Marketing Mashup

James McKinven

The weekly marketing and entrepreneurship podcast where I jump into interviews with some of the most interesting people I have met throughout my career. From CMOs and agency founders to social media executives and freelancers, you'll hear their different perspectives on marketing and how to build a brand.

  1. 04/18/2020

    Why building a community is more important now than ever with Joe Glover

    Joe Glover is the founder of The Marketing Meetup, a community of 14,000+ marketers across 14 locations in the UK and US, with monthly events, regular podcasts, workshops and loads more. As with many founders, Joe created the Meetup as a solution to his need, which was to learn about his chosen craft and meet other marketers but in an environment which values listening and being positively lovely over sales and selfishness. As a result of the success of The Marketing Meetup, he's also started his own agency - Empath Marketing - helping companies begin to see how the marketing department can be a value driver, rather than just a cost centre. Intro to JoeLet's talk about The Marketing Meetup which has scaled into this fantastic community of marketers with events across the country (and more). Tell me more about your mission "A positively lovely community for helping marketers get better at what they do."Why is community so important? How do you make sure it's authentic and not just 'corporate community' that you mention in the Humans Come First podcast?We're currently going through a period of extreme change and uncertainty, lots of people are worried for their livelihoods and their future. It's also a very important time for brands to respond in the right way. How can brands be kind and helpful with their marketing during this crisis?How can we as marketers stay kind to one another? Can we do anything to help?Due to the circumstances, you've had to adapt The Marketing Meetup. Can you talk me through some of the changes you've made to ensure the community stays strong?Your content schedule for the next few months is fantastic, with a bunch of great events set up with people like Rory Sutherland and Dave Gerdhart. What is your process of coming up with new content and how do you ensure it's good quality and providing value for your community?Following the success of the Meetup, you've set up your own agency. When did you know it was the right time to set up that agency and what do you offer for your clients?Links LinkedInTwitterThe Marketing MeetupEmpath Marketing

    32 min
  2. 02/27/2020

    How Marketing Examples Breaks The Rules of Traditional Marketing with Founder, Harry Dry

    You can now support the podcast by buying me a coffee here ☕ Harry is the founder of Marketing Examples. Marketing Examples TwitterHarry's TwitterWe cover a bunch of ground in this episode: What it's like being on the Indie Hackers podHarry's first endeavour turning tweets into canvas prints - 140 CanvasDoing things that don't scale, sending in handwritten letters to YouTuber mailtime'sWhy you need to market yourselfImportance of validating your ideaThe story behind Yeezy Datinghttps://thekanyestory.com/Buying billboards in Times SquareHow Harry hustled his way into Yeezy HQWorking for Crowdform. Harry lived like a 'real person' for 8-9 months...While writing for Crowdform, Harry took those examples and put them on a marketing examples first pageHow Marketing Examples was born organicallyThe importance of providing value natively on the platformPeople don't like self promotion, but if you're giving people value they'll react wellHow Harry got banned on the EntrepreneurRideAlong sub-redditWhat are the best subreddits to post in?How Harry lost 27k of BitcoinBest practices to grow a Twitter followingUsing long Twitter threads and not linking away from Twitter@NoContextHearn; @NavalRavikantBotUsing his website to bring people to TwitterWhy not having a background in marketing can make you a better marketerThe attention to detail in Marketing Examples sets it apart from anything elsePodia's Competitor PagesGrowing a very nice sized email list (13k)Utilising Product Hunt effectivelyUsing good copy to increase conversionsRefactoring UIUsing GIFs for marketing

    1h 6m
  3. 12/17/2019

    Why the advertising industry is broken with Paul Mellor, MD of Mellor&Smith

    Paul is the co-founder of ad agency Mellor&Smith and also started the event series #TakeFuckingRisks as a side hustle - which is now one of the biggest creative events in London. Support this podcast by buying me a coffee (or 3...) We covered plenty of ground in this episode! Should you specialise or be well roundedThe state of the advertising industry today89% of ads that people see are forgotten - can you imagine if this was any other industry?"As an industry we are f*****g terrible at our jobs"What do we need to do to fix the industry?First admit there is a problem - although this doesn't serve the industryHaving a backbone and standing up to clientsStop being addicted to digital and short termismStop being fixated on dataMake advertising based on what people do rather than what the algorithm saysWhy clients don't trust agencies and what we can do about itThe public don't trust brands, we need to rebuilt thatIs the market research and insight industry broken too?Serial focus groupersGet down to the supermarket and see how people actually actWhy we shouldn't approach B2B differentlyThey are still people, it's just not their money they are spendingAny B2B brand using traditional media is going to winHow do you get clients to take risks?Why social media metrics are bullshitIs traditional media the most effectiveIs it the fact that the advertising as bad or is traditional media broken?Why influencer marketing is a conThe role of advertising is to get you noticed, not to make salesWhat is "Take F*****g Risks"?Why there is a lack of honesty in our industryWhy we need more trouble makersHow do you deal with disagreements with clients?If you're so good at this, why are you only 11 people?Links Follow Mellor&Smith on TwitterPaul's LinkedInFollow me on Twitter

    1h 1m
  4. 10/11/2019

    CEO of Wistia, Chris Savage, talks brand affinity, raising debt and long-form content

