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Recorded: Monday 25 October 2021 | Published: Friday 29 October 2021
Successful people solve better problems.
(Aside: Unsuccessful people try to avoid problems altogether)
The key to marketing success is understanding your next best step.
The key to understanding your next best step is to understand what your current problem is.
Throwback episode from 2016: HubShots episode 40 with Kipp Bodnar when he talks about āsolving for the problemā.
We recently worked through this process with a client who wanted to focus on generating more traffic for their blog. But after some analysis, it turned out that they had plenty of traffic, and instead their next best problem was improving conversion rates of leads.
Consider - if you will - that life (or business) is a game - essentially just solving puzzles. What puzzle should you focus on next?
(Source)
Hereās a few quick items of interest we noticed:
The HubSpot Social tools donāt get much attention these days - they are easy to overlook.
One little tip is to use the Monitor tab to check interactions. The Twitter monitor will highlight new followers and even allow you to follow back and/or reply right from within HubSpot:
In this case, we were trying to see how effective particular meetings were over the month and their source as we are running multiple channels of traffic to it.
Here is the outcome.
Here is how we configured it:
Here is how we filtered it:
Here is the link to our one! There is another one that is similar that you should have got an email to as that is triggered from the system because you are a subscriber.
š So did you complete the custom survey? Here is the link to the HubShots one! š
How did I miss this?
On a client HubSpot coaching call with Ian last week he mentioned this option on actions in a workflow:
Bonus: it will also (optionally) clone all the actions after it as well.
I was checking through my Sane Later folder this morning (as I do every few days) checking for any emails to unsubscribe from. I use Sane Box to group any newsletter type emails into a Sane Later folder. My usual process has been to check the emails and unsubscribe from any that arenāt relevant (this is usually most of them).
When I clicked on the Unsubscribe link of one this morning it opened a browser tab that tried to install an app on my machine (fortunately my virus checker caught it and deleted it).
It made me realise how trusting of unsubscribe links I had been - and how Iād almost been duped - the email was essentially a scam (a very credible looking one) with the sole purpose of getting me to click the Unsubscribe link.
Silly me - I should have known better.
But it has resulted in a change in my process. Now, instead of unsubscribing from emails that I donāt want Iāll instead:
No more trying to be a good citizen and unsubscribing. Sadly, now Iāll be marking a lot of emails as spam.
Itās bad for the legitimate companies who are using permission marketing to send me their newsletters because if I donāt recognise them (or remember signing up) theyāll be unfairly marked as spam.
Why do I mention this? Because Iām pretty sure Iām not the only one doing this nowā¦ instead I think it is becoming the norm.
(Never pass up an opportunity to use a baby yoda image)
Which brings me to...
Iāve been busily unsubscribing from all the exhibitors that paid to be part of Inbound this year.
Iām assuming that as part of registering I agreed to receive marketing emails from exhibitors. I wish Iād paid more attention and not ticked it (or opted out) because last week I was getting a few new emails every day from vendors Iād never heard of, all chatting about things ānow that Inbound was finishedā.
Anywayā¦ Iāve been getting lots of emails that I donāt want. And as per my experience in [1] above, whilst Iād usually go through the unsubscribe process, now Iām just marking them as spam instead.
I wonder what their Spam % results have been...
First up, for the vendors in [2] above I wonder how many of them sent from their main email platforms (Eg HubSpot) versus how many sent from a separate new account, purely for this follow-up.
Iām guessing most of these vendors send from separate accounts set up purely for post-event follow-ups. Itās what Iād do.
But second, part of overcoming being marked as spam is to build some brand recognition with your recipients before you send. Especially if they are a new list of contacts (eg that youāve purchased from HubSpot) or if you havenāt sent to them for a while.
Running some brand ads to those audiences (eg via synced audiences) could be a good start.
That way when they see your email, theyāll recognise the brand and potentially be primed to read it.
This isnāt a new idea - Iāve been reminded of this by a number of coaches and mentors over the years. But it is one that continues to ring true for me - and seems to be a key criteria Iām noticing in those who move ahead.
With that in mind, I thought Iād mention ways you can be resourceful with your HubSpot and Marketing activities when it might appear at first that you donāt have the resources you needā¦
(Image Source)
Via the HubSpot product updates blog.
This time a year ago HubSpot gave us the ability to add Contacts to a GoToWebinar with HubSpot Workflows! I wonder how many people are using this considering everyone we know uses Zoom!
Zapier has launched a beta of their new Transfer service - which allows bulk data transfer between platforms. Itās initially launching with a few partners (including Airtable, Facebook, Salesforce, Twitter, Shopify, LinkedIn, Slack, Google Apps and a few others) to use as a source, but can push to 1000s of destination apps.
Shared by one of our clients! Thank you Peter from FireMate.
āOur job is to give the client, on time and on cost, not what they want, but what they never dreamed they wanted; and when they get it, they recognize it as something they wanted all the time.ā
Dewys Lasdon, Designer.
(Quoted in Tom Petersā, The Circle of Innovation: You Canāt Shrink from Greatness, Knopf, 1997.)
Google is under the microscope (along with Facebook) over the way they have allegedly colluded to protect and promote their ad exchange. This thread on Twitter has the overview:
This is going to be big.
In a future episode, weāre going to be diving into the effects of the iOS15 updates with respect to email engagement tracking (you may recall we alluded to this back in episode 249 . Hereās a few resources to review in the interim:
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Connect with Ian Jacob on LinkedIn and Craig Bailey on LinkedIn
HubShots, the podcast for marketing managers and sales professionals who use HubSpot, hosted by Ian Jacob from Search & Be Found and Craig Bailey from XEN Systems and XEN Solar.
HubShots is produced by Christopher Mottram from Podcastily.
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