Join us for an insightful session with Adam Tuttle, a seasoned leader responsible for managing customer experience at ActiveCampaign. In this engaging conversation, we'll dive deep into ActiveCampaign's unique playbook for elevating Customer Experience (CX) from the moment a visitor lands on their platform to becoming a loyal customer.
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(upbeat music)
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- All right, welcome to our next session.
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So this session's called "The Active Campaigns Playbook",
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elevating CX from visitor to customer.
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And I have a special guest with me today,
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Adam Tuttle from Active Campaign, Adam, how are you doing?
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- I'm doing great, thank you.
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- Good, so Adam and I actually go way back,
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I don't know way back,
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but at least we used to work together at Active Campaign,
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and Adam's still at Active Campaign,
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and he's got quite a journey.
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So maybe let's start there
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before we get into the thick of things here,
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but tell us one a little bit about Active Campaign,
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you can give the pitch about Active Campaign for those that know,
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and then I'd love to go,
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just go down like your personal journey
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while at Active Campaign.
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- Yeah, so Active Campaign, very like simply high level,
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we started as an email marketing platform many years ago,
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but I would say like really over the last decade have pivoted
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to be very centric to like marketing automation.
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So that's kind of, I would say the foundation
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of everything that we build or do.
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We also have a CRM in there,
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so kind of email marketing, marketing automation, CRM,
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but even those things tend to center around automations,
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and so, and we've been doing it quite a while,
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got customers in about 180 countries globally,
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so yeah, it's really, really fun.
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- Kate, can you mention how many hundreds of thousands
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of customers now?
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- Do you remember?
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- I will say more than 170,000.
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- Nice, 170,000.
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And actually one other question on that,
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like what's, I know there's several,
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you said like several types of countries,
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you know, what types of customers are usually
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the best fit for Active Campaign that are using Active Campaign?
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- Yeah, so I mean, we definitely have like a variety, right?
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So I would say we've probably more focus on SMBs
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over the last, you know, forever,
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but we definitely have mid-market,
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even a few enterprise, but I would say kind of our sweet spot
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is like the upper end of SMB,
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and maybe the kind of bottom barrel of mid-market.
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And again, sometimes, you know,
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that's kind of the cool thing about softwares like ours,
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you know, generally speaking is,
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not everyone that's in an enterprise company
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or a large company needs an enterprise solution
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for what they're trying to do.
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And so we can often meet the need,
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just kind of depending on, you know,
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what's going on with where the customer's at
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and what they're looking for.
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- Nice.
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And so let's kind of dive into what's probably most important
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is understanding your background a little bit, Adam.
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So give us a story of, you know,
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your journey so far at Active Campaign.
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- Yeah, so I've been with Active Campaign
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for just over 11 years,
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kind of getting close to that 11 and a half mark.
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I started when the company was very small,
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so right now we're about a thousand employees,
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maybe a little bit under that.
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I started when we were at nine employees,
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and I started in a support role.
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And so I knew nothing about tech, nothing about SaaS.
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I didn't even know what SaaS was.
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Just put that in even bigger context,
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like I didn't even know who Mailchimp was,
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who at that point was a very big competitor.
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And so I started in support,
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and those first few years were very scrappy startup, right?
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Everyone kind of did everything.
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I was one of probably two people
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that didn't write code in the business,
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so again, very different than it looks today.
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Had early kind of roles in like early versions
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of our customer success teams,
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worked on our channel partners for a bit,
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did all of that, and then I started the sales team.
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So I was one of the first account executives,
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started that sales team, did that for about a year and a half,
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went into sales leadership as a manager for a bit,
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and then I moved my family to Sydney, Australia,
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and I opened Active Campaign's first
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international office in Sydney.
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Was the director of sales for APAC,
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and covered that region we live there for,
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about just over two and a half years,
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then came back, put myself into ops,
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because I realized that with where I wanted my career to go,
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like 10 years down the road,
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I needed more ops exposure,
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so I was in ops for a couple of years,
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and then just a year ago I started a team,
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we called CAT or customer activation team,
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which is really, I think,
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where we'll kind of tie into this conversation,
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but it's kind of like a,
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if sales support and success all merged together
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and created like a hybrid, it would be this team,
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and that's what I've been working on for the last year or so.
