We can't go to market the same way we have for the past 10 years. The old playbook no longer works. Successful GTM in 2024 and beyond is centered around audience-building. In this keynote from Goldenhour 2024, Anthony Kennada lays out the future of marketing, the role of content, and how it's all centered around owned media.
0:00
(cheering)
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Please welcome to the stage,
0:03
Anthony Canada, the founder and CEO of Audience Plus.
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♪ Now, free ♪
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♪ Everybody ♪
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♪ Now, free ♪
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♪ Jump roughly ♪
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Welcome, welcome to the first ever Golden Hour.
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How's everyone doing?
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All right, good, good.
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Notorious VIG.
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Jay-Z, Nas.
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What do they all have in common?
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Well, they're all from right here in Brooklyn, New York.
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Also, they would have all hated hearing me rap.
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So my apologies to the pioneers.
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Do you think Big Daddy Kane ever wondered
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what rhymes with nurturing leads?
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Probably not.
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I think I am to wrapping what NFTs were to art.
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Seriously, we are thrilled to be here in Brooklyn.
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This is our inaugural event.
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And like the Beastie Boys, we haven't slept much,
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but trust me, it will soon be, as they say, time to get ill.
1:03
Hopefully some of you guys get that reference.
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While everyone else is hosting their conferences
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across the river in Manhattan,
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we couldn't feel any more at home here in Williamsburg.
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Even if we did name the event Golden Hour,
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and it's been cloudy with a chance of rain
1:16
and the forecast this evening ever since we moved in.
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So don't worry, dinner is on a rooftop,
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and we opted for hors d'oeuvres instead of umbrellas.
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So let's just happen in Scottsdale, they said.
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Anyway, we should also just get the elephant out of the room
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before we get started.
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Audience Plus is a startup very early in our journey,
1:35
and putting together something like this
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is not easy on the budget.
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So with this in mind, if you find yourself
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without a ride after the conference,
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keep an eye out for me on Uber.
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I have five stars, all my passengers getting mints.
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Now, I'm sure when you first heard about Golden Hour,
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you all wondered the same thing.
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Does the world really need another tech marketing
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conference where a bunch of people get together
2:00
to talk about their Tesla Cybertrucks,
2:02
and how AI can eventually make cold plunges even colder?
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Again, probably not.
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But if we're using the same status quo definition
2:11
of conference, then the world probably
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doesn't need another one.
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Still, I believe that our community needs something
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right now, something that's different than the status quo,
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and the traditional vendor events that many of us
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have attended year after year.
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We need a space where we can break out
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of our LinkedIn feeds and Slack channels
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to draw inspiration from new ideas,
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not just recycle the same playbooks time and time again.
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We need an onsite environment that is more intimate,
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that enables those attending in person here
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to strengthen existing relationships and build new ones.
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And the open bar won't hurt afterwards as well.
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(audience laughing)
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We need an inclusive digital broadcast
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that goes beyond a basic live stream
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to help educate and inspire a global audience.
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And we need a shared experience that demonstrates
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the power of good marketing, not just by what is shared
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from the stage here, but what is felt by every attendee
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throughout the event.
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No pressure to the audience plus marketing team at all.
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(audience laughing)
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But the truth is that in my 15 years of working in SAS,
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I've never once attended an event like this.
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And so Golden Hour is our attempt to interrupt the pattern
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and introduce an event brand that
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makes marketers feel relevant and inspired and prepared
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for the next chapter of our industry.
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And today is really just the start.
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So we could make Golden Hour happen alone.
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There's a fine line between Coachella and Firefest.
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So I wanna give my sincerest thanks to our partners,
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especially Vimeo for their support.
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Thank you so much for everyone that helped make
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Golden Hour happen this year.
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So thanks for the assist.
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During my seven years leading marketing
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for a company called GainSight,
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I saw firsthand how an in-person gathering
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can spark a movement.
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Yes, even in enterprise software.
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In 2013, we had 300 early pioneers in customer success
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attend our first industry conference
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in San Francisco called Pulse.
