A touching Thanksgiving story


Golden dome of Notre DameLoved this touching Thanksgiving story and wanted to share it.

A very young 18 year old kid arrives at Notre Dame. He’s Indian and from Nairobi, Kenya. He knows no one.

Feeling awkward and lonely, Notre Dame breaks for the Thanksgiving Holiday. He’s only been in the USA for a few months.

A roommate invites him to visit his family for the holiday. Together, they travel to a small and picturesque little town on the banks of the Ohio River, Madison, Indiana.

32 years later, this man still remembers that weekend, and says “That’s the weekend I became an American and a Domer.

Can you imagine what it must have felt like for him? Lonely and in a strange culture.

Our 17 year old son is looking at college and distances. But Nairobi to Chicago (the closest major city to Notre Dame, Indiana) is over 8,000 miles.

The fact that this man saved this wonderful memory for over three decades on the wonderful way how he was treated on his first USA experience is one of the best Thanksgiving stories ever.

(p.s. I was that roommate.)

Over the holidays, check out the B2B Marketing “library”


With the long Thanksgiving holidy in the USA, executives look forward to visiting with family. But they they also have some quiet time for reflection and undoubtedly have one eye keenly trained on 2011 too. With the economic troubles of 2010, they are undoubtedly thinking.

How can we ensure 2011 is a lot better than 2010?

My suggestion is this: Take the quiet time at the holidays to improve your knowledge of business to business sales and marketing.

Fortunately, we have a “library” for you.

LibraryLet’s try to match up what you might want with what is offered at the business to business lead generation site, Find New Customers:

  • I have some quiet time for some fairly deep reading.
    We suggest white papers like How to Find New Customers, Definitive Guide to Making Quota, and Moving from Transactional to Conversational Email Marketing. 

    How to Find New Customers

    How to Find New Customers

  • I’m looking to take advantage of exercise time and use my iPod to listen to experts.
    We suggest our podcast series of lead generation marketing. Start iTunes, go to the Store and search for “demand generation.” I highlighted the results of the search below.  Our free channel is the first one listed in Podcasts. 

    iTunes Podcasts

  • I’m not sure exactly what I’m looking for. I just want to browse.
    We suggest the Thought Leadership section might be the best place to browse.

We hope you find the valuable content on lead generation marketing you seek. And remember, the lending library at Find New Customers is 100% free and open 365 days a year, 24 hours per day. Plus we have no late fees.

Happy Thanksgiving to Americans and all the best to those outside the USA.

Demand Generation Predictions for 2011 (from Eloqua)


What does the future hold in business to business lead generation?

Crystal BallEloqua recently hired a journalist, Mr. Jesse Noyes, who interviewed six top experts business to business lead generation (including me) for an article entitled “Demand Generation Predictions for 2011“

Here’s how Elouqa introduced the article:

With a new year on the horizon, marketers are thinking about what trends are coming down the pipe. We invited a select group of b2b marketing thought leaders to gaze into the future and give their demand generation predictions for 2011. The results were wide-ranging and not always in agreement. Without further ado, here are six demand generation predictions for the next year.

While we invite you to read the predictions (Just click the title of the article above), we also wish to introduce you to the six top experts they interviewed along with their topics.

Please note that these luminaries in marketing lead generation are considered the top BtoB marketing experts on Earth, and I’m deeply honored to be included.

  1. Lead Visibility Will Drive Demand Generation: Ardath Albee, Author of Marketing Interactions
  2. Quality Becomes the New Quantity in Content Marketing: Ann Handley, Chief Content Officer at MarketingProfs
  3. Social Media Yields Higher Conversion Rates:Christopher Hosford, of BtoB Magazine
  4. On Social Media, Smart Brands Ditch the Quick Fix: Jim Ducharme, Editor of The Email Guide
  5. Marketing Automation Goes Mainstream: Jeff Ogden,The Fearless Competitor and President of Find New Customers
  6. Marketing Automation Gets Reality Check: David Raab, Author of The Customer Experience Matrix

We invite you to check out these marketing lead generation predictions as well as the marketing luminaries listed here. And we also invite you to check out our business website focused on btob lead generation too, at Find New Customers.

