About this episode Do you routinely look for ways to bring more innovation into demand generation? Or do you feel like your marketing approach is falling behind? A lot of marketers talk about innovation. Fewer connect it back to revenue, sales follow-up, customer experience, and the actual work of getting things done. That is why I interviewed Jeanne Hopkins, then CMO at Lola.com, about how marketers can bring more innovation to demand generation without losing sight of the whole business. Jeanne has led marketing in B2B technology companies, including HubSpot, Ipswitch, and Lola.com. In this conversation, she shares why creative ideas are not enough unless they get executed, why marketers need to think beyond leads, and why the best demand generation teams stay connected to sales, customers, employees, and the broader community. We also talk about the danger of “arts and crafts marketing,” the importance of generating revenue, why marketers should walk a mile in the sales team’s shoes, and how empathy helps marketers understand customers, finance teams, office managers, and business travelers. About Jeanne Hopkins Jeanne Hopkins is a marketing leader with deep experience in B2B technology, demand generation, revenue marketing, and customer experience. At the time of this interview, Jeanne was CMO at Lola.com, a corporate travel management solution for finance teams, office managers, and business travelers. Connect with Jeanne: Jeanne Hopkins on X/Twitter Jeanne Hopkins on LinkedIn Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Jeanne Hopkins 00:31 Jeanne’s path from accounting to marketing 03:19 Driving innovation in demand generation 06:27 Avoiding arts and crafts marketing 09:41 The four circles of marketing 12:04 The immediacy trend in marketing 14:20 How marketing can help sales 23:31 Advice for future CMOs A few things worth taking away Innovation in demand generation is not just about new ideas. It is about turning ideas into execution. Creative marketing that does not connect to revenue can become “arts and crafts marketing.” Marketing’s job is not just to generate leads. It is to help generate revenue and support the whole business. Marketers need strong relationships with sales leaders if they want demand generation to turn into real pipeline. Customer marketing matters because getting customers is not enough. You also need to keep them. Jeanne’s four circles are employees, customers, prospects, and community. People expect answers right away. Speed and responsiveness are now part of the customer experience. Marketers should secret-shop their own website, forms, chat, phone numbers, and follow-up process. Marketing teams should call and review their own leads so they understand what sales experiences. Empathy helps marketers understand sales teams, finance buyers, office managers, business travelers, and customers. Future CMOs need to communicate clearly, speak confidently, and present well to leadership and the board. A few lines that stuck with me “I don’t want to be a totally early adopter, but I want to be on the forefront before competition catches up with us.” — Jeanne Hopkins “Being creative is great, but innovation isn’t going to matter unless you can get it done.” — Brian Carroll “My job is to generate revenue.” — Jeanne Hopkins “It’s not marketing. It’s not sales. It’s us together.” — Jeanne Hopkins “If you don’t start with employees and customers, the rest of it is all for naught.” — Jeanne Hopkins “Have you ever filled out one of those forms on your company?” — Jeanne Hopkins “Walk a mile in their shoes and you’ll build some empathy for how hard it is.” — Jeanne Hopkins Resources mentioned Jeanne Hopkins on X/Twitter Jeanne Hopkins on LinkedIn Lola.com Drift Expensify SAP Concur Toastmasters You may also like What is empathy-based marketing? Why Marketers Fail at Customer Empathy and How to Fix it Getting sales enablement right to increase results Listen and subscribe If you found this episode helpful, subscribe to the B2B Roundtable Podcast wherever you listen. Full transcript Brian: Well, Jeanne, welcome to our show. I’m really excited to have you here. Can you tell our listeners a little bit about your background? Jeanne: Well, thanks, Brian. My undergraduate degree is in accounting. Believe it or not, I started in an accounting office where I was told on my annual review that I probably didn’t have a future in accounting because I was too loud for the office. Everything balanced, and everything was good, but I was too noisy for a nice, cut-and-dry accounting office. So that’s when I moved into toys. I worked for Milton Bradley Company in their in-house advertising agency. Then I moved to LEGO, and then I moved into other consulting companies. Then I got into software, which was an internally funded company called Datum E-business Solutions, which delivered a trusted