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By the way, this picture was taken right before
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the fire alarm went off during the opening keynote.
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So we're about 10 minutes in and I'm happy to announce
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we're off to a better start so far.
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But years later, Pulse exploded into a full-on media brand
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for the customer success audience
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with 6,000 attendees at Moscone Center,
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annual sister events in Europe and Australia,
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virtual workshops, in-person communities
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in 50 cities across the globe.
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One year, we even had a Ferris wheel.
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Customer success became a movement
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and it all started with a few hundred people
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gathered in a room just like this one around a new idea.
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And I see that same opportunity for us
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or our marketing community gathered here in Brooklyn
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in the thousands that are watching online.
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So each of you today here in person
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received a commemorative golden hour pin
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marking your attendance today.
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I'd encourage you to hang onto it
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and wear it at future events
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and really kind of having that almost like symbol
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of being one of the first,
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being the early pioneer in this movement.
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At GainSight, we had our conference attendees years later
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wearing lanyards covered with our entire pin collection,
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looking like a very cool TGI Friday's waiter.
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It was always so fun and just so rewarding
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to see who the OGs were.
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We've been trying to be very intentional
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about how we designed this agenda
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really around this idea of inspiration, education
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and connection.
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And we believe that shared experiences like Golden Hour
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can really bind us together
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but also play an important role
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in not just the development of an industry
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but our very careers within the industry.
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Frankly, I don't think it could come at a better time
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because as I'm reflecting on just sort of my career journey,
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I don't think there's ever been a time quite like this
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where an entire profession is being reinvented
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and this reinvention is happening
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when most of us are pretty tired.
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Anyone else here feeling tired?
6:04
Not in a coffee, not hitting jet lag from travel kind of tired,
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like a deeper existential tired.
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But look, if we're going to move forward,
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we first have to address some of the very real trauma
6:17
that our industry has experienced over the last five years.
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Is fatigue, exhaustion, increase stress?
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These are all symptoms that could run wild
6:27
if we don't identify and process the root cause.
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So if you'll allow me, let's relive the trauma
6:33
for just a few minutes just to put things in context.
6:36
Remember 2020?
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We dealt with the onset of the COVID pandemic,
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lockdowns, the move to remote work.
6:45
They need to figure out how to make an impact
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through seasons of uncertainty.
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Remember walking one-on-ones, infinite Zoom windows,
6:53
virtual happy hours?
6:55
We had to enforce new boundaries
6:57
between our professional lives and our personal lives.
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We had to somehow find a way to hit our pipeline targets
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while also figuring out an entirely new way of working,
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all while operating under anxious thoughts
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and a very real threat to our health and safety
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and those of our teammates and those that we love.
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We didn't know what was gonna come next
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as the world was opening up.
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It'll be unexpected happened.
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Prosperity, zero interest rate policy,
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crypto millionaires, the post-pandemic boom
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led to an unnatural set of growth for a lot of SaaS companies.
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Marketing budgets were flush with cash.
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Thousands of companies were funded with valuations
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that reflected record multiples
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and the industry went on a hiring and buying spree.
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And in the name of remote work,
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we hired people from across the globe
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for many companies, growth came pretty easily.
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Whew, this could last forever.
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Wrong.
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(audience laughs)
7:58
SaaS market corrected.
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This latest snapshot from Bessemer's Cloud Index
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shows the peak and trough of public SaaS valuations in blue
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relative to NASDAQ, S&P 500 and Dow Jones.
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And what's worse than the data visualization here
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is the very real whiplash that our profession experienced.
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How again, we had to go back to the drawing board.
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We were told by our CFOs to find a path
8:21
to two years of runway, which meant almost universally
8:24
taking a massive haircut on the marketing budget.
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For many of us that required a devastating layoff,
8:31
or two or more, that affected very real people.
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Many of us personally impacted.
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In a recent survey of CMOs that we conducted,
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44% shared that they now have less resources
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to achieve their revenue plans
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than they had in the previous 24 months.
