great about E O s? It's a filtering mechanism because if 334 00:24:37.960 --> 00:24:42.440 we've already set our rocks for the quarter, I know that I can't I 335 00:24:42.480 --> 00:24:48.200 can't go in and change those rocks. So I have to park that idea 336 00:24:48.839 --> 00:24:53.359 in our you know, kind of potential rocks list on a sauna and if 337 00:24:53.400 --> 00:24:59.759 I'm constantly adding ideas throughout the quarter, what I've found is just being able 338 00:24:59.759 --> 00:25:03.480 to sit on some of these ideas for even a couple of weeks. We'll 339 00:25:03.559 --> 00:25:07.880 get to our rocks setting session and we'll go and obviously look at. Okay, 340 00:25:07.880 --> 00:25:12.079 what rocks did we say that could be potential rocks last quarter as we're 341 00:25:12.079 --> 00:25:15.480 setting our new rocks, and I go now that it's not relevant anymore. 342 00:25:15.799 --> 00:25:22.839 Now that's not relevant anymore because I just the system allows for time to be 343 00:25:22.960 --> 00:25:27.319 in place between the newness and freshness of when you had the idea and when 344 00:25:27.359 --> 00:25:32.160 it's like okay, time to rally the troops and the team around actually executing 345 00:25:32.200 --> 00:25:34.640 this, where before e o s we didn't have that. So it was 346 00:25:34.680 --> 00:25:38.240 like ideas just flying around. Yeah, I have an idea. In the 347 00:25:38.279 --> 00:25:42.559 middle of the night on a Tuesday and Wednesday I'm like we're going this way, 348 00:25:42.640 --> 00:25:48.000 and everybody's like what the Hell? Like this, this is chaos. 349 00:25:48.200 --> 00:25:53.079 It's like the wisdom in what I've heard some people say is like they set 350 00:25:53.079 --> 00:25:57.680 a benchmark of over a hundred dollars or over a thousand dollars, whatever it 351 00:25:57.839 --> 00:26:02.599 is. If I'm going to send more than X, I'm going to sleep 352 00:26:02.640 --> 00:26:04.200 on it or, you know, if it's over a thousand, I'm gonna 353 00:26:04.240 --> 00:26:08.640 wait a week right and see how I feel. But having a spot to 354 00:26:08.839 --> 00:26:14.079 park those ideas, whether that's in Asana or a Google Doc, that your 355 00:26:14.079 --> 00:26:18.960 team, you know, has consistent access to across the team, to where 356 00:26:18.000 --> 00:26:22.400 you don't feel like you're letting good ideas slip through the cracks, but you're 357 00:26:22.480 --> 00:26:26.960 not oh Dang, if we don't get started on this tomorrow, nothing is 358 00:26:27.119 --> 00:26:32.079 ever going to happen that again. It's that moderation. It is moderation. 359 00:26:32.119 --> 00:26:34.920 But where, I think, where it gets more complex is some things are 360 00:26:36.039 --> 00:26:40.400 clearly rocks, like they're clearly the the high value, like this would be 361 00:26:40.440 --> 00:26:45.119 a whole quarter project. But that might not be the thing that distracts. 362 00:26:45.359 --> 00:26:48.920 It's like all these little things that come up that would never be a rock. 363 00:26:48.039 --> 00:26:52.759 So now we have a thousand things on our to do list that are 364 00:26:52.880 --> 00:26:56.880 like technically side projects. They're not actually going to be the big things that 365 00:26:56.920 --> 00:27:00.079 move the company forward, but they ended up on our list because they're not 366 00:27:00.680 --> 00:27:03.480 quite big enough for rocks. But so we can probably implement them next week. 367 00:27:03.519 --> 00:27:08.160 You know, that's where you have to balance that tension of like does 368 00:27:08.240 --> 00:27:14.119 this just distract from from what we currently have on our plate? Because it's 369 00:27:14.119 --> 00:27:15.440 a good idea, but it's not quite a great idea, you know. 370 00:27:15.880 --> 00:27:21.279 Yeah, yeah, it relates to time