No Sleep Till Brooklyn 13 min

Ep 1: Justifying a Conference to Leadership


Get a behind the scenes look at how the AudiencePlus team justified Goldenhour at such an early stage, why you might want to, and how to get it done.



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What do you think he's saying in there?

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He's telling the board that we want to create the biggest marketing event in

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the industry.

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Huge!

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What do you think they're saying?

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But telling them a way to where they'd pull this off.

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It's not too early.

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What do you think he said?

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That we need to take big swings.

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Big swings.

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Oh man.

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I wonder what they said.

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They said, of course we need to take big swings.

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But this is crazy.

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We're crazy!

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You're right.

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I've had just a bloodbath in there.

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Never thought of.

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Well that was easy.

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I guess we read that all wrong.

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I guess we did.

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No! Sleep! Tell!

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Workways!

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We are evangelizing a new playbook for marketing.

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And in this new playbook we're suggesting that actual

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exchange of value, education, relationships, you know, these are the things

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that ultimately drive revenue.

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If you can build a connection with an audience through a variety of different

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means,

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that's going to be the key to success moving forward.

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So part of it was we had to walk the walk.

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And I think events are a core part of how we do that.

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We have some experience now having done some events.

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We hosted a three city road show when we were only a few months old as a

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company.

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We did our big launch event as well.

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Virtually had like thousands of people kind of attend that which was awesome.

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We did an executive conference that had like $100 billion of market cap in the

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room.

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I definitely, at my heart of hearts, feel like I am an event marketer disguised

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as a CMO disguised as a founder CEO now.

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And having built a program like this at GainSight at the same level of maturity

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In fact, we were even earlier at GainSight when we hosted the first Pulse

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Conference.

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Where can you find over 2,000 litres in the customer success industry under one

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roof right on the San Francisco Bay?

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It can only have been a pause.

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When the industry comes together once a year to celebrate all things customer

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success.

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Incredible journey seeing this grow this year about 10x what it was in year 1

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back in 2013.

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So it's really, really good just that.

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We're a small but mighty TK runs marketing for us.

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We worked together at Hopin' before.

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I think he's one of the smartest demand growth marketers I've ever worked with.

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Now running kind of the entire show for us at Audience Plus.

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Somehow we were able to recruit Todd Clouser, known as the worst marketer in

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the world.

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But I've known him as anything but that.

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We bring a lot of the B2C creator like kind of DNA into the culture.

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Amanda's are founding sales rep really helping us mature our kind of go-to-

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market strategy, drive growth.

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Ruben and Elaine are our customer success team.

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What's interesting about Ruben and Elaine they both were at GainSight and they

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saw Pulse from our first conference there from the early days.

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And all that it's impacted.

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And so I think they're kind of like you're crazy but we get it like keep going.

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My initial thought was to laugh out loud but I held it inside of me.

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I smiled and I recalled what this extraordinary marketer had done at GainSight

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and I was like yeah why not.

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In some ways we have to practice what we preach so in that way it made perfect

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sense.

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I still thought it was crazy.

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Talking to the board about hosting a conference when you're less than a million

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of there are.

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A team of eight full-time employees.

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It's not exactly like the obvious play to run necessarily.

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They knew what they were sort of investing in with me right.

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They knew that this was the thing that I was uniquely good at doing.

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I may not be the best product marketer.

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I may not be the best you know even demand marketer at the end of the day.

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But if I had a vision for something on the creative events brand side we've got

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a playbook and a track record of success.

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And I think that's why it was a little bit of an easier conversation.

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This is going to be the greatest conference marketers have seen since HubSpot

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introduced Inbound.

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Since Inbound started a decade ago.

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There's been no innovation in the conference space.

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By hosting an industry conference you're aligning your brand with a movement

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that is bigger than just your products and services.

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You're building authentic relationships with prospects, customers and partners.

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And you're giving your internal team a milestone on the calendar where every

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year they can calibrate against.

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For everything from product readiness to customer love.

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But if hosting a conference can be so meaningful why do we have such a hard

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time convincing our stakeholders that it's a good idea?

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How can we create language around the value of hosting events in context of

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today's marketing reality?

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Here's how I would think about it.

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First, events spark movements.

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All of us are battling for the attention of our audience.

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And one of the hardest challenges marketers face is defining a strategic brand

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narrative that has emotional resonance with their buyer audience.

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Events unlike any other program enable marketers to activate that messaging to

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align their brand with that story.

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And probably the most powerful outcome to gather the voices of a community who

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validate that narrative as true.

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How do we have to say all the creators are here. It's a big space to be right

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now in the creative world.

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And if you're on LinkedIn and you are creating content and you're not here you

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're missing out.

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Validating your market leadership as the brand at the helm of the movement.

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Owned Media gives people the opportunity to stand out like never before.

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A guy like me can get dressed up in a silly costume and make a difference.

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That's not something I would be able to do on networks that exist without

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platforms like Audience Plus.

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It gives a voice to smaller creators like never before.

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Events drive pipeline.

