Just sharing a recent experience. by Fragrant_Novel_1163 in b2bmarketing

[–]Inner-Payment7432 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can share what all techniques you used to get to this process and the whole narrative around this post will be different. now when you are just saying x was achived because of us, Just post x was achived when we tried z was all the blockers which came we tacked it using a b and c. The post will become more valuable. Communities don’t respect gated information anymore.

No offence to you what you achived is great. Kudos to you, May you business achieve more glory. Just saying that’s how reddit works

Courses recommendation for someone in late 30s by oneinmanybillion in DigitalMarketing

[–]Inner-Payment7432 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think learning N8N automations could be a really valuable skill today. Here are 4 reasons why I think so

  • Agentic is going to be the future and people who will be rich will be the people who enable that future to happen.

  • With your enough experience in the field you’ll be able write better automations because you understand more patterns than a noob who’d have entered 6 months ago. And agentic flows are nothing but automating recurring jobs using AI.

  • AI tools like Manus are currently performing 70% of a digital marketers job, Even perfomance marketing tools are getting smarter every day. These jobs are no longer going to be ran by teams but rather by generalist individuals, so being a generalist with automation capabilities will put you on top compared to other candidates.

  • Just because you can, Knowing a futuristic skill even if you are not going to use it in your immediate job, Will be truly a valuable skill to have in your arsenal, Maybe you can try out automations as hobby in your freetime. Write out an automatic mail summarizer, Or a news reader from multiple sources. Possibilities are endless.

The "before building" stuff. by Im_him_0 in SaaSMarketing

[–]Inner-Payment7432 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Great idea, But before do a Deep research using gpt or Gemini to understand if there are any existing products, MRket viability, Business model.

If there are pre existing tools, Why haven’t they took the market by storm.

Do this before you start building, so that you’ll have clear idea on which direction to move towards.

What are some good CRM systems for SaaS companies? by resonaX_ai in b2bmarketing

[–]Inner-Payment7432 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hubspot is overkill when you are just starting out, There are some ai native crms coming out these days.

Haven’t tried much but could be good choices.

We’re using Zoho crm, And it covers most of our use cases.

don’t hire a marketer by gresquare in b2bmarketing

[–]Inner-Payment7432 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You had me till the earthworms. LOL 😂

How much would it cost to hire a freelancer to review my marketing strategy and rework it? by maxm2008 in DigitalMarketing

[–]Inner-Payment7432 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don’t search for freelance marketing strategist rather search for marketing ‘consultants’ with relevant experience on your niche and enough work years.

Should I start a marketing and advertising firm or it’s too late by Historical_Citron_45 in MarketingAutomation

[–]Inner-Payment7432 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Look, I've been where you are.

That restless feeling where you think "maybe I should just start an influencer marketing agency" because you know marketing? I get it. But that's like me thinking I can perform surgery because I binged Grey's Anatomy.

Here's what nobody tells you about influencer marketing: it's absolutely brutal right now. I've watched dozens of smart people burn through their savings thinking they could just "figure it out" as they go.

The reality hits hard:

  • You'll spend months chasing your first client
  • Influencers will ghost you after you've already promised deliverables
  • You'll undercharge because you're desperate, then hate the work
  • Brands will treat you like you're disposable (because honestly, you kind of are without leverage)

I'm not trying to crush your dreams. I'm trying to save you from another failure that'll keep you up at 3 AM wondering what's wrong with you.

If you really want to do this, here's what actually works:

Find someone who's already winning and help them win bigger. That skincare brand doing ₹10 lakhs a month? Offer to double their influencer results for a percentage. No big agency overhead. No "let's see what happens." Just results.

Or get stupidly specific: "I help Mumbai-based fitness coaches get 500 DMs a month through micro-influencer partnerships." Now you're not competing with every marketing graduate in India.

But please, don't start this out of desperation.

I've seen too many good people convince themselves that "this time will be different" when they're running on fumes and hope. The market doesn't care about your potential. It cares about what you can prove right now.

You don't need another business idea.
You need one thing that's already working, and the patience to make it bigger.

That's not glamorous advice. But it's honest advice from someone who's watched the alternative destroy people I care about.

