Episode 67

Drive More Conversions With BOFU Content (No Keyword Research) ft. Lashay Lewis

On this episode of Distribution First, we're diving deep with Lashay Lewis on how the right content distribution strategies can boost your bottom-of-funnel results.

She peeled back the curtain on her masterful approach to bottom-of-funnel (BOFU) content and how it's been a game-changer in her marketing strategy.

Here’s a sneak peek at what you’ll discover in this episode:

1. The Power of Proper Channel Selection: Lashay kicks things off by emphasizing why choosing the right platforms can make or break your distribution success.

2. Strategic Paid Ads Usage: Dive into how Lashay uses paid ads to creatively retarget audiences and pull them down the funnel.

3. Quality Over Quantity: Discover why Lashay prioritizes the quality of connections and content over mere numbers.

4. Integrating Practical Content: Learn the importance of using hands-on tools like templates and checklists to provide real value in your content.

5. Focus on Conversions: It's not all about traffic volume. Lashay shares why driving conversions should be the ultimate goal of your content efforts.

***

CONNECT

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✉️ Email: hello@justinsimon.co

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Transcript
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Hey, everybody. Before we get started, I want to thank my friends at Hatch for

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producing this episode. You can get unlimited podcast editing and

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strategy for one flat rate by visiting Hatch

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FM. All right, let's get into the show.

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Welcome to distribution first, the show where we flip content marketing on its head

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and focus on what happens after you hit publish. Each week I

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share playbooks, motivations, stories, and strategies to help you repurpose and

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distribute your content because you deserve to get the most out of everything you

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create.

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Hey, everybody. Welcome to this week's episode of distribution. First,

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I'm so happy to have my friend Lashay Lewis on the show. I can't

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believe it took me, I don't even know, 60, 70 episodes

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to get Lashay on. I feel too long. Too long.

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Really feel awful about it. I should have had

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Lashay on a long time ago. We've been hanging out together

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on LinkedIn across the Internet for a good long while. And so

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I'm so happy to have you on Lashay. I'm so happy to be here.

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Thank you so much for inviting me on. I'm really excited about this one.

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Yeah, this is going to be fun. So we talk a lot about,

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obviously this is distribution first. So we talked about distribution,

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repurposing the back end of content

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marketing. Uh, what happens after we hit publish? A lot of times.

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And so for me, what I think is interesting is a lot of

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times when I talk to people about

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distribution, SEO is not typically

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what they think of when they think of distribution.

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What they think of is email or

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they think of social media and LinkedIn.

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And for me, SEO, Google,

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YouTube, those are one of the core distribution channels. I have three bucket

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strategy that I talk about with distribution. SEO being one of those buckets.

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And Lashay is an expert on BOFU content,

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bottom of funnel, driving people in, trying to get people to conversion

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and using that content and using things that people are

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already searching for and are already interested in to then convert

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them and get them to do stuff. So I think when we think about distribution,

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it's easy to go top of funnel. It's easy to go opinions and it's

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easy to try and create interesting content like this

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podcast and other things like that's what people think about when they think about

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content marketing. But I think a lot of times it's easy to skip out on

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the good stuff at the bottom. So I'm curious, why start at the

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bottom? I guess let's go there. Why start bottom of funnel to

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begin with versus? Hey, I'm just

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trying to get my name out there. I'm trying to build this company and trying

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to do this stuff. What's your reasoning behind that? The biggest reason

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is going to be the goals of the company, right.

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So depending on the goals of the company is going to

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determine where you start. So if a company is more interested in

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brand awareness or thought leadership or things like that,

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typically that's when you start more at the top of the funnel. And then

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if they're interested in, okay, I need conversions, I need demos, I need

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signups. That's when you start at the bottom of the funnel. So it really

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depends on the company's goals. But specifically for me, why I like to

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start bottom of funnel, because it's very easy for me to show my value

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because bottom of funnel is usually that last touch

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point before conversion. So it's not difficult. Well, I

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say that lightly. It's not too difficult for me to track,

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but you have to, as opposed to somebody starting at the top of the

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funnel. And we talked about enterprise software

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sales cycles, could be anywhere from three to six months. Plus, if you think you're

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going to follow that person for three to six months and figure out

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every little touch point they did, sad to tell you,

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that's probably not going to happen. Versus BOFU, they come into an

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article, they read it, they like it, and they

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get a demo button, they hit free trial button, they hit whatever that

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conversion point is. That's what's being pushed in

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the bottom of funnel piece versus, again, top. And sometimes middle of

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funnel are more pushed toward maybe the email list or getting

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a free this or template playbook, something like that. But I

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like to start bottom of the funnel because it's easier for me to show my

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value as a marketer that way. And do you

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think about it? I know the Chris Walker really made the whole demand

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capture versus demand creation like two buckets. Really?