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78% believe that expectations on marketing
8:51
to deliver growth are even higher
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than the previous 24 months.
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And 44% reported lower team morale
8:58
over the last several years.
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So now, as we look to gather our footing,
9:03
to execute on this efficient growth charter
9:05
that we've been given with our leaner teams,
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we're leaning on the marketing tactics and playbooks
9:10
so we've executed well for our entire careers,
9:12
only to find that these playbooks no longer work.
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Welcome to the inspiring keynote, everyone.
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What do we do?
9:21
How do we move forward?
9:22
The silver lining on trauma, pain, and suffering
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is that it builds perseverance.
9:28
And this is just as true at work
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as it is in our personal lives.
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You don't just go from suffering to okay to success
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at the flip of a dime.
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But psychologists say that there's one powerful
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emotional construct that can help accelerate
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the recovery process better than anything else.
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Any guesses what that is?
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Hope.
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Hope can transform even the most acute trauma
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into a beautiful story.
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Hope gives us something to hang on to,
10:00
to look forward to beyond the current struggles
10:02
of our day to day.
10:04
We all need hope in something,
10:06
whether that's in our careers or in our personal lives.
10:09
Otherwise we're just going through the motions.
10:12
And who better than marketers than to create
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a sense of optimism, to inspire not just ourselves
10:18
but our teams, the rest of the company
10:20
and even the audiences that we serve.
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But before we turn to inspire others,
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we have to put our own oxygen mask on first.
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And that's what today's about, finding our hope.
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And together, the co-author,
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the next generation marketing playbook
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that allows us to make an impact on like ever before.
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So with that as our goal, with that as our task for today,
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let's zoom into the tactics just for a little bit.
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There seems to be a consensus that the two decade old
10:48
playbooks that we've all been executing
10:51
are just no longer working in the same way.
10:53
In fact, it's almost become a bit of a meme
10:55
to post this on LinkedIn and to say that,
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call it marketing automation, inbound marketing or whatever.
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And by the way, I am certainly not knocking those strategies.
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They've served us well for many years.
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But a lot's changed over the last five years,
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just as we walked through, almost certainly over the last 20.
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We have a session coming up this morning,
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we're gonna dive deeper into this topic,
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but let me propose the changes that I've observed
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that have made this statement true.
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First, the ability to capture the attention
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of our buyer audience has become more difficult
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than ever before.
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And sure, there are many more companies
11:30
that are now competing for that very limited attention.
11:33
But our very brains have been rewired
11:36
by the proliferation of new content formats on social media
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that literally create an endless rush of dopamine.
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Scientists actually have a name for this phenomenon,
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they call it TikTok brain.
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And it has literally narrowed our collective attention span
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as a society.
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So how can the old playbook around gating ebooks
11:54
and white papers compete with the instant gratification
11:57
in dopamine reward of a short form video asset
12:00
on your LinkedIn feed?
12:01
Who, by the way, just release their own TikTok-like feature?
12:05
All right, so buyer attention is more scarce,
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what else has changed?
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Well, our relationship with social media has changed.
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We know these platforms are important,
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we have to be where our audience is,
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we have to compete on that battlefield for attention.
12:18
But I think what we're waking up to is this idea
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that the intentions of these platforms
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are misaligned with our own.
12:26
X has been unapologetic about their active suppression
12:30
of certain links on their platform,
12:31
most famously sub-stack.
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The LinkedIn algorithm changes every few weeks,
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impacting our reach.
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TikTok is closer than ever to a national band
12:40
here in the United States.
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And I think what we're learning on these platforms
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that there sits between us and our audience,
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a third party algorithm that we don't control.
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It's throttling our reach and throttling our distribution
12:52
into our very followers.
12:54
And since the underlying business model
12:55
for these platforms is around advertising,
12:58
their incentives are never gonna align
13:00
with our own.
13:01
So what's really interesting is the consumer
13:03
and creator economies got wise to this misalignment
13:07
much earlier than we did in B2B.