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I think it's a much easier sell or at minimum a compelling reason to reach out

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to get a prospect to attend a thought leadership event rather than taking a

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demo.

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There's an explicit exchange of value there.

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And conferences represent an incredible opportunity to fill the room with

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prospects, whether they're warm or cold,

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and to curate moments that build relationship with them on site.

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Events close deals.

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The research shows that there's a 10x improvement in close rate for prospects

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who attend a conference versus non-attendees.

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I'd sell stakeholders on the idea of setting a meeting target for every

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pipeline account who will be there to host breakout dinners for prospects and

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other field marketing activations.

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Events build the partner ecosystem.

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You can't really host an industry conference on your own.

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These programs represent an amazing opportunity to activate the partner channel

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with your brand at the center of the ecosystem.

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There's an incredible amount of hype around this event, so many incredible

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marketers, a team that has a track record of putting on incredible events.

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The only thing that helped me back is I heard the world's worst marketer was

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here as well, Todd.

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So I was like, do I really want to go?

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But then the answer was absolutely yes.

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So Apollo's really happy to be here.

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We're happy to sponsor.

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We're happy to partner.

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Partners make for great exhibitors and speakers, and their participation helps

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both drive net new attendees from their auditions.

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As well as offset the expenses of putting the event on.

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Finally, events impact customer retention.

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We saw some data at GainSight that after six years of hosting the Pulse

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conference, any customers who did not attend our event had a higher propensity

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to churn.

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That's because events enable the CS team to build real human relationships with

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our customers, to celebrate them as the heroes in our community, and ultimately

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to help strengthen their decision embedding on your own.

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As people are walking into the general session room, the energy is high.

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The music is blasting.

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The voice of God tells people the show is about to begin.

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There's this kinetic energy in the room that's crescendoing towards a big

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moment.

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So you can't just hard pivot from that to talking about enterprise software.

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Over the years with Pulse, we had some crazy news.

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We had some crazy ideas to transition the audience into the opening keynote.

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From hiring a Taylor Swift impersonator to perform a song,

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To a friend's skit featuring doppelganger actors,

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To my personal favorite, a surprise vanilla ice performance.

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What a great event.

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There's a great way to keep morale and keep everybody energized and to invite

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us out and bring back the 90s.

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It was just a great little experience for a lot of people.

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Create a moment that lives up to the energy you're creating in the room and

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successfully transitions your audience into the opening keynote.

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Now Golden Hour being a first year event with a first year event budget to boot

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We took a bit of a safer route for the opening moment.

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We had been running a campaign for the last year or so called emo marketing,

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Where we'd rewrite the words to popular punk songs from the early 2000s

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To create empathy with just how hard marketing is in 2024.

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And since Golden Hour was being hosted in Brooklyn,

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There was an opportunity to lean into that and bring that similar kind of video

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moment around a song from pop culture that's centered on Brooklyn.

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We have a core value of a childlike joy.

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And our thought here is we're doing this work thing for a lot of our lives.

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We want to make sure that we bring joy into everything that we do.

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At our launch event in May, we had Daniel official who is Topanga from Boy Me

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ets World,

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Be Our Host.

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And it was just an amazing like nostalgic moment, especially for our audience

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who grew up watching that show.

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Hello, I'm Danielle.

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You look just like her.

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Wow.

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That's because I am her.

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Method actor, guys.

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So what's your real name?

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No.

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Danielle, I really am her.

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It's just going to be a story to work with.

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She's great.

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JK, by the way, she's great.

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She looks just like her.

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What?

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She's actually...

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Oh.

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This is awkward.

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I'm sorry.

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Can I get you something?

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You know what?

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I would love a water.

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Water.

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Got it.

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I think it's...

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I'll be right back.

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Okay.

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You know what?

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I think we should start the show.

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And so, what can we do that's going to just be joyful and amazing and we're

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like, "Well, we're going to be in Brooklyn."

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No sleep until Brooklyn.

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Big last year, make a much disappear.

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Team Rod and Lena and our target's not clear.

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My CEO from Stas is efficient growth time.

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It's been three months since I spent the time.

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No, I won't stop me.

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Give our sight enough.

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Great.

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Gertrude, leave for a less than 10.

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We're changing B2B content.

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What else is doing this?

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How does changing B2B content actually make you money?

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You know the amount of...

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People are going to see this content.

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They're going to want to know what the heck we do.

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Guess if it fails?

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We can start looking for jobs, but honestly, I'm not too concerned about that.

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Things are extremely hard.

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We're halfway through the month.

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No deals forecasted.

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Golden Hour, we are behind on registrations, behind on sponsorship revenue.

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So we got to figure out what we're going to do.

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None of what's on the board is insurmountable.

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There isn't anything that any other company hasn't faced or isn't facing right

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now,

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so we're also not alone.

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Definitely not alone.

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To your point, Zev.

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So whatever you've been through and whatever you're going through now, you're

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not alone.

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Events like this are little helpful reminders that you are not alone in the

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challenges that you may be facing at work.

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At worst, we can be alone together.

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together.