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- That's awesome, so first of all,
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I apologize for having you describe
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11 years of Active Campaign in a minute and 30 seconds,
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but I think you did a really good job there.
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But yeah, so I'd love to center this conversation
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around the CAT team, honestly,
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because for the audience,
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when Evan and I were talking earlier in the month,
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like it organically came up,
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and I thought it was really interesting,
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because it was a mixture of automation,
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understanding the customer,
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and what customer experience really is.
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And so I guess like,
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could you maybe take us right before the CAT team,
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like what was the kind of the situation,
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what was in place,
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and then the challenge at that time?
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- Yeah, so you had, at that point,
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our work like many companies in the last couple years
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in TAC, especially,
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we had a large sales team, SDRs, AEs,
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different types of AEs, all these things.
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And then you had the support side of it as well,
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BDRs trying to do outbound,
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and it was just, it was bloated.
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I think that's just the best way to put it,
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it was just bloated.
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And so we started looking at the business need,
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and saying, we don't always need,
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like we're a pretty transactional business.
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A lot of times people, I mean,
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we still generate hundreds,
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if not thousands of accounts a month,
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just from people signing up through the website.
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So it's pretty like simple to get going platform.
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And so what we looked at is like,
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does everyone always need this like long sales process,
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or can we streamline the process,
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be a little bit more hands-on with the customer.
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So instead of trying to qualify somebody up to
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a sales rep over here, or a sales rep over there,
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maybe that's the solution sometimes,
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but maybe it's not.
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And when we say maybe it's not,
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what we are looking at is,
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what if we could create a really great experience
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where someone comes to us,
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we say, hey, like what brought you to active campaign?
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And they're like, oh, I need to,
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I want to switch this provider,
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and I like it, I need marketing automation,
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but I don't know where to start,
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we're like, cool, we'll help you build your first automation.
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And so we build it with them on a call,
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or we help them set up an integration,
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or we help them build a pipeline to the CRM,
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whatever it might be,
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we get those questions answered,
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and then we help them sign up.
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And now that's obviously a very like,
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that's how we wish they all went.
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On the flip side of that,
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what we also do is like,
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my kind of model to the team is identify the pain point,
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and then identify who's the best person
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to solve that in their business.
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So in a lot of cases, it is sales.
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Maybe they need legal negotiations
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on a contract, or they have,
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we can't solve their problem quickly.
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Like, maybe we can help them with that first piece,
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but they have like five more pieces
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they need to figure out over the next month.
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That's not my team's job.
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My team is gonna help like during our two week trial period,
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can we help you get converted,
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can we solve your pain point,
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and if we can, we will,
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and if we can't, we're gonna do everything we can,
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and then we're gonna get you connected to the right person.
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And so that's really where this idea came from,
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a year ago, as we started diving into it.
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- And so just to clarify, like,
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then so before this, it was just a mix of different sales teams,
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and you had a sales team that was just qualifying
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and sending them over to closing sales.
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- Yeah, and so let's think about,
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from a customer perspective side, right?
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So let's say that I'm on an SDR team,
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and I'm qualifying this lead up,
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and they have a problem, like maybe a bug,
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or they think there's a bug, or something like that.
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- Well, in that case, then the SDR group
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creates a support ticket, they hand it off to support,
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they might follow up, but it is,
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you've now disconnected,
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and my team tries to just go and solve the problem.
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So we actually get on a lot of times
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where someone's like, this automation's broke,
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I built it, it didn't work,
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and we're like, oh no, we can help you fix it.
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So we'll go into it with them,
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we try to help them get it fixed,
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we help try to solve the problem,
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and so that's where you see like,
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we're trying to figure out who is the best person
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to create a great customer experience,
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and can we streamline that process as much as possible,
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as opposed to, I'm just worried about a quota,
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I just need to get it passed off to somebody else,
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or I need, you know, we just want to remove
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some of that behavior, at least on like level one,
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and try to help the customer really just enjoy
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their overall experience with us.
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And then, again, if we need to get them
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connected to the sales 'cause that's the best fit,
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we can sell that and be like, hey,
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you really need to talk to this person
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because they're gonna be able to help you answer A, B, and C.