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Really. Do you think of it in that way of like we're capturing demand

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with top and middle versus really, or creating demand at the

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top versus capturing demand that's existing at the bottom? I

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do kind of look at it like that, right? Because all keywords are

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not built the same. And there's a big

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misconception usually with in house marketers specifically, and I'm calling

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you guys out, vp of marketing and demand gen

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leads, usually. I'm

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not gonna say they don't know a lot about SEO, because some do are pretty

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well versed in it. But the ones that aren't, they're like, okay, you know, I

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found this keyword. It has 20,000 searches a month. Let's

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go after this one because, oh, look at all the search volume. And our competitors

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are ranking forward and every reason in the world to go after this term. But

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what they're missing is search volume does not equal search intent.

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Those are two different things. And again, depending on your goal,

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is going to determine which one you go after. So you can go after

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what is sales enablement. And that probably gets maybe like

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10, 15, 20,000 searches a month, right. Versus

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best sales enablement software for small teams, maybe

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50 searches a month, 150. Not a lot. But the

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traffic that comes in from a term like that is going to be very, very

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high intent and a lot of the time, Justin, what I find is

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that four to five, or

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rather, let's say this, usually six to

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nine Bofu articles will produce more

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conversions than 30, 40, 50

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top of funnel articles. And I'm talking about with search volumes of

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20,000, 50,000. And again, it's just that

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misconception of, oh, because it has more search

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volume. I'm going to get leads from this. I'm going to get sales from this.

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It's like, no, the smart thing to do

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if your goal is conversions, I don't want to just make it seem like everybody's

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dumb. The smart thing to do if your goal is conversions is to start bottom

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of funnel and bottom of funnel. It's less people in that buying

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pool. There's some sort of, like, statistic or something where it's like three

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to 5% of your market is buying. Like the three to 5%

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is in this bottom of funnel pool floating around. So it's

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not going to be as much search volume as something top or middle

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of funnel, but that intent is going to be there, and it's probably going to

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convert more than anything else on the blog,

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at least from what I found. Yeah, yeah. There's

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definitely, it's an odd mix in content

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marketing. I feel like there's a, there's a, a strong desire

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to just create a lot of things

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and hope those things work out

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rather than actually have a strategy. The more

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companies I talk with, the more marketers,

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unfortunately, that I talk with, the more I'm

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realizing that there's a real lack of

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strategy involves within a lot of

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marketing programs. And to me, it's like

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what you provide for the BOFU side is very similar to,

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like, how I think about providing a strategy around repurposing

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and distributing content. It's a recipe, so

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we can have this. You don't have to just go in blind

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hoping you make a good cake. Like, there's an actual

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recipe that you can use to make a really good

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cake, and if you follow it, you'll be

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successful. It's not guaranteed that it's going to be as

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pretty or as nice or as good as somebody

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who's done it. You know, been a baker for 25 years, but you have the

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strategy to make a good cake. And I think

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there's just a huge, there's a huge lack of thought.

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Maybe, maybe it's just like you said from a in house, like a vp,

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like, I think there is just maybe a, I don't want to say

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ignorance, but there is maybe some level of ignorance in terms of, like, what

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actually moves the needle versus saying, like, we're going to

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do content marketing. That means a lot of different things to a lot

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of different people. And I think

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actually doing content marketing and actually having a strategy,

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like you said, it can be totally different for

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totally different teams. Are you trying to capture demand at the bottom

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of the funnel to drive demos now? Are you trying to

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build awareness and a brand and try to do that for the long

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term? You're probably trying to do both

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in reality. And that's where a lot of teams get screwed up,

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is they're trying to do all of it with one piece

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of content. And that's the thing, right? Like