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And companies like Substack and Patreon
13:11
have convinced the industry that you need to own
13:14
that relationship with your audience
13:16
in order to be successful in driving outcomes through them.
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And that's an important future for our industry as well.
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Let's look at another change.
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Under the CFO call for efficient growth,
13:28
everyone had to run the analysis to figure out
13:30
which channels were more effective and efficient than others.
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And the data shows that paid media typically
13:36
will represent the largest line item
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in the marketing programs budget
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and also one of the least efficient marketing channels.
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And it's no surprise when the red pen comes out
13:47
to look for some cost savings,
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it's the paid media budget that's targeted first.
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By the way, this is not to say that digital advertising
13:54
is dead.
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I actually think paid as a very important role
13:57
in the future of B2B marketing.
13:58
But the reality is that even for companies
14:00
that are doing this really, really well at scale,
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it's getting harder to find efficiencies on that spend.
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And so it's something that we have to be paying attention to,
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which will rethink how we deploy paid dollars
14:12
as this efficiency focus is here to stay.
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One last change.
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Legislation around consumer data privacy
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has gone into effect this year.
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If you've guys been following along,
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third party cookie restrictions for Google Chrome
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went into effect for 1% of Google Chrome's users
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on January 4th and will now be activated
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to the rest of the customer base in the second half of this year.
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So that's 68% of the internet, I think,
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running through Google Chrome.
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Google's also implemented email security mandates
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that go into effect this in February
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or went into effect, excuse me.
14:47
We have more headwinds than ever before to reach our audience.
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And if you want to peek into the future, by the way,
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on the legislation side, check out the afternoon workshop
14:56
on building an Amia demand engine with Tim from Yo Yaba,
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who runs the largest digital marketing agency
15:02
in the Dach region.
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And Dach is typically one of the most regulated markets
15:07
for digital marketing.
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So that'll be a good session to consider.
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This is a lot of change.
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There's a lot of change to process
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and a lot of challenges to the execution playbooks
15:17
that we've built our entire careers on.
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So how do we respond?
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What do we do?
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And that's, again, the intention of what we're going to be
15:24
working through, because I believe that there's a new dawn
15:28
coming for the marketing industry.
15:30
And I want to share with you the hope that I see
15:32
for where we're headed.
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Hope for how we can lean into these challenges.
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And in doing so, come out the other end
15:39
as a stronger and more impactful marketing practice.
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Let me show you what I see.
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We know that content is the oxygen
15:47
for the marketing flywheel.
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However, we have to evolve our intention
15:52
away from producing content for algorithmic value
15:54
or cheap conversions, the content that's actually produced
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for human value.
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And this means mastering formats beyond the written blog post,
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which is super important, we'll continue,
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embracing editorial writing, video, podcasts,
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and other live streaming and other media formats.
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It means balancing long form and short form production
16:16
to capture attention.
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And I believe that in addition to all of the upskilling
16:20
that's currently happening on internal content teams,
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creative agencies have a huge role to play
16:25
in helping to accelerate the progress into this new kind of era.
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We have to be active in rented spaces like LinkedIn, YouTube,
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and others, but we have to realize
16:34
that we cannot build for those channels alone.
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Think about your brand as a network,
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the official home for conversations, thought leadership,
16:42
and community around your point of view.
16:45
And a lot of that content will be produced by you and your team.
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A lot will be produced by incredible creators, influencers,
16:52
subject matter experts who add both credibility and distribution
16:56
to your network.
16:58
We need to evolve this legacy idea of digital conversions
17:02
into building an owned audience of subscribers,
17:05
adding value and creating resource for the 95% of our audience
17:09
who's already paying attention, but may not
17:11
be in a position to buy today.
17:13
And by the way, let's not abandon the demand capture
17:16
kind of motions to get the 5% who are in market
17:18
through the funnel.
17:20
For too long, we've over indexed on the 5%
17:23
at the expense of the 95.
17:26
And that direct first-party relationship
17:28
means no third-party algorithm that's
17:30
sitting between us and our audience throttling our reach
17:33
in the cost of distribution begins to approach zero.