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Oh great, you know, so it's just,
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it's a more fluid process for us.
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- And I guess I wanna point out something
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for all the listeners here, because
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you think of things differently from like a B to C lens
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to the B to B lens, and I find this conversation
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really interesting because like, in a B to C company,
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like you're just trying to answer that question
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that's coming in as fast as possible,
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hey, where is my order?
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And you're trying to automate and get them that answer
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as soon as possible done.
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And I think what Adam's trying to do,
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and again, correct me if I'm wrong,
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is providing that same sort of philosophy,
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but on a B to B side, is someone early in the process
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of like, there's a simple pain point.
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How can we solve that as fast as possible
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without having you go through several different steps?
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Do I have that right, Adam?
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- Yeah, 100%.
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Because, you know, because we tend to focus
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on the SMB market, we often have small businesses
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that are just a couple people,
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or maybe it's, you know, they might be an e-commerce store
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that does a million dollars in revenue,
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but they're a team of like five, right?
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So, and sometimes the problem is that like,
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the thing that I think anecdotally,
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this is just from my experience as a whole,
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is generally speaking, not always,
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but generally the problems that people are trying to solve,
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especially marketing automation,
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are not like life-changing or revolutionary.
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It's pretty straightforward.
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And yes, there's a lot of ways that you can approach that.
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There's nuance to the business and things like that,
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but I don't think that we need to over-complicate.
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And again, sometimes if you can help someone solve
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just that first piece,
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or you can remove that first barrier,
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then they're willing to run with it.
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They're willing to say,
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"Okay, yes, this actually meets my need."
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And that's all we're trying to do
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is tear down that merry first wall,
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that barrier to entry for them,
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so that they can like, see the full potential,
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or see the opportunity,
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but we don't need to help them set up their entire account,
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usually in the first go.
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We just need to make sure
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that we can solve that for initial pain point.
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- So talk to us a little bit about like your team
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in terms of like the skill sets that they have,
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and how do you teach them those skill sets?
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- Yeah, so what we did when we created this team
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is we hired 100% originally in-house,
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and we literally hired people from sales.
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We've hired former SDRs.
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We hired support reps from our support teams.
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We hired people from our customer success team.
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And so we kind of brought this amalgamation
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of people together,
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and everyone for the most part
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had been in the business at least a year.
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So they had a really strong foundation,
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and we wanted that because we felt like,
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especially to kick it off on the right foot,
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you couldn't spend six-month training people.
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We had to get people that were a little bit more
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like already invested in the tool,
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they knew what it was.
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And we had to really focus on that group
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of like the soft skills of kind of teaching like,
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great, you solved the problem,
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but remember to send the customer order afterwards,
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or ask them if they're ready to buy, right?
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So there's some of those like kind of sales skills
12:36
that maybe don't come as naturally to someone in support,
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or it hasn't been the motion that they're used to.
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So it was more teaching those soft skills.
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And then what we've looked for,
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for new hires that have come in from the business,
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outside the business, excuse me,
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in the meantime, are people that are probably,
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for the most part, in that like one to two years
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of experience, so maybe they're just even like
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right out of college, they've had a few like good internships,
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things like that.
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But we want people that are ready to like,
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solve problems and that are curious.
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And I think that that's really important
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is we can hire a lot of people that are talented,
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but if they're not curious,
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if they're not willing to kind of ask those questions
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and dig a little bit deeper,
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then we're probably not gonna align perfectly with them.
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The other thing that I would say for me
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was incredibly important on version one,
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was every manager I brought in,
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so I have four managers globally.
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Each one of them has sold active campaign in the past.
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So they had a foundation in sales,
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but you know, having watched them all for quite some time,
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I knew where their skill sets like,
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they were willing to go a little bit deeper,
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they were willing to jump into tickets and chats
13:51
and things like that.
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So you kind of look for the people
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that were like a good fit in that sense,
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but yeah, that piece was also really important.
13:58
Me as I wanted people that had actually shown customers
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the product before I had walked customers
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who understood the value that we're adding,
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because then they're gonna be able to teach their teams
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and coach their teams on those things,
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no matter where they come from.