    Chris Savage is the co-founder and CEO of Wistia, a video sharing and hosting company (and pioneers of the brand affinity movement). After graduating from Brown University with a degree in Art-Semiotics, Chris and his co-founder, Brendan Schwartz, started Wistia in Brendan’s living room in 2006. Wistia has since grown into a multi-million dollar business with over 150 employees (including 1 labradoodle). Before Wistia, Chris helped produce an Emmy Award-winning feature-length documentary and was named a Top Young Entrepreneur by BusinessWeek. I've been following Wistia's journey for the past few years and I'm delighted to welcome Chris to the podcast. Support this podcast by buying me a coffee (or 3...) ☕ What is Wistia?How did it start?How did Wistia originally position in the market?They were a private video sharing site and then pivoted to embeddable website videos. Then had to make the decision to fully focus on marketing videos.They then switched back to offering everything as people had lots of different use cases for Wistia, which was a mistake because then they struggled on where to focus and innovate. They had no differentiator.When did Wistia take it's first set of investment?Took a year to focus on private video sharing - huge companies. They noticed they were onto something big so took investment and hired 2 people. They then started loosing $30k a month, which felt horrible!Stayed at 4 people for another 3 years.The greatest mistake they could make was not thinking long-term.Their last funding round was in 2010, what have they done for the past decade to grow?As they got more profitable they took more risksInvested in content marketing and company cultureThey got to £10m in revenue with a few million in profitPeople were saying 'if you're profitable then you're probably not growing fast enough'Thought they were missing out on growthWent from being profitable to running at a loss, hiring people, running ad campaignsOutside the business it seemed like they were doing great but internally they were creating a ton of complexity and a situation was bad.Lost the ability risks because of itForced everything to be short termCompounding affect of losing $300k a monthAt the point where you were haemorrhaging money, going further and further into the red, what were you thinking? What was next?This was the point where 3 life changing offers where on the table. Their intention was never to sell Wistia, but it got to the point where they were considering it.But they felt that if they sell, they would be failing.Then they started thinking about what they would do if they sold.Start a new companyIdea of the brand, the people, the problems they'd want to solve"If we want to build another company, we'd build another Wistia back to the £10m days and we wouldn't have screwed it up by putting the throttle down so hard"How has Wistia been since raising the debt? Is it back to being a happy company?As soon as the debt was raised, there was about 6 months of turmoil with staff leaving etc, then they built back up to profitability, really quickly.It was a huge turnaround as they went from a $0.5m loss in 2017 to $6m profit in 2018It gave them profitable confidence again! Wistia could start to take creative risks again, such as One, Ten, One-Hundred and 16 weeks parental leave policy.Is it possible to grow a successful business, like Wistia, without taking external funding?Depends on the mindset of the founderYou need persistence, lots of persistenceYou need to have the right market, one that is growing. If the market is not ready for your product, if you don't have funding it will be very hard to keep going.One, Ten, One-Hundred is one of my favourite bits of B2B marketing I've ever seen. What was the thought process behind making it?Was born out of a conversation with Sandwich Video founder, Adam Lisago.They had done a big ad campaign the year before, this was to try and build brand awareness, which didn't work at all. One, Ten, One-Hundred was an opportunity to document this ad creation process with Sandwich.What they found with this series is that time spent with brand was up massively, brand search was up and ultimately brand affinity increased.Why does long form content work so well?Time with brand is such a hard thing to come by if you think about the amount of touchpoint customers have with your brand currently - cumulatively it doesn't add up to much.A key to any relationship is building trust and the more time you can get people to spend with you brand, the better.It was something people actually wanted to watch. It was entertaining and educational.How did it perform?$10k video performed the best, but they all performed different jobs.The $1k video shows how you can make a creative video that showcases your product well, it doesn't need to break the bank.The $10k video showcases the sweet spot of how much you could spend to get a really high performing ad.The $100k video proves that if you need your brand to be this polished and have the money to spend to reflect that, then it is worth it.It didn't just stop there with Wistia's long form content. What is Brandwagon?Ended up having conversations about brand, which sparked the idea of creating a talk show which let's the Wistia personality come through.The format means it is repeatable and they know exactly what they are doing, which makes for more efficient production.Patrick Campbell of ProfitWell said on another podcast episode that they have got their production of their video series down to about $10k, which is the equivalent to the spend to create an ebook. If it's that cheap to do, why isn't every B2B marketer doing it?Patrick and the team are pioneersSome people don't understand the impact it can haveThey are looking at how a campaign can go viral, as opposed to thinking about how they can build brand affinity.The biggest brands are now figuring out that making good content that interests people really does workA place we're really seeing this taking off is with Podcasts. Podcasting is one of the most personalised, intimate ways a person or brand can communicate with you. You're building a relationship with your customer.Is Wistia going to keep going with the long-form content? If so, what's next?"We're shooting lots at the moment but I can't get into too much detail"Wistia didn't have a sales team until 3 years ago. Why didn't you for so long, and what made you create one?It's based on focus. When they started, of course they were doing sales, but they wanted to keep the business self-service and seamless with onboarding. They'd built Wistia up pretty big without any sales team.But things change! They started speaking to different companies and finding some that had bad experiences with Wistia! This was because there were people who liked speaking to people before buying, they need someone to help them through the buying process. This actually was damaging, especially upmarket. A huge pre-customer experience gap.From the outside it looks like everyone is happy and Wistia has a great culture - which I don't doubt. But obviously throughout any journey you're going to have to make difficult decisions within the te...

    54 min

About

The weekly marketing and entrepreneurship podcast where I jump into interviews with some of the most interesting people I have met throughout my career. From CMOs and agency founders to social media executives and freelancers, you'll hear their different perspectives on marketing and how to build a brand.