17:37
We need to move past pushing all digital conversions
17:39
into an automated and robotic nurture sequence.
17:43
And instead, start curating exclusive value
17:46
and intentional experiences just for our subscribers.
17:50
By doing this, we're giving our unknown audience--
17:52
folks that haven't yet subscribed-- a compelling reason
17:55
to do so.
17:56
But more importantly, we're delivering real value
17:58
to our subscriber base who are coming to us to not just
18:01
buy products, but to learn, to connect, to belong.
18:07
And by embracing all these new changes,
18:09
we're going to be afforded the opportunity
18:10
to look beyond the limitation of web analytics data,
18:14
anonymous aggregates of views and listens and impressions,
18:18
and to a world where we can understand and defend
18:21
the actual impact of our content on revenue,
18:24
using real first-party data.
18:27
And the impact of our efforts can now become known,
18:29
not just inferred.
18:31
And we can reinforce our seat at the table
18:33
and enrich our conversations with sales, customer success,
18:36
product, and our other partners across the company.
18:39
And as we capture more and more of this data
18:42
around our audience, across both our own services and rented,
18:46
we'll be in a position where we can run machine learning
18:48
models against our own proprietary data
18:51
to help inform production decisions.
18:53
What topics should we be creating content around?
18:56
What formats?
18:57
How do we distribute it in one channel?
18:58
What creators should we be partnering with?
19:01
What if we had access to the same engagement data
19:03
that YouTube and Netflix had on us?
19:06
We'll move beyond random acts of content
19:09
and leverage actual data on our audience
19:12
to tune production and distribution decisions outcomes.
19:15
So this is the hope that I see for marketing.
19:19
By the way, this may sound radical or unproven to some,
19:22
but realize that this is already happening
19:24
in the consumer, e-com, and creator economies.
19:27
We're just late to the party.
19:29
And I think that the SaaS businesses in the room
19:32
who are the first movers in this strategy
19:34
are going to be both on the right side of history
19:37
and also have a head start on the competition.
19:39
And this is a strategy, personally,
19:42
that I find to be pretty inspiring.
19:44
And it really has the potential to unlock
19:45
a new level of creativity in B2B marketing
19:48
that many of us have been desperate for in years past.
19:52
We've referred to this collection of strategies
19:54
as owned media, nothing new in that terminology,
19:57
but one that's taken on new meaning and importance
20:00
given the realities of our go-to market today.
20:03
Just over two years ago, I saw these trade wins
20:06
of our industry starting to shift
20:08
and realizing that there wasn't a company in the marketplace
20:10
that was championing owned media,
20:12
building the technology to help marketers
20:14
operationalize the practice,
20:16
but also championing the movement with content,
20:19
community, and this exchange of ideas.
20:22
So I stepped down from my CMO career
20:23
and launched a company called Audience Plus.
20:25
And we've been transparent from day one
20:27
on how we view our role in the marketing industry.
20:30
First, we're building a pioneering software platform
20:33
for owned media.
20:35
We're also convening a community of marketers,
20:37
you, through Golden Hour,
20:38
to co-author the new execution playbook for our practice.
20:43
And also, we're creating a content and media network
20:45
of our own full of best practices
20:47
to inspire, educate, and equip the market.
20:51
So a quick word on each.
20:52
Now we believe that the new marketing playbook
20:55
requires a new type of platform to operationalize it.
20:59
And our vision for Audience Plus
21:01
is to become the operating system for owned media.
21:04
Starting with two use cases that today are currently in beta.
21:07
First is a new type of CMS that's purpose built for media.
21:13
With Audience Plus, you can easily launch a media property
21:15
on your domain that enables your audience
21:17
to subscribe directly to your videos,
21:19
your articles, your podcasts, and more.
21:21
And since it's all no code,
21:23
you can run your entire operation within the marketing team
21:26
without borrowing resources from engineering
21:27
to publish changes to the platform.