blocking, as you talked about with 371 00:27:21.720 --> 00:27:26.759 what you were mentioning with Count Newport's book, and where the idea for rocks 372 00:27:26.839 --> 00:27:30.599 come from. So the reason that quarterly goals in e o s are called 373 00:27:30.680 --> 00:27:34.160 rocks is from that old analogy where a professor takes a jar, put some 374 00:27:34.240 --> 00:27:37.480 big rocks in it and asked the class is it full? Yes, it's 375 00:27:37.519 --> 00:27:41.079 full. Then he dumps pebbles in. Oh, now is it full? 376 00:27:41.160 --> 00:27:44.400 Yeah, dumps some sand in. Now is it full? Yeah, then 377 00:27:44.559 --> 00:27:47.920 puts water in. Right, but if you started with the water you couldn't 378 00:27:47.920 --> 00:27:51.559 have gotten all those other things in. So you have to set those goals 379 00:27:51.759 --> 00:27:55.359 and you have to time block and have accountability to that. That way you 380 00:27:55.400 --> 00:27:57.799 can say no, I do not have time for this because I'm starting with 381 00:27:57.839 --> 00:28:02.599 the rocks, not the sand and the water. It's good. James, 382 00:28:02.599 --> 00:28:07.160 you posted about focus and and our findings on Linkedin and you've got a number 383 00:28:07.400 --> 00:28:11.039 of responses. You want to talk about some of what you were seeing in 384 00:28:11.079 --> 00:28:15.240 some of the feedback? Yeah, so, so some of the comments that 385 00:28:15.279 --> 00:28:18.920 we got just, you know, kind of reading through here. One said 386 00:28:18.960 --> 00:28:25.000 I require new ideas every year into the marketing plan and budget. That's how 387 00:28:25.039 --> 00:28:27.920 we keep it fresh and the team innovating and engaged. I love that. 388 00:28:29.000 --> 00:28:33.720 A requirement for fresh new ideas in our organization. I probably because I'm the 389 00:28:33.799 --> 00:28:36.880 leader of it. We have no shortage of new ideas. Um So I 390 00:28:36.880 --> 00:28:40.079 don't think we was like, sounds like a limit for us. It's not. 391 00:28:40.359 --> 00:28:45.519 Maxim another one, somebody else had mentioned implementing Eos has been a game 392 00:28:45.599 --> 00:28:49.200 changer. Another person the majority of conversations I've had about this issue. It's 393 00:28:49.240 --> 00:28:53.640 because the leadership team wants to please everyone. So when VP of sales needs 394 00:28:53.680 --> 00:28:57.079 something, it's a top priority, when CEO wants something, it's a top 395 00:28:57.079 --> 00:29:00.599 priority, and the team is on a able to focus on their rocks because 396 00:29:00.640 --> 00:29:06.960 they're pressured to chase these shiny objects. And and that's where I think to 397 00:29:07.119 --> 00:29:11.480 me, you know that that's a culture problem and if if the leadership is 398 00:29:11.519 --> 00:29:14.799 not creating an atmosphere where people feel like they can push back and say, 399 00:29:14.839 --> 00:29:18.079 Hey, you know, even as me as a CEO, Hey, I've 400 00:29:18.119 --> 00:29:22.119 asked you to do something, but it's like, Hey, I'm really focused 401 00:29:22.119 --> 00:29:25.720 on this rock right now and I'm not gonna have bandwidth to finish the rock. 402 00:29:25.880 --> 00:29:29.799 And this when given. I can only speak for me. I can't 403 00:29:29.799 --> 00:29:33.000 speak for other leaders, but like for you're to tell me that okay, 404 00:29:33.039 --> 00:29:36.720 like focus on your rock, like the thing. I just either didn't realize 405 00:29:36.759 --> 00:29:38.000 it was going to be that heavy of a lift or I you know, 406 00:29:38.160 --> 00:29:42.119 I wasn't aware that you had this other rock. And so I think that's 407 00:29:42.240 --> 00:29:45.960 that's a culture issue. If you're in an organization where you don't feel like 408 00:29:45.000 --> 00:29:48.039 you can where you can push