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- So it's like, if I were to again clarify that,
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it's like a, I would just say two parts,
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like one is the product expertise
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and the other part is just the curiosity on the other side
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of the prospect's business
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and merging those two worlds together.
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- Yeah, and in fact, we actually call the team internally,
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we call the product experts.
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Like that's like their official title
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is that they're a product expert.
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And so that's where we spend a lot of time.
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And then again, yeah, just making sure that they can,
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you know, again, help the customer get going.
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That's really the goal at all.
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And it's been really, I mean,
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there's lessons to be learned all the time,
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but it, for the most part, has really worked well.
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And it's just now continuing to adjust levers
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and tweak knobs here and there
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to just really get us to an optimal state.
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- Now, I wanna take this conversation
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just to the next level.
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And if the answer is like, we don't do much,
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that's perfectly fine, but when it comes to automation
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and utilizing some sort of AI,
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whether that be something as simple as chat GBTU
15:20
or just understanding more of like the data coming in,
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is that something that you and your team work closely with?
15:26
- Yeah, so we use our automations
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very, very heavily internally.
15:30
So we use our own tool for our entire work.
15:35
Generally where ours fall right now is kind of twofold.
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So the first side of that would be like our routing.
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Like I said, I've got team members right now
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in four continents and a few extra countries.
15:50
So we have a lot of teams, we have languages,
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so we have team members as speak Spanish,
15:55
Portuguese, Italian, French.
15:57
- Can I stop you really quick on that Adam?
15:59
So I think that's super, really,
16:00
that's super important.
16:02
Like just talk about the customer experience.
16:05
So you're saying to me that no matter where you're at
16:07
in the entire world, almost no matter what language
16:10
that you're speaking, you're able to connect with someone
16:14
in as little as what amount of time, is that true?
16:18
- Yeah, it should be like almost same day
16:20
from creating a trial.
16:22
And now that would be, yeah, for the big languages,
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like I said, English, Portuguese, French, Spanish,
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German, Italian, that's kind of where we fall at this point.
16:34
But those are the, for us, those are,
16:37
anyone that speaks those languages
16:39
is probably a great fit for a customer for us.
16:42
And so the automation piece is trying to figure out
16:45
how do you get thousands and thousands of trials a month?
16:50
One to decide do we actually, like,
16:52
are we the right person to talk to them?
16:54
So there's that question that we have
16:56
and there's criteria that we look for
16:58
and we can't talk to all of our trials,
17:00
we don't have the capacity for that.
17:02
So we try to identify which ones we think are the best ones
17:05
that are more likely to convert,
17:08
which ones are really wanting to see
17:10
if active campaigns are good fit for them.
17:12
And then you have routing to all of the different regions.
17:15
And then sometimes within regions,
17:17
like we have a Dublin office,
17:20
we have Italian, French, German, Spanish,
17:24
and English speakers within that office.
17:26
And now we're sending the different deals
17:28
from the different places to them.
17:30
And again, automation does all of that.
17:33
So it's a humongous part of what we're doing.
17:37
Secondly, we have a one-to-one email tool.
17:42
So it sends out an email from my Gmail to you directly.
17:47
And once our rep gets a deal inside of the CRM,
17:51
we're in opportunity,
17:53
we start automatically emailing it
17:54
from the rep offering to get on a call with them,
17:57
giving them their calendar, things like that.
17:59
It expedites the process as a whole.
18:01
Those emails are language specific,
18:03
again, using automations for that.
18:07
And yeah, it's a really like an involved process on that,
18:11
but it's a lot of sorting data, looking at data.
18:15
And then again, saying, oh, like we need to move this here,
18:18
we need to move this there.
18:19
And trying to get them connected
18:21
to the right person inside of our business quickly.
18:25
- Yeah.
18:26
When it comes to the email side,
18:29
so just to understand that a little bit more,
18:32
the email is automatically being sent out.
18:35
And what's kind of the focus of that email?
18:39
Why send out that email?
18:41
- The focus of that email is to get on a call with a customer.
18:45
So that is what we're trying to do
18:46
is to get them on a call with us.