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one piece of content can serve multiple purposes. But again, it's

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like if the intent is off, it's not going

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to serve the purpose you wanted to. Again, if you want inbound

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leads and you're writing top of funnel, it's not going to serve the

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purpose. If you want brand awareness, thought leadership,

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more people in the email, more people to download this white paper. I hate white

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papers, y'all. And I'm talking as a millennial,

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as a buying millennial, that's buying software. So a lot of other millennials that

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probably hate white papers, I don't read them, but if you have like a playbook,

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if you have templates or things like that, to me that's

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more top of funnel. It's like getting

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people into your ecosystem versus bottom of funnel.

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They've already been pre educated, probably by your competitors,

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too. So. Right. It's like if we think about football, it's like the other

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team running all the way to the goal

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line and then you come in for the interception and run it all the way

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back for the touchdown, right? Like kind of like that's how

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bottom of funnel is. And I tell people all the time, it's like people look

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at content marketing as this black box where it's just like, oh, we're just going

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to throw things in it and see what sticks. It's like there's an actual

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strategy behind content marketing. And it's like once

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in house, leaders come to this realization. They're like, oh, shoot. Like,

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ooh. And they usually come to this realization six to

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twelve months after publishing a bunch of top of funnel stuff.

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They come to me and they say, well, Lashay, we've been

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publishing a lot of pieces and they have a lot of search

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volume, but we're not seeing any uptick in leads, any uptick

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in sales. It's like, what's the gap here? And the gap is

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that you're not focusing on high intent

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terms, you're focusing on high search terms.

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So again, once leaders start to understand that

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differentiation between the two and the value that one adds

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against the other, that's when they get the clarity and say, okay, we need

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a bottom of funnel strategy. And again, I'm not saying top of funnel is bad

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or anything, it just all depends on your goals. And again, if your

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goal is to get attributable inbound

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pipeline from your blog, bottom of funnel is going to be the

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way to go. Specifically comparison pages. And the thing with

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that too is you can build a strategy that isn't

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insane, that manages both of those things and do

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it really, really consistently and really, really well.

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Here's a high level example of how I would think about that. There's

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probably five to ten bottom of funnel pieces of content

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that are missing from 80% to 90% of

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people's company websites right now. Yeah, yeah. So if

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you created those five to ten, we know just by

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Pareto principle that 80% is going to drive or

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20% is going to drive 80% of the results. So let's just say those ten

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are in that 20% of the overall. You know, you could

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write 100 blogs, but we're going to just choose these ten. Cause we know they

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really work. Yep. And at the same time, we can do a monthly

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event, top of funnel, that drives and talks

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about all the problems that people are having, and then we can

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repurpose and distribute that on things like social and email. And now

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with literally a few blog posts at the bottom of funnel, a

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monthly event at the top of the funnel that you've repurposed properly, you

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have an engine that's running all across the funnel that drives

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people toward the same things that you want. Yep. And I think

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that's where a lot of leaders miss it. They're like,

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it's usually one or the other. They're like, okay, we're going to go extreme bottom

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of funnel. And again, if that's your goal, that's totally okay. Or

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they're like, we're going to go extreme top of funnel. But they try to go,

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it's like a scale. They like try to lean one way or the other and

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try to get that middle balance. It's like, no, in order to get

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the balance, you have to have balance, right? So it's like, if you do

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want to put together a content marketing program that kind of targets every bit of

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the funnel, lay it out, right? So maybe you do two bottom of

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funnel posts per month. One middle of funnel and one top of funnel. Like you

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said, it doesn't have to be a blog. It could be a webinar. And again,

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that webinar leads them into your ecosystem, and then maybe you send them an

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email about a bottom of funnel post that you did that drives traffic

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back to the bottom of funnel posts. And I found,

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anecdotally, at least when you're able to drive traffic

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to a bottom of funnel article outside, well, not even really

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outside of Google, because even when you run paid

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ads to bottom of funnel articles, anecdotally, I found

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that they rank better. So if you can take an

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asset you already own, like an email list and say, hey, we wrote this on

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the best whatever for whatever, and then you send that traffic

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to that blog, it's possible that you can get conversions from there too, right? It's

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not just all Google, Google, Google, right? It's your own assets

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as well. So I think that's where repurposing

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is really important. It's like, and I'm guilty of this, too,

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it's like when we create bottom of funnel pieces, we're solely relying on,

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like Google to bring in the traffic and things like that.