back, that's a tough spot to be. 409 00:29:48.160 --> 00:29:51.759 I would probably try to find somewhere else to be. You know, earlier 410 00:29:51.759 --> 00:29:55.920 we were talking about as a leader. What do you do to facilitate that, 411 00:29:55.920 --> 00:29:57.880 that hand raising of we have an issue here. I've got too much 412 00:29:57.960 --> 00:30:03.960 bandwidth. We need to change direction. From the perspective of managing up, 413 00:30:04.079 --> 00:30:08.559 one of the things that you can do is if your team has a goal 414 00:30:08.640 --> 00:30:14.039 setting and tracking system in place, like rocks with e o s is, 415 00:30:14.200 --> 00:30:17.160 when your boss comes to you and says we need to do this, or 416 00:30:17.319 --> 00:30:19.680 do you have time for this? That allows you to say, I can 417 00:30:19.720 --> 00:30:22.559 say yes to this, but if I say yes to this, I'm saying 418 00:30:22.599 --> 00:30:26.839 no to what I've already been asked to do. I'm saying no to half 419 00:30:26.839 --> 00:30:30.720 of this project. Or that means this project that was supposed to be done 420 00:30:30.920 --> 00:30:36.160 July is now into August. Is that okay, because this is what I 421 00:30:36.200 --> 00:30:38.240 need in order to say yes to that? Or this is what's going to 422 00:30:38.319 --> 00:30:42.519 happen if I say yes to that, and that language can be really empowering 423 00:30:42.599 --> 00:30:47.839 for you to manage up to your boss or your supervisor, and it's really 424 00:30:47.920 --> 00:30:52.319 it's really easy to assume that your leader, especially if it's like your boss's 425 00:30:52.359 --> 00:30:59.079 boss, it's really easy to assume that they know what you're focused on, 426 00:30:59.279 --> 00:31:03.279 what what context of your situation. So it's really easy to hear that and 427 00:31:03.319 --> 00:31:06.599 go, do they not know that? I've you know that so and so 428 00:31:06.720 --> 00:31:08.319 just asked me to do this, this and this, and I've also got 429 00:31:08.319 --> 00:31:12.079 this. No, actually, they don't know. Like they're thinking about a 430 00:31:12.079 --> 00:31:18.440 wide variety of things, and so hopefully the culture of the organization is for 431 00:31:18.480 --> 00:31:22.759 you to see. I mean how Logan phrase that was was beautiful. It's 432 00:31:22.839 --> 00:31:26.240 hey, if I focus on this and I do this, it means I'm 433 00:31:26.279 --> 00:31:29.240 not going to do this. Is that what you want? And so you're 434 00:31:29.240 --> 00:31:32.000 putting it back on them and, like I said earlier, more often than 435 00:31:32.079 --> 00:31:33.119 not they're gonna say, Oh, no, no, I didn't realize that. 436 00:31:33.279 --> 00:31:38.880 Well, you've just saved yourself weeks of distraction and probably frustration across your 437 00:31:38.960 --> 00:31:45.400 organ by having this posture of pushing back a little bit and not just blindly 438 00:31:45.440 --> 00:31:48.680 taking it because it's like, oh, it's my boss's boss, I've I've 439 00:31:48.720 --> 00:31:51.279 got to do this right. I think that's a fast path to burn out 440 00:31:51.319 --> 00:31:55.839 too. In any position that you go into as a leader, if you 441 00:31:55.880 --> 00:32:00.279 can start by laying the ground rule that you want push back and you can 442 00:32:00.279 --> 00:32:04.599 say it early and often, you set yourself up for success. The more 443 00:32:04.680 --> 00:32:07.920 you say it and give people permission, the more they'll do it. But 444 00:32:07.960 --> 00:32:10.839 a lot of people are not going to do what we're advocating for right now 445 00:32:12.200 --> 00:32:15.759 because the culture doesn't exist to actually push that forward. It sounds so great 446 00:32:15.799 --> 00:32:19.720 in theory, but if you were to go to your boss or your boss's 447 00:32:19.759 --> 00:32:22.559 boss and give that type of pushback, it would seem so out of left 448 00:32:22.599 --> 00:32:27.160 field because it's it might not be commonplace. So that's where to me from 449 00:32:27.200 --> 00:32:30.200 a leadership standpoint. Hey, in this room again, if it's if it's 450 00:32:30.200 --> 00:32:34.920 your staff meeting or if it's just your marketing team meeting, whatever, the 451 00:32:34.960 --> 00:32:39.119 rooms are where you want the ideas to really go back and forth and you 452 00:32:39.160 --> 00:32:44.079 want to fight for the best idea, you could establish that every time you 453 00:32:44.160 --> 00:32:46.519 have one of those conversations. Hey, I want pushback. Hey, I 454 00:32:46.559 --> 00:32:50.880 want you to tell me where this has holes in it. The more often 455 00:32:50.920 --> 00:32:53.519 you do that, the culture gets reinforced. There was one more James on 456 00:32:53.559 --> 00:32:57.519 here. Do you want to highlight that before we start to wrap here? 457 00:32:57.799 --> 00:33:00.839 This last comment was it mostly happens because if Momo and many time marketing leaders 458 00:33:00.880 --> 00:33:05.079 and teams have a need to show that they are doing a lot. This 459 00:33:05.200 --> 00:33:08.000 speaks to what, you know, we said earlier. There's a barrage of 460 00:33:08.079 --> 00:33:14.880 things that can work and the fear of missing out on not doing category creation 461 00:33:15.400 --> 00:33:20.640 because you're doing, you know, a demand creation strategy, or the feeling 462 00:33:20.640 --> 00:33:23.079 of missing out of all of these potential, you know, all of this 463 00:33:23.160 --> 00:33:27.759 site traffic that you could get come into your site, because there's this arbitrage 464 00:33:27.799 --> 00:33:30.480 to rank for all these keywords related to this. You know, Wide Open 465 00:33:30.799 --> 00:33:35.000 set of words that you know you could rank four, but it's like, 466 00:33:35.079 --> 00:33:37.279 if we are doing that, then we're that we're not doing this, and 467 00:33:37.319 --> 00:33:42.240 so that fear of missing out one really resonated with me because I think that's 468 00:33:42.720 --> 00:33:45.880 that's that's what feels crippling to me. oftentimes it's like, oh, but 469 00:33:45.960 --> 00:33:47.559 I know all these different things can work and I just want to do all 470 00:33:47.559 --> 00:33:52.480 of them. Yeah, it's I think the one that I think of see 471 00:33:52.519 --> 00:33:55.440 a lot of content specifically, is when you go to a website and they 472 00:33:55.480 --> 00:34:00.319 have like every social media link imaginable, like, Oh, if I click 473 00:34:00.359 --> 00:34:04.319 on this, I know about to hit a graveyard on like at least four 474 00:34:04.359 --> 00:34:07.519 of these platforms where you tried for like two weeks and it was way beyond 475 00:34:07.559 --> 00:34:13.320 bandwidth, way beyond focus, and now you're gone and I think hopefully we're 476 00:34:13.360 --> 00:34:20.480 realizing you can pick one or two channels where your potential ideal buyer is most 477 00:34:20.519 --> 00:34:22.760 active and just live there. But man, that's the one where I'm like, 478 00:34:22.920 --> 00:34:25.519 yeah, we have Fomo, oh I have to be on whatever the 479 00:34:25.599 --> 00:34:29.880 latest channel is because everybody else is there and that's we're gonna miss out. 480 00:34:30.239 --> 00:34:34.679 That's such a great call out. That is literally the visualization of what we're 481 00:34:34.719 --> 00:34:37.840 talking about. and Go to a B, two B brand's website, scroll 482 00:34:37.920 --> 00:34:44.000 to the bottom, look at one how many different social media icons and links 483 00:34:44.000 --> 00:34:47.599 are there and how many of them are a graveyard? If that happens, 484 00:34:47.679 --> 00:34:53.119 then