What do you think? Do you agree with these experts or do you have another opinion? We love your comments and your sharing of these articles.

Hubspot TV - the Inside Story


Have you heard of Hubspot TV?

It’s a weekly online marketing show by Hubspot. Airs every Friday at 4:00pm ET online.

If you’ve not seen it, tune in tomorrow at 4:00pm - it’s airing on Tuesday due to the Thanksgiving holiday.

Do you know the real inside story of HubspotTV? If you’ve watched it, you certainly don’t know what happens behind the scenes.

In addition, I bet our readers would like to understand the business case for the show.

Hubspot TV

The audience filing in for Hubspot TV

What really happens there and what has Hubspot learned from two years of doing it?

Just a word about Hubspot. They are an inbound marketing software company for small and medium sized companies based in Cambridge, MA.

Their growth has been nothing short of phenomenal. Hubspot is one of the fastest growing companies in America today. The Fearless Competitor is a HUGE fan of this company.

I’ve a unique perspective. On November 19th, the the featured guest on the show was the business to business lead generation expert, Jeff Ogden, the Fearless Competitor and President of Find New Customers (@fearlesscomp).

This past Friday, I joined host Mike Volpe, VP of Marketing at Hubspot and Karen Rubin, his co-host for the show. And we had a live studio audience, including a big group of very well dressed kids - MBA students from the Johnson School at Cornell.

Here are some key observations from my firsthand experience as the featured guest on HubspotTV:

  • A LOT of planning goes into the show - probably a lot more than the viewers think. (scripts, developing content to use during the show, setting up microphones, aligning on camera talent, warming up the studio audience, etc.) It’s not easy to do. Takes a real commitment. But as Mike told me, a weekly show enforces real discipline on the marketing team - one cannot skip a show, when you have a committed audience for the show.
  • The technology is simple and cost-effective, but impressive in how it is being used, e.g. recording and publishing to the web (Livestream) at the same time.
  • As an on-air “talent” this past week, it sure did not feel like anything was happening. (No big cameras with big red lights as one finds with standard television cameras.)

Equipment

Three small HD Canon video cameras (one of the three was pointed at the audience), connected via FireWire to a Mac and control board. Two large photo lights. A table and three stools.  Three high quality microphones. A young producer controls the switching from camera to camera during the show.

The show is recorded on the Mac and streamed to LiveStream at the same time for publishing to the web for the live show. (You must use cameras that are capable of recording and outputing via FireWire simultaneously.)

But I think my readers are looking for an answer to this question.

“What benefits has Hubspot gotten from the show?”

Here are the things they told me before and after the show. (And the results make me wonder why more companies don’t do something similar.)

Mike Volpe

Mike Volpe, VP of Marketing, getting ready for the show

  1. You cannot measure HubSpot TV by the normal marketing metrics including leads, qualified sales opportunities, and customer wins. After all, no registration is required to watch live or afterwards.
    Actually, Hubspot TV uses the “Free Your Content” approach espoused by David Meerman Scott, Seth Godin and Tom Peters. (Click the link to learn more about freeing your content.)
  2. While leads don’t register, Hubspot can see number of visitors. Popularity’s good but not overwhelming. (25-100 for the live show - with 50 for the show I was on.) They get  many more viewers to the iTunes (recorded) version than the live show. The show’s not become wildly popular.
  3. While the show’s popularity is not overwhelming, their VP of Marketing, Mike Volpe told me the depth of the engagement is likely very high, because they get comments from Sales frequently that prospects are commenting favorably on Hubspot TV. (I find that a very interesting approach. It’s not “Did they view our content?” It’s “What effect did our content have on them?“)
  4. Management also gets many positive comments about the show. Their CEO, Brian Halligan, regularly hears from executives about how impressed they are with the show.
  5. One key benefit is recruiting. Lots of prospective employees visit the show and sit in the studio audience.

    Cameras at HubspotTV

    Setting up the cameras for Hubspot TV

  6. The benefits in international are impressive. As the show is global, it has given Hubspot tremendous goodwill outside the USA.Mike told us of a hot prospect in Mongolia - impressed with Hubspot because of the show. It seems due to the global nature of the internet, Hubspot developed a base of fans outside the USA. (Companies looking to move internationally should strongly consider an approach like this.)