time application. A long time ago, way back in the year 2000, it used to be that you’d send an email, and maybe somebody would send it back, but it would be three hours later or three hours before. That’s because networks were not on the same timing device. So the whole concept of timing and having to be secure became critically important to all networks. From there, I was selling into IT, B2B technology companies, that sort of thing. So that’s my gig. Brian: Very cool. You’re with Lola right now. Tell our listeners a little bit: what does Lola do? Jeanne: Lola.com is a corporate travel management solution that allows finance people, office managers, and business travelers themselves to see their full travel and integrate with an expense platform. I know, Brian, you’ve probably done some expenses before. Brian: Yeah. Jeanne: You take a picture of the expense, you watch it go into the cloud, you fill out the form, and it takes a half an hour or an hour. I bet you avoid it, right? It’s one of those things. Brian: It’s something you wait until the last minute to do. If the reports are due on Monday, you’re doing it Sunday night. Jeanne: Of course, taking away from family time. Brian: Right. Jeanne: We’re integrated with Expensify, Concur, and a whole bunch of different finance applications, as well as travel. So you can book your travel with us. We have a complete support network that helps you get checked in and makes sure that when disruptions happen, like we were just talking about the polar vortex in Minnesota, people who aren’t traveling in and out because it’s too darn cold can be rerouted or brought back sooner or later. Those are some of the hiccups that business travelers endure, and we’re trying to mitigate that for them. Brian: Very cool. I wanted to highlight you because you’ve brought so much since you and I met. We could date ourselves a bit here, but way back, as we’re speaking, I think at a MarketingSherpa Conference. Jeanne: 2006, yeah. Brian: Yeah. I was really impressed by you and how you were bringing innovation, creativity, and out-of-the-box thinking. You’ve continued to do that throughout your career. How did you start thinking differently about driving innovation and out-of-the-box thinking with how you do demand generation? Jeanne: Well, I can’t claim the credit myself. I would say there were a couple of different influences. Both my parents are, I call them, artists of a kind. My dad paints, he plays music, he writes. My mom sings and plays music and paints. When I was in high school, I majored in art. We had to submit a portfolio and do all that, and I enjoy thinking from an artistic view of the world. That’s the left-handed component of me. But then, when I graduated from high school, I went to college for accounting because I’m ultimately practical, right? I said I could always get a job adding things up. What that’s allowed me to do is I read constantly. I read all the time. I’m always trying to look for something that’s a little bit different, a little bit ahead of the curve. I don’t want to be a totally early adopter, but I want to be at the forefront before the competition catches up with us. I’m lucky to have a creative outlook. My dad was a newspaperman. He was a managing editor of the newspaper in western Massachusetts, in Springfield, and I can look at things and look at story ideas. Like, is this a story? Just us having a conversation right here, Brian, is a story, right? Brian: Yes. Jeanne: We each have a story. We have a backstory that goes back some 13 years now. Brian: Right. Jeanne: We know each other. We worked together. You have a family. You know my family. That’s a story. So I sent a note to my internal content team, and I said, “Hey, I’m doing this podcast. When it gets published, I think we should do a press release and post it on the blog and backlink to Brian’s blog because that’s where he’s going to be posting it.” But that’s not really creative. That’s all execution. Brian: Right. Jeanne: Don’t you think that’s where people kind of drop the ball? Brian: I do. I think it’s like bringing the two pieces together. What I’ve respected about you is that you were always willing to try something new, and you would see it through. You wouldn’t let it drop. I think it’s both sides. Jeanne: Are you saying I’m a nag? Brian: Well, I think a little bit. But you want things done well, and you personally own it. That’s something for our listeners that I saw. Being creative is great, but you also had this very practical side you brought to it. Creativity isn’t going to matter much, or innovation isn’t going to matter, unless you can get it done. Jeanne: A place I worked a few companies ago, one of the salespeople contacted me and said, “Oh, they’re completely rebranding. They’re doing all this kind of stuff.” I feel like marketers that go the rebranding route, t