you've probably got a lack of focus on that marketing team. But I 485 00:34:53.480 --> 00:34:59.079 think about like yeah, and and again, I am the most guilty culprit 486 00:34:59.239 --> 00:35:04.440 of lack of focus, but I just recently stepped into owning the marketing function 487 00:35:05.079 --> 00:35:09.519 as REX Baverston left the organization to get back into consulting and one of the 488 00:35:09.519 --> 00:35:14.400 things that I wanted to do with our team, with with emily and Benji, 489 00:35:14.639 --> 00:35:16.719 is said it very like be as clear as I possibly could be about 490 00:35:16.760 --> 00:35:22.199 like we are going to create demand by dominating linkedin. And so what we 491 00:35:22.239 --> 00:35:25.519 are doing today by recording this, speaking to what I was referring to earlier, 492 00:35:25.559 --> 00:35:28.679 with a show, being able to do, all of you know, 493 00:35:28.719 --> 00:35:32.320 a wide variety of these tactical executions of marketing. If we're going to dominate 494 00:35:32.360 --> 00:35:37.320 Linkedin, we know that video is the best way to do that because it 495 00:35:37.320 --> 00:35:42.159 builds affinity and that's aligned with our brand story. What we we want to 496 00:35:42.199 --> 00:35:45.079 drink our own champagne. We're telling our clients they need to build affinity. 497 00:35:45.320 --> 00:35:49.440 We need to build affinity. So, you know, creating demand by dominating 498 00:35:49.519 --> 00:35:52.920 Linkedin is like our rallying cry. Will that be our rallying Christ six months 499 00:35:52.920 --> 00:35:57.599 from now? Maybe, like something might adjust, something might happen in the 500 00:35:57.599 --> 00:36:00.760 business. We need to focus somewhere else, but I'm trying, as you 501 00:36:00.800 --> 00:36:04.320 know, I'm trying very hard, and Benji could probably, you know, 502 00:36:04.400 --> 00:36:08.039 tell everyone how effective is that. It actually is, but like trying to 503 00:36:08.079 --> 00:36:15.199 focus all of our resources around that. It's crazy how freeing it is whenever 504 00:36:15.320 --> 00:36:16.880 you have that kind of focus, because it's like, nope, that's not 505 00:36:16.920 --> 00:36:21.320 relevant, that's not going to help us create demand by dominating linkedin. Now, 506 00:36:21.519 --> 00:36:23.079 that's that's not gonna do it either. Oh Yep, I'd love to 507 00:36:23.159 --> 00:36:27.159 hire that team of writers to try to rank for those keywords, but it's 508 00:36:27.159 --> 00:36:30.000 not gonna be this quarter. But, but it's still a constant struggle. 509 00:36:30.000 --> 00:36:32.360 I mean here we are talking about it and I'll probably end up sending Benji 510 00:36:32.519 --> 00:36:37.599 or emily a text message in six hours, but with some new article that 511 00:36:37.639 --> 00:36:40.000 I saw the hours that will only be eight o'clock. Probably more like twelve 512 00:36:40.079 --> 00:36:45.039 hours in the middle of the night. You've gotten better at the middle of 513 00:36:45.079 --> 00:36:49.159 the night ideas coming through via slack so that you know team members don't get 514 00:36:49.239 --> 00:36:52.079 texts immediately. Yeah, I try to do this later on slack function. 515 00:36:52.159 --> 00:37:00.880 Now this has been such an insightful conversation. I'll end with the quick story. 516 00:37:00.920 --> 00:37:04.559 It's actually an old Indian parable that I feel like just sums this up 517 00:37:04.599 --> 00:37:07.840 so well. It's just this idea of there's this old ancient Indian stage he 518 00:37:07.880 --> 00:37:14.320 has two disciples and the first one comes to him and there bow and Arrow. 