21:30
Today over 30 customers are in beta
21:33
and are the earliest pioneers in this movement.
21:35
The second use case that's launching this quarter
21:38
is our Audience Analytics,
21:40
a first party intent data platform
21:41
that allows you to both manage subscribers,
21:44
but also understand their engagement across your content.
21:47
We'll finally be able to break our dependence
21:49
on just web analytics tools alone
21:51
to really see the impact of our content
21:55
across the lifecycle.
21:57
And best of all, all of this data
21:58
is being captured in our proprietary audience graph database,
22:00
which over time will enable a rich understanding
22:03
of topics, formats, and creator collabs of interest.
22:07
By the way, you won't hear anything else
22:09
about the Audience Plus product from the stage today.
22:11
So if you have any interest in learning more,
22:13
we see Amanda, there she is.
22:15
Out in the foyer.
22:16
Honestly, I'm so excited about work building.
22:21
We'd love to share it with you
22:22
and have a chance to see a window to the future that we see.
22:26
All right, on the community front,
22:28
we believe that Golden Hour will continue
22:29
to play an important role in our movement,
22:31
starting here in Brooklyn today,
22:33
but a ton of ambition for where we can take this
22:35
kind of going forward.
22:36
So in addition to the annual conference,
22:38
which we hope to bring back every spring,
22:41
we host an executive forum every fall
22:43
that operates more like a facilitated,
22:45
peer-driven workshop for chief marketers.
22:48
Last year, we had 50 CMOs and over $100 billion
22:51
of market cap in the room.
22:52
And we're excited to bring what we're now calling
22:54
Golden Hour exec back this fall.
22:57
And I'm excited to announce one more community initiative.
23:01
Coming this fall, we're going to be launching
23:03
our first pilot chapter as of what we're calling
23:05
Golden Hour Local, a new initiative
23:07
of local community groups in your home city.
23:11
So think of this as a quarterly gathering
23:13
of content and demand marketers in your town
23:16
to compare notes on owned media strategy
23:18
and to work through some facilitated content.
23:21
Each local community will be chaired by a chapter president
23:24
and supported by the audience plus team
23:25
of content and logistics for these meetups.
23:28
So if you're interested in becoming a chapter president
23:30
and bringing Golden Hour Local to your city,
23:32
again, please stop by the booth with Amanda
23:35
and she'll share some more details on it.
23:37
All right, and so to talk about our content network,
23:40
I'm excited to bring up Todd Clouser to the stage,
23:43
audience plus his head of audience marketing.
23:45
Welcome Todd.
23:46
(audience cheering)
23:48
♪ Now, free, jump roughly ♪
23:53
♪ Now, free, jump roughly ♪
23:55
♪ Now, free, jump roughly ♪
23:57
My name is Todd Clouser.
23:59
Some of you may know me as the worst marker in the world.
24:03
But me standing on this stage right now is proof
24:09
that B2B content is changing because my background
24:13
is not in SAS.
24:15
In fact, my claim to fame is that I started
24:19
a two-person media company in the welding industry.
24:24
So how does that translate to B2B SAS?
24:29
Well, I'm here to tell you that.
24:33
And I'm also here to tell you about audience plus
24:36
his new content program and how that's going to affect
24:40
all of you in this room.
24:41
But before I do that, (laughs)
24:44
I wanna give a shout to both Anthony and JK.
24:47
They've done an amazing job at building V1
24:52
of our content program.
24:53
It's actually what drew me over to audience plus
24:57
in the first place because I believe in this mission so much.
25:00
That being said, over the past couple months,
25:02
we have spent a lot of time building out our strategic
25:06
narrative, aligning our content to goals,
25:11
and building the future of our own own media platform.
25:15
But I had to come up with something that kind of
25:18
summed up the goals of our content in a very simple
25:23
easy to understand way.
25:26
And because we're B2B marketers, this is what we came up with.
25:29
The goal of our content is to inspire the modern marketer
25:35
by curating owned media best practices with authentic
25:39
and editorial storytelling, advancing the adoption
25:43
of the strategy and sharing its impact on our profession.