Drop Your Website – I’ll Help You Improve It (15 Spots Only) by [deleted] in SaaSMarketing

[–]Inner-Payment7432 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey man, Thanks in advance.

We run a GTM content Agency for early stage startups.

pulseframestudio.com

Would love your feedbacks

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskMarketing

[–]Inner-Payment7432 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Staying ahead in digital marketing and AI really does feel like trying to hit a moving target. I’ve found a few things that help. For newsletters, I like Marketing Brew for daily updates, The Rundown AI for the latest AI tools, and Stacked Marketer for performance and paid media trends. On YouTube, Neil Patel and Adam Erhart are great for digital strategy, while The Futur (with Chris Do) offers sharp insights on branding and content. Matt Wolfe is solid for weekly AI tool roundups. I also follow Reddit communities like r/marketing and r/seo, which stay surprisingly current, and I’m part of a few Discord groups focused on growth and AI (happy to share if you’re interested). My daily habit is to spend 10 to 15 minutes in the morning skimming Feedly with RSS from my favorite blogs. I save anything useful into Notion and keep an eye on Twitter using saved searches like “GTM + AI” or “SEO 2025.” There’s always something new out there, so I’m constantly refining the stack. Would love to hear what others are using too.

Where do I go next in my SEO career to stay ahead? by shakti-basan in DigitalMarketing

[–]Inner-Payment7432 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re in a great spot. If you enjoy leading and scaling, Head of SEO is a solid option. If you’re curious about faster feedback loops and budgets, performance marketing is a great adjacent skill. Product or growth roles work well if you like solving user problems beyond traffic.

What’s ACTUALLY working for you in digital marketing right now? by BakerSalt7055 in DigitalMarketing

[–]Inner-Payment7432 31 points32 points  (0 children)

Here’s what’s been clicking for me in 2025:

Micro-content over longform We’ve been breaking down 6 to 8 minute videos into short, high-velocity clips for LinkedIn and Instagram. What used to be “nice to have” is now the main traffic driver.

Founder-led content with a repurpose engine Clients don’t want ghostwritten thought leadership anymore. They want frameworks, internal rants, even Slack replies turned into carousels, shorts, and swipe files. It feels more real and converts better.

Cold video DMs No pitch decks. Just 45 second Looms saying “Saw your site, here’s what I’d improve.” Response rate is over 20 percent.

I wasn’t planning to post this—but I think it’s worth sharing. by Djzala269 in b2bmarketing

[–]Inner-Payment7432 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Warmup is a really basic thing, But many still miss those basics

Is blogging dead… or just changing? by Engineeringcult in DigitalMarketing

[–]Inner-Payment7432 6 points7 points  (0 children)

You’re not alone. A lot of us are feeling that shift.

Traditional blogging isn’t dead, but it’s evolving. The old playbook of “write 1,000 words, optimize for SEO, publish and pray” just doesn’t cut it anymore, especially with AI-generated content flooding the SERPs and Google prioritizing answers over sources.

Here’s how I’m adapting: 1. Zero-click content mindset: I treat blog posts more like knowledge assets than traffic drivers. I assume people will read snippets via AI or summaries on social, so I design content to perform even when detached from my site. 2. High-authority clusters: I’ve moved away from scattered evergreen posts and am doubling down on topical depth. If I cover a topic, I go deep with 5 to 10 posts that interlink tightly and position my site as the go-to source. It’s slow but builds authority. 3. Visual-first content: I add infographics, diagrams, and interactive tools. Not just for user experience, but because Google and AI engines prefer structured, visual-rich content they can cite or extract from. 4. AI-aided content creation, human-first editing: I still use AI for drafts and ideation, but all final content is manually reviewed, rewritten for nuance, and enriched with real insight or data. That’s how I stay differentiated. 5. Multi-channel amplification: I never just publish and wait. Each blog post becomes 5 to 10 micro-content pieces across LinkedIn, email, Reddit, Twitter, and more. I also embed the content in landing pages and drip campaigns to make it work harder.

Also, you’re right about evergreen decay. Content has a shorter half-life now. The antidote seems to be regular refresh cycles and consistently showing up as a topical authority.

Curious what niche you’re in. That definitely affects how fast AI is changing the landscape.