519 00:37:14.920 --> 00:37:16.719 He says focus on the bird's eye. And then he says what do 520 00:37:16.760 --> 00:37:22.039 you see? And this disciple, this follower, goes I see the clouds, 521 00:37:22.119 --> 00:37:27.000 I see the forest, I see the trees, I see all every 522 00:37:27.039 --> 00:37:29.960 he just starts describing. I see that squirrel over there. And then the 523 00:37:30.000 --> 00:37:32.440 stage asks the second disciple, the second follower, what do you see? 524 00:37:32.440 --> 00:37:37.039 And he says I see the eye of the bird and that's focus. Right. 525 00:37:37.039 --> 00:37:39.239 He says, okay, shoot your shot. To me, that's it 526 00:37:39.480 --> 00:37:45.960 like when you know that exact Arrow, like very specific, that's the exact 527 00:37:45.960 --> 00:37:49.800 spot target I want to hit, and that's all you see. Everything else 528 00:37:49.800 --> 00:37:52.400 that's in the periphery goes away. It's like, I see the bird's eye. 529 00:37:52.079 --> 00:37:55.480 That's a very different mentality. You know exactly where you're headed. You 530 00:37:55.519 --> 00:38:00.840 know exactly where you're going. That's what we're hoping for for you, for 531 00:38:00.880 --> 00:38:04.199 your organization. That's why B two B growth exists, hopefully not to just 532 00:38:04.239 --> 00:38:09.039 give you abundance of ideas, but to help you continue to grow and to 533 00:38:09.159 --> 00:38:14.159 shape your thinking on some of this stuff. This has been a fascinating conversation. 534 00:38:14.639 --> 00:38:16.320 We're so excited to get to share more of these in the future. 535 00:38:16.360 --> 00:38:19.599 If you want to connect with James, if you want to connect with Logan, 536 00:38:19.599 --> 00:38:21.800 if you want to connect with me on Linkedin, we'd love to chat 537 00:38:21.840 --> 00:38:24.920 with you about marketing, about business, about life. Fellas, it was 538 00:38:25.000 --> 00:38:29.840 a pleasure, it was an honor to record this with you. Let's stay 539 00:38:29.880 --> 00:38:34.400 focused this week and, uh, do the work that matters. And Benji, 540 00:38:34.480 --> 00:38:37.239 I don't know if we want to tease the next insight that we're going 541 00:38:37.280 --> 00:38:39.599 to be dropping, but like, like you mentioned, we interviewed a hundred 542 00:38:39.639 --> 00:38:44.480 B two B marketing leaders. We asked him fifteen different questions and the next 543 00:38:44.519 --> 00:38:49.440 insight we're gonna be dropping is an insight that we developed around the question of 544 00:38:49.599 --> 00:38:55.519 what is the number one metric your CEO is measuring marketing success? One really, 545 00:38:55.519 --> 00:38:59.960 really interesting. I've been talking with Timmy about this at the last, 546 00:39:00.320 --> 00:39:04.000 you know, seven or eight of our of our lunches. So really excited 547 00:39:04.039 --> 00:39:06.679 to share that in one of the one of the future episodes. It probably 548 00:39:06.679 --> 00:39:09.079 won't be the very next episode that you listened because we're we're still working on 549 00:39:09.119 --> 00:39:13.320 tweaking some different things with B two B growth, but it's it's coming down 550 00:39:13.320 --> 00:39:16.000 the pipe soon. Yeah, excited for all the future conversations and to share 551 00:39:16.039 --> 00:39:21.880 what we've been learning from this original research that we've been doing. Stay tuned. 552 00:39:21.920 --> 00:39:37.519 We'll be back real soon with another episode. If you enjoyed today's show, 553 00:39:37.639 --> 00:39:40.559 hit subscribe for more marketing goodness. And if you really enjoyed today's show, 554 00:39:40.679 --> 00:39:45.480 take a second to rate and review the podcast on the platform you're listening 555 00:39:45.519 --> 00:39:49.639 to it on right now. If you really really enjoyed this episode, share 556 00:39:49.679 --> 00:39:52.880 the love by texting it to a friend who would find it insightful. Thanks 557 00:39:52.920 --> 00:40:00.679 for listening and thanks for sharing. Boo