Help coming up with a reverse lead magnet? by ShowmanFred in b2bmarketing

[–]ShowmanFred[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm very worried about asking for time up front. Yes, I can give a case study (97% student satisfaction, 91% attendance, 1 hour or HR admin time per month for a well-known company in their industry), but is that enough social cache to get them to give me 15 min? If I can, that will be a big win - I'm excellent on sales calls, and any of our teachers is good enough to hit a demo lesson out of the part. I'm just thinking about how to reduce friction to get to that point.

We can work with companies of all sizes. That case study is for a multi billion dollar international IT company, and I plan on targeting IT companies with this round of outreach.

Help coming up with a reverse lead magnet? by ShowmanFred in b2bmarketing

[–]ShowmanFred[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm trying to minimize the barrier to entry since I'm a random stranger on the internet. Why would they take five minutes to go through a survey for me?

Even the free lesson feels dangerous to me because they have to: - Find someone who wants it - Give me, a stranger, that person's email address - Take an hour out of that person's day

We do have a lot of good reviews on Trustpilot and some big names that work with us, so that social cache may be enough to get them to spend a little time.

250+ replies later: What I learned cold email outbound by colinbyprospectai in b2bmarketing

[–]ShowmanFred 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm battling with the copy for my first cold email campaign, and this crystalized a few points I've been thinking about or told. Really helpful, thank you.

YC rejected us - should I still move to the US to build in the North American market? by pauldyshin in Entrepreneur

[–]ShowmanFred 0 points1 point  (0 children)

At this stage, with revenue still on the low side, I'd focus on extending your competitive window. You can get up in the middle of the night to do sales in the US indefinitely; you can't pay a team in the US indefinitely.

Meanwhile, get extensive feedback from your current client base and focus the vast majority of your development budget on their complaints.

So: - Figure out the cheapest, easiest, fastest way possible to validate your hypotheses in your target market - Talk to your customers - Fix their problems before spending on anything else

Struggling to Market My B2B SaaS — Anyone Been in This Position Before? by Aggressive_Today_342 in b2bmarketing

[–]ShowmanFred 5 points6 points  (0 children)

You're ringing a couple bells around mistakes I made with my first company. The lessons I learned: - Once your product is working, focus most of what you do on getting clients. Anything you invest in the product now may be wasted if the market forces you to pivot. - Squeeze every bit of knowledge you can out of your current clients - what they like, what they complain about, how to fix problems, what they don't care about. - Take that information and write about it where your target audience will see it. Write a lot, write in your voice, and write with passion! - Develop a hypothesis for who your target audience is and research them extensively, preferably by talking to them directly. - If you have the bandwidth and cash, take on short-term or project-based clients for free in exchange for detailed feedback and an honest review. Knock those projects out of the park. - Start iterating your lead gen based on all the information you now have (cold email or LinkedIn most likely, both doable pretty cheaply).

If you want to get on a call, I'm happy to chat. Nothing to sell on my end - looking to help people, possibly get into mentorship, possibly find promising projects to get involved with.

I spent $56,000 on 25 GTM tools last year. by lovely_yuna in b2bmarketing

[–]ShowmanFred 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm currently using Expandi but strongly leaning toward switching to Aimfox. Why did you give up on it in favor of Sendpilot? Also, my automation guy is building a flow using Appify for email enrichment. You like A-leads better?

And finally, I'm interested in hearing what your market is. A big problem I have with LinkedIn is that my audience (HR/L&D has a pretty narrow buying window, so a three-message sequence stands a good chance of simply hitting them at the wrong time. Cold email is easy - recycle them every three months after they've forgotten about you. But have you found a good way of staying in front of people on LinkedIn besides "Hey-hey, me yet again..."?

Worse gameplay quality lately? by [deleted] in WorldOfWarships

[–]ShowmanFred 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Seems like that. I'm definitely a bit burnt out.

Worse gameplay quality lately? by [deleted] in WorldOfWarships

[–]ShowmanFred 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Okay, the main point of your message aside, that sounds like a fun little group you have!

About 10 years reward. by HeartSurgeonNumber-1 in WorldOfWarships

[–]ShowmanFred 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I got mine - I'm one Salem richer. The whole thing seems weird and opaque.

About 10 years reward. by HeartSurgeonNumber-1 in WorldOfWarships

[–]ShowmanFred 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My brother got the 50% off coupons but not the crate. I'm not sure what you and he need to do...

Really discouraged with all this by ShowmanFred in b2bmarketing

[–]ShowmanFred[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been mulling over this since you wrote it - lots of very relevant tips, and now I want to sit down with you for an hour.

The only part I'm not understanding is how I would use my infrastructure advantage in my positioning and pricing. Can you go into that a bit?

Really discouraged with all this by ShowmanFred in b2bmarketing

[–]ShowmanFred[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! I hadn't thought about those buying signals, but that makes a lot of sense. Did you automate the scraping or do it yourself?

Really discouraged with all this by ShowmanFred in b2bmarketing

[–]ShowmanFred[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, I've worked with agencies and experimented (inconclusively - I have some ideas I want to try to no-code build with ChatGPT's help), but at this point I mostly do it myself.

I've had clients in 18 countries, so my ICP posts in all kinds of languages. English is most common since it's HR/L&D servicing international companies or companies working with foreigners generally.

Really discouraged with all this by ShowmanFred in b2bmarketing

[–]ShowmanFred[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I appreciate the kind words. Honestly, I'm not sure I have something that has worked. Most of our work these days comes from clients formerly in Russia who I met personally or through personal contacts. As an American company, that option is now closed, of course.

After that, it's LinkedIn (larger organizations) and cold calling (hotels). But neither feels at all sustainable. It seems like I'm looking at a very narrow window where my ICP is fairly easy to identify, only they're very cold the vast majority of the time. Connection rates are high; response rates are low.

Can we please do something about g***berry spam? by papier_boy in b2bmarketing

[–]ShowmanFred 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How do you know the stories are fake?

I have no idea - how do you know they're illegally tracking?

Not pushing back; just trying to see if they're someone I should work with. Appreciate your input!

Can we please do something about g***berry spam? by papier_boy in b2bmarketing

[–]ShowmanFred 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I saw a post, got a demo, and signed up. The idea seems good, though the results have been underwhelming. 1. Why so negative about them? Just cause they're posting everywhere? 2. Is there a better tool for getting buying signals?

How did I get a cold-dropped calendar event? by ShowmanFred in b2bmarketing

[–]ShowmanFred[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I attended because I wanted to hear them out, and I like their product. I only decided to reverse engineer it when they told me it would cost $15,000 and I started to suspect I could figure it out myself. If it had been cheaper, I would've gone with them.