18:49
And because we want to provide that hands-on product
18:53
expert service,
18:55
what I 100% do not want my team doing it
18:58
is just having someone send them an email,
19:01
them sending a couple of help articles
19:03
and then hoping that they upgrade.
19:05
I want them to have conversation.
19:06
I want them to have Zoom calls.
19:09
I want them to meet with people face to face and be human.
19:12
And so I think that's one important thing of this whole,
19:15
like as we think about customer experience,
19:18
you can create a great customer experience
19:20
by starting off with heavily, heavily invested
19:24
inside of automation.
19:26
So we do a huge amount of work in there
19:29
and data processing and sorting and things like that.
19:32
All of that is geared towards,
19:34
we want to get you connected to a human.
19:36
And so it's not to simply automate the whole process.
19:40
Like we'll do that as much as we can,
19:42
but not every single customer is just going to buy
19:44
on their own.
19:45
Like we know that, that's no business has that, right?
19:48
So our whole goal is to get people where it's,
19:51
it's really focused on, again, identifying the right people
19:55
to have those conversations with,
19:57
but then getting them on the phone with us
19:58
and making sure that we're helping them quickly
20:02
and representing the company in like a human way.
20:06
- I just want to stop you on that,
20:09
because I think my head was actually going
20:12
into the direction of, there's now so many tools out there
20:15
and features out there where, hey, we know that this is
20:19
a Brazilian Portuguese lead that just comes in.
20:22
And I'm using that example,
20:24
because I remember that I had to campaign this,
20:25
such a big area for you guys.
20:27
And, okay, now you can automate a message,
20:31
like in that language, knowing their IP,
20:35
but what I think you just said is super important,
20:37
is like you have to back it up in the human experience.
20:39
And that's something that you cannot, at least in this point,
20:43
have it AI kind of figure that out for you.
20:47
And I'm just glad that you brought that up.
20:50
- Yeah, I think, listen, I think like, obviously AI
20:53
is like the buzz word right now,
20:54
and it's going to continue to grow in power.
20:58
But what I view as the most exciting part about AI,
21:02
at least from my seat, right?
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So purely the context of what I do,
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is one, it will help our customers,
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because we are starting to build more AI functionality
21:13
into our platform, such as the ability
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to actually have it build automations for you,
21:20
from a machine, like you tell it what you want it done,
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and it'll build it all for you, which is incredible.
21:25
So that helps this, that small business owner
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that's never done this before,
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get off on the right foot.
21:31
That's super exciting.
21:32
But I think that the other piece that to me is,
21:35
I'm always looking at ways that I can better automate my
21:39
processes that I don't want to be human.
21:42
E.G., trying to get the meaning booked, right?
21:45
Every time that someone has to send an email,
21:47
and there's times for that, right?
21:49
So we actually do have our reps,
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like they flip back and forth between a machine
21:52
sending an email, and then trying to, like,
21:54
really like hyper personalize an email.
21:58
But the idea of it all comes back to,
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hey, like, we really want you to connect with us.
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And we want to be human, we want to help you.
22:08
And I think like the machine that is now going in AI,
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is hopefully going to make us even more effective at that,
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and help us to get those meetings scheduled right away,
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so that instead of the rep having to spend two hours a day
22:22
going through a pipeline and chasing down a bunch of people,
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the machine's actually helping get those people
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in front of them quickly, so we're able to help more people,
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and then it becomes a pretty big snowball at that point.
22:35
- And so, I guess like I have to ask this question,
22:39
which is like, is it a hypothesis still,
22:42
or is it proven that like,
22:44
you want to connect with people in person on a meeting,
22:48
because you're more likely then to convert them
22:51
to a great prospect and a customer,
22:54
and have you seen that in the data?
22:56
- That's why like, you don't want to solve this
22:58
just through a chat experience or through an email.
23:01
- We definitely see it,
23:03
and even the fact that somebody comes into my team's pipeline,
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they have a higher chance of converting,
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even if we don't talk to them.
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So like, that means that like,
23:13
we're talking to enough people that is kind of,
23:15
you know, bringing up the entire like base behind it, right?
23:19
So we're definitely seeing the impact there.