25:48
Eh?
25:49
Eh?
25:50
(audience laughs)
25:51
I feel like a lot of you nodding right now.
25:54
I was nodding too.
25:56
(audience laughs)
25:56
But if you're anything like me,
25:58
there's a reason that you're nodding.
26:01
The reason is 'cause you looked over
26:02
and you saw Dave Gerhart doing it.
26:05
(audience laughs)
26:07
But the truth of the matter is,
26:09
you have no idea what I just said.
26:13
It's okay, Dave didn't either.
26:15
So here's what we're gonna do.
26:16
We're gonna break this down.
26:18
(laughs)
26:21
We're gonna break this down.
26:23
So, Anthony just went over what owned media was, right?
26:29
And if you're in this room,
26:32
you probably believe that owned media
26:35
is the future of B2B marketing.
26:37
The problem with that though,
26:41
is not many people know how to do that, right?
26:45
There's no roadmap.
26:47
That is the goal of our content on Audience Plus.
26:51
We are going to go into excruciating detail
26:56
on how you can get started,
26:58
how you can measure and report on success,
27:01
and showcase other companies both inside
27:04
and outside of B2B,
27:06
so you can see where they are finding success.
27:10
So, it is my distinct pleasure
27:13
to be able to share with you
27:15
what we've been working on over the past couple months.
27:19
So, about two years ago,
27:22
Obed Durrani and I created Easy Mode.
27:25
Now, what Easy Mode is,
27:27
is it's an eight-part framework
27:30
that teaches content marketers and marketing teams
27:35
how to create a content engine using creators.
27:39
We've implemented this at dozens of companies now,
27:44
but today, you can go on Audience Plus
27:47
and get the full thing for free.
27:49
This is where I pause for the applause.
27:53
(audience applauds)
27:56
All right, so, quick question.
27:59
Has anybody noticed the obscene amount
28:03
of camera operators in the room today?
28:05
There is one camera operator for every 20 of you,
28:11
and there's a reason for that.
28:13
At Audience Plus, we believe that events
28:16
are a huge part of owned media,
28:19
and we wouldn't be doing our jobs
28:22
if we didn't chronicle this entire thing
28:26
and deliver it to you in an educational documentary
28:29
so you can do this exact same thing.
28:32
The series is called No Sleep 'Til Brooklyn,
28:34
and it is literally the blueprint
28:37
of how we put this event together.
28:39
And then finally, we have a new series coming soon
28:44
that is a guided playbook on how to build
28:48
an owned media strategy.
28:50
And because this is a very new approach
28:53
to be to be marketing,
28:55
I'm gonna walk you through a little bit
28:57
of what you will get.
28:58
You will get tutorials on how to integrate
29:01
owned media practices into whatever it is
29:05
that you're currently doing today.
29:07
You'll get exercises on how to test and measure
29:12
those different ideas.
29:14
You will get a companion guide with prompting questions
29:18
to complete with your team.
29:20
The goal is no more silos.
29:22
You can do this entire thing together,
29:26
and you will get additional resources
29:28
so you can go as deep down
29:30
that owned media rabbit hole as you want.
29:33
Now, this is the type of content
29:35
that you typically pay a consultant,
29:38
tens of thousands of dollars to do for you.
29:42
We are breaking this down so that you can do it
29:44
with your team on your own.
29:46
But in addition to these highly produced pieces of content,
29:53
we're also going to deliver daily content
29:57
through several show series using both internal
30:01
and external influencers.
30:03
You'll get a monthly broadcast
30:06
that we go into the best practices
30:08
that we're finding ourselves here at Audience Plus.
30:12
You'll get written how-to guides,
30:14
and you'll get access to our job board
30:17
where our goal is to help marketers find their next role
30:21
in companies that are actually running the new playbook.
30:25
But we also had to figure out how we get people to want
30:31
to subscribe to our content,
30:33
because the point of own media
30:35
is to build that deeper relationship with our audience.