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But good bottom of funnel content should actually double as sales

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enablement. So it shouldn't just be sitting on the blog and collecting

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leads. Your SDR should have them. You know what I mean? Like they should

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be able to accurately convey your value

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propositions to a prospect on a call by looking

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at a bottom of funnel piece. That's how you know you have a good one,

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right? So it's like, again, it's not just about

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creating a bottom of funnel piece and putting it out there and hoping for the

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best. It's actually creating a strategy around it to make sure

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the odds play in your favor as it you know, results into

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driving inbound leads from that piece. Yeah. You can sway the odds in your favor

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more than not. Yeah. The more companies that I work with and the more

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content strategies that I dig into, I think there needs to be more

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clarity for teams around intent for that content

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and honestly, more conversations

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internally. It's easier for me now as an external resource to come into a

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company and see the things that I used to have to deal

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with internally, which is like the product team

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says, we need to do X, Y and Z pieces of content. And

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it's like, okay, you're creating that list is six,

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like six things that are very similar. And

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are we going like, there's those type of things. So it's having a

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strong view of the intent and seeing the intent across.

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One of the things I've been looking more into with folks as well is

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around the type of content based around the

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distribution channel. So for instance, really,

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really bottom of funnel content, depending

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on what it is, doesn't make a ton. So like a comparison, right. It might

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make sense to put that out on LinkedIn, but it probably makes more sense to

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rely on Google and your email list of people who are already actively

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signaled in some way, shape or form that they're interested in you or they're

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interested in your tool

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versus a channel like LinkedIn, where

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they're probably less interested in hoppy on LinkedIn to like see a

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tool comparison and more interested in getting help,

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getting information, getting a template, those more middle

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of funnel, top of funnel type of things. And so you have a really

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good point with that, but let me put a bug in your ear.

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So for one of my clients, we've actually been publishing the bottom

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of funnel articles on LinkedIn, and they do really

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good. You're publishing the article itself, not the article

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itself. My bad. So we take the link and you know how

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it kind of like generates a preview and things like that. Like, we'll so

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not totally like repurposing in the form of like breaking down the piece

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and turning it into a LinkedIn post, but we'll take the article

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itself, paste it into LinkedIn. A little preview comes up, give it

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like a, you know, description, you know, and then what

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I find is that they, if your LinkedIn audience is dialed

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in, those tend to do well on LinkedIn, too.

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Another thing I found is if you have a bottom

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of funnel piece and you're running paid ads, another good thing to do. If you

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have somebody that comes in middle of funnel, maybe top, middle of

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funnel, you can retarget

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that person with a bottom of funnel post. Again, this works

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better if they've been in your ecosystem for a little while and things like

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that. But I find that works really well. Doesn't

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just work well on LinkedIn, it works well with Facebook ads, too, especially if

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you have more of a story based bottom of funnel article.

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And I put this out on LinkedIn maybe like a week or two ago, how

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to combine SEO and case studies. When it comes

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to content like that, running ads to that type of story

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based content does extremely well. So

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I would preface that. I would say it's something worth testing,

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but at least from what I found from working with my clients, it does do

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well if the audience you have on that platform

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is the right segment that you're trying to target. You know what I mean? So

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it's like, if you're trying to target, you know what I mean,

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plumbers. And it's like you're on there

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looking for, you have people, electricians and things like that. It's like two

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different things, probably, horrible example, but y'all know what I'm trying to say. It's like

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you have to have that alignment with the followers and the

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audience and things like that. And it's like, this is probably getting to a whole

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nother topic. But that's why it's so important to focus on

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quality and not quantity. When it comes to everything, when it

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comes to blog posts, when it comes to LinkedIn followers, whatever it

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is, the quality is always going to outweigh the

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quantity. Hence why I get people that come to me and they're like, oh, my

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gosh, you know, you're doing so well. You have under 10,000 followers.