23:22
What we don't have enough data on yet,
23:24
because again, the team's only been going for 12 months,
23:27
is, and what I suspect will happen,
23:30
I would say early indicators are pointing
23:32
towards this being true, and time will tell,
23:35
is that the lifetime value of the customer will be extended,
23:39
because they had a great experience up front,
23:43
and the platform stable,
23:44
like there's like so many pieces, right?
23:47
But one thing that I always like kind of challenge
23:48
my teams on, is, you know,
23:52
sometimes it's really easy when you think about
23:53
like churn and contraction and all of that stuff,
23:55
that once you make that sale,
23:57
once you help that person get upgraded,
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well, tough luck, like, you know,
24:02
like onto the next one, right?
24:04
But my philosophy has always been that
24:07
if you can provide a really good experience for someone,
24:10
if you can be human with them,
24:11
they probably will stick with you longer, right?
24:16
Like, unless there's something that's just gone horribly wrong
24:19
for them, but if they just get going,
24:22
you just send them a help article,
24:23
they're like, ah, I think this works.
24:24
Like, there's that seed of doubt from the beginning,
24:27
because they felt pressured into buying something,
24:30
that, you know, whatever it might be.
24:32
- Yeah.
24:33
- I think that that's been causing,
24:35
so my speculation is, yes, we are definitely seeing that,
24:38
the more that we talk to people,
24:39
we have better conversion rates and things like that.
24:42
The real testament will be down the road,
24:45
is our lifetime value of the customers that we interact with,
24:49
beating out like our self-service models.
24:52
And again, I would say early data says yes,
24:54
but time will really tell.
24:57
- And so last question,
24:58
we'll wrap things up here, Adam.
25:00
Take off your active campaign hat,
25:02
and I still wanna ask you that same question,
25:04
which is that if you just think of customer experience,
25:06
say the tools that you use,
25:09
the places that you go,
25:10
the things that you buy,
25:12
do you think that human element
25:14
is always part of that equation,
25:16
and should be somewhat a part of that equation,
25:19
or do you think that there are businesses,
25:22
it depends on the type of business where,
25:24
no, the human element of it can be pushed to the side.
25:28
It's a broad question, but I just--
25:30
- Yeah, it's a super broad question.
25:32
I think the truth is probably somewhere in the middle.
25:37
So what I mean by that is,
25:40
I think businesses like e-commerce,
25:44
even think about you go to McDonald's now,
25:49
you don't have to order,
25:51
you can either order on a hat of time,
25:54
and then you just go to the drive through
25:55
and give them a number,
25:56
and you pick it up and you leave.
25:58
That's an automated process, right?
25:59
It's removing that need for human,
26:02
but I still believe that in B2B, especially,
26:07
I think that the need for human
26:09
will always be there to a degree.
26:11
What I think that this will allow us to do is be,
26:15
hopefully, is more human, right?
26:18
What I think that we're gonna start seeing is,
26:21
more and more tools have those initial steps,
26:27
or maybe like, okay, I send up for a trial,
26:31
or maybe I purchased directly through a website,
26:35
something like that,
26:36
and then the human side will be just more
26:39
to make that person feel supported,
26:40
and it'll be more of a, again, a relational thing
26:43
as opposed to being just purely transactional of,
26:47
here's your checklist, let me give it to you, right?
26:49
Okay, let's automate the checklist,
26:51
but if you don't do the checklist,
26:53
I'm gonna call you and say,
26:54
hey, are you having trouble with the checklist?
26:56
Can I help you?
26:57
So I think there's things like that,
26:59
but I definitely don't see,
27:02
at least in the next decade,
27:05
the human side just purely going away,
27:08
but I do think that things will become
27:10
more and more personalized,
27:12
and I guess for me personally,
27:14
I don't think that you can just hyper personalizing
27:16
this without a human touch at some point.
27:18
- Okay, well, Adam, thank you so much for your time.
27:21
It's been super interesting talking with you,
27:23
and I'm hoping everyone here also has enjoyed the time.
27:27
- Yeah, thank you so much, I really appreciate it.
27:29
- No problem, and again, thanks to Adam, his team, congrats,
27:32
and good luck to the future,
27:34
as well too, with building out that team.
27:36
- Thank you so much.
27:37
- All right, bye everyone.
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