30:39
So if you become a subscriber of Audience Plus,
30:42
you will get our newly reinvented newsletter
30:46
where we go into tactical how-tos
30:50
on how you can both implement the content strategy
30:53
and execute on it.
30:55
You'll get a monthly Q&A session,
30:58
it's kind of a town hall style
31:01
where you can come on and ask
31:04
and present the things that you're actually having problems with
31:08
so that we can help you fix those things and get unstuck.
31:12
You'll get access to the playbook,
31:13
which I just went over, including our first course
31:16
coming out later this year on to own media.
31:20
We will do quarterly research guides
31:22
that not only utilizes survey data,
31:26
but it utilizes actual data
31:28
that's coming out of the Audience Plus.
31:30
So if you're a network,
31:32
you'll get discounted access to all golden hour events
31:36
that Anthony just went over,
31:38
and you will get invitations to our new golden hour
31:43
community meetups that are coming soon
31:46
to a city near you.
31:48
So if any of this sounded interesting to you,
31:53
here's the QR code for you
31:57
to become a subscriber right now.
32:00
I'm literally measured on this number,
32:03
so I need to see more phones going up right now.
32:09
And I'm just going to sit here and chill for a little bit
32:11
until I sit here.
32:13
All right, all right, I'm leaving.
32:15
I promise I'm leaving. - Thank you, Todd.
32:16
I appreciate it.
32:17
Real quick, though, real quick.
32:18
Before I leave-- - Oh, Todd.
32:20
Before I leave, I just want to tempt you with something.
32:22
Just like real quick.
32:25
I've got a video for you, so...
32:28
Create to one.
32:30
Hey, guys. Welcome to Easy Mark.
32:32
Mark and hers are thinking about creating content
32:34
that's very different.
32:36
So we've built it up.
32:37
We wanted to create an on-site experience
32:39
that curated relationship building
32:41
for both Introvert and Introvert alike.
32:44
Trust-- Trust in the Oregon Easy.
32:47
Yes.
32:49
Because of hyper-compile mind or with bad friends,
32:52
we still keep on and specifically constantly.
32:55
[MUSIC PLAYING]
32:58
We break both of those things down and then three parts.
33:03
More grace.
33:04
All right.
33:09
So if that doesn't exist, it's time for you to scan that part.
33:15
I don't know if I'm making it into the future in marketing
33:17
after all, so thank you all.
33:20
Thank you.
33:21
Thank you.
33:22
[CHEERING]
33:25
With your Todd's future in marketing is very bright.
33:30
So thank you, Todd.
33:31
We're so excited for-- to have you be a part of this.
33:34
Look, we're just so excited, again,
33:36
to get started, to formally kick things off here.
33:39
Many of you are staying with us at the William Vale.
33:42
And chances are, if you have--
33:44
and if you've taken the elevator down to the conference
33:47
floor, you might have seen this written on the wall,
33:51
alone, together, wish we planned it.
33:54
It was there when we arrived.
33:55
But I couldn't help but think just how appropriate
33:58
that framing is, considering, again, all that we've
34:00
been through over the last five years,
34:03
and what we're doing in response to that today.
34:05
Many of us have built our careers on a digital marketing
34:08
playbook that has served us very well,
34:11
but is anywhere from 18 to 25 years old
34:13
and is losing its impact.
34:16
We then experienced a whiplash sparked
34:18
by the pandemic in 2020 that left us exhausted
34:21
and looking for new ways to impact pipeline.
34:23
Today, nearly 25 years later, we're
34:26
gathering here to find our inspiration
34:29
for the new playbook for the marketing practice,
34:31
right here at Golden Hour.
34:33
So whatever you've been through, and whatever
34:36
you're going through now, you're not alone.
34:38
Events like this are little helpful reminders
34:41
that you are not alone in the challenges
34:43
that you may be facing at work.
34:46
At worst, we can be alone together.
34:49
So let's get started.
34:51
What do you think?
34:52
[APPLAUSE]