We hope you found these insights helpful. And I hope you’ll watch the episode above. It’s the the November 19, 2010 show featuring me, the Fearless Competitor.

What do you think? Have you seen the show? If so, what do you think of it? We love your comments and when you share our content on social networks.

add to del.icio.us : Add to Blinkslist : add to furl : Digg it : add to ma.gnolia : Stumble It! : add to simpy : seed the vine : : : post to facebook


Jeff Ogden, the Fearless Competitor, is President of Fun and Find New CustomersLead Generation Made Simple” Check out the online show every Friday at 11am ET, “Laugh and Learn with the Fearless Competitor.”

Find New Customers helps businesses develop and implement marketing lead generation programs to improve the way they find and acquire sales leads using best practices in lead generation.



A few thank-yous (After all, it’s Thanksgiving week)


A few thank you’s from the expert in marketing lead generation, Fearless Competitor. @fearlesscomp on Twitter. Also, did you happen to see the 2011 Demand Generation Predictions from top experts on the Eloqua blog? Very interesting article, I think.

We also invite you to visit Find New Customers, the home of the business to business lead generation experts.

“All the content we’ve ever seen from Find New Customers has been very helpful.  Thank you for sharing your great content.” Marketing Consultant in Italy

 

It’s Time for Hubspot.TV


HubSpotHubspot TV today has a special guest, @fearlesscomp.

Don’t miss it. And we’ll report back to our readers on Monday.

And I need you to help me make it the best show ever! We want a HUGE turnout, so we need your help.

Please go to http://www.hubspot.tv now.

Random acts of marketing (Why you need outside help) (via )


We fixed all the outdated links in this post. Also, please note that the VP of Marketing we discuss here recently resigned due to cultural issues at this West Coast software firm.

Random acts of marketing (Why you need outside help) I was having a great conversation with a Vice President at a $100MM West Coast software firm when she told me: “We’re kind of old school, Jeff. We just engage in random acts of marketing.” What she was referring to was their tendency to run multiple marketing campaigns without insights into prospective buyers. Unfortunately, what she complained about is far too common. Random acts plaque B2B marketers all over the world. She was very interested i … Read More

via

What’s Really Working in BtoB Lead Generation


I had an opportunity yesterday to host a radio show on business to business lead generation with three top marketing lead generation experts for Focus.com.

  1. Mac McIntosh of Mac McIntosh Inc. and AcquireB2B
  2. Paul Mosenson of NuSpark Marketing
  3. Mac McConnell of BlueBird Strategies

This Expert Roundtable discussion was a lot of fun and a great show.  As MarketingSherpa found that 8 out 10 companies say the lack of quality sales leads is their single biggest problem, this session was quite popular.

Companies face many challenges in lead generation business to business. Sales lead generation is imperative today, but companies lack the skills and resources for sales and lead generation too. Marketing needs to step up and deliver marketing lead generation using innovative lead generation marketing

Find New Customers

approaches.

Companies look for help in b to b lead

generation, also know as btob lead generation.

We’ll soon have the audio file of this b to b lead generation show as well as a PDF of the transcript. Stay tuned. We should have it early next week.

Jeff Ogden, the Fearless Competitor, is President of Fun and Find New CustomersLead Generation Made Simple” Check out the online show every Friday at 11am ET, “Laugh and Learn with the Fearless Competitor.”

Find New Customers helps businesses develop and implement demand generation programs to improve the way they find and acquire sales leadsusing best practices in lead generation.

“Find New Customers, can certainly help your business dramatically improve the flow of sales-ready leads to salespeople.” Paul Dunay, Buzz Marketing for Technology.

The sorry state of sales today - from Jim Dickie of CSO Insights (via )


The sorry state of sales today - from Jim Dickie of CSO Insights Attended Selling Power  Webinar: 2010 Sales Performance Challenges; Jim Dickie and Gerhard Gschwandtner recently and heard one of my favorite presenters, Jim, present a litany of sorry statistics from the beginning of 2009 (undoubtedly worse today), which I share with my readers: 59% — the percentage of salespeople who exceeded quota (the lowest ever measured) 86% — the percentage of companies that raised quotas (with poor performance, how can … Read More

via