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Because I focus on the quality of the followers and not

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how many. And then from there, we kind of get into what people call

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vanity metrics. And I used to call them that, right? But I had to

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think a little bit. I said, you know what? It's not all vanity. Because

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sometimes, well, every time you have to start

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at the top to work your way to the bottom, right? So even

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with bottom of funnel articles, it works the same way. Every single

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time you publish the piece, it starts to

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rank, it starts to get traffic, then it starts to get

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conversions. And it's like, it's only vanity

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if you stay focused on that particular metric for too

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long. And again, it's like when people think, oh, search volume,

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it's only vanity if you're stuck there and you're like, I'm expecting for

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this piece to bring me inbound leads, and it's like when you see that it

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doesn't, that's when it starts to hit. But hopefully doing

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pods like this one will get it on people's radar. That don't wait six

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to twelve months to know that top of funnel doesn't work for driving

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leads. I'm telling you right now, I can save you six to twelve

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months right now. Absolutely, absolutely. I think

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knowing, I think really knowing the distribution

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channels, SEO, the intent behind

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why that. So like what you brought up with LinkedIn there and using the

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ads to retarget makes a ton of sense because you can narrow down and

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target exactly who's going to see that ad. You know what I mean? You can

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be more prescriptive versus in an organic

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feed, there's no telling who or how or somebody's

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going to see this particular thing. And I think that's the thing where people

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struggle, especially with organic,

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LinkedIn, even their emails, top of funnel, trying to get awareness,

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is they talk too much about themselves, it's too much about the

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company, it's too much about what we do, it's too much about

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our products. And I think that's a little bit of the intent.

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Confusion is those people, when you go to

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a social channel or sign up for an email list,

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you probably signed up for the email list because they gave you something of value,

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a template, a checklist, those type of things. A white paper, if that's what

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somebody wants. Not what I want, but maybe somebody out there wants a white paper

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right now. You've heard it from two millennials companies. We don't want white

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papers. Switch that up. No, I don't want a white

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paper. I want a template, a checklist, a buyer's guide.

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I want something simple and helpful. Yes, yes, yes. And again,

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I think that's the point. If people are creating content

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nowadays, you're not competing to create. There is so

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much content out there, it's unbelievable. And

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so the barrier of just creating something, even

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if you ranked number one. Hey, we ranked number one, Vanny match.

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Well, if that piece of content is kind of junky and doesn't actually like drive

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conversion and do much good, it's not like that ranking isn't

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actually valuable. And I have to tell this to

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people all the time. And here's something really cool

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that people probably don't know. I've mentioned it a couple times, but I don't use

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any SEO tools. So when I say any tools, I use

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ahrefs. But that's like for keyword research and just to kind of get

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a lay of the land of how things are in their specific industry.

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But when it comes to, like, on page SEO tools and things, like, I

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use zero tools. And again, it's because

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we all have access to the same tools. At the end of the day, that's

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not what differentiates you. It's like how you

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solve the problem, how you connect those problems to your

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prospects pain points. That's what's gonna differentiate you, not the

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tool. So I don't use any tools. And I still tell people, I tell

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my clients, I'm like, ranking means nothing

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if you can't get it to convert. And that's like, such

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people just don't take heed to that like they should.

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Again, it's the whole vanity metric thing where it's just like,

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remember, it's only vanity if you stay there. Because at

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some point, yes, you have to rank in order to get conversions. People have to

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see it. So it's a good leading indicator

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is what it is, right? So, and again, it's like,

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that's why I tell companies, like, we focus on the customer first

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and SEO second. So, and

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again, this comes from working across dozens of content marketing

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agencies, seeing them do it the wrong way. They're like, oh, rankings this and rankings

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that. We got to get this reporting, the traffic numbers. And I'm like,

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y'all are paying attention to everything except what the companies care

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about, which is inbound leads. You know what I mean? But it's

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like it takes a certain level of education.

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Again, because bottom of funnel is so nuanced and it's

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so different, then not saying top of funnel isn't nuanced to a degree,

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but it's like the nuancedness comes

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from where the information is sourced from, right?

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So if you have a top of funnel piece, it's not difficult to

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type in what is sales enablement and find a ton of other

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definition definitions around sales enablement and things like that. And this is

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another thing I touched on, where top of funnel content

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is more objective and bottom of funnel content is more subjective.

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Subjectivity creates nuance. Because instead of

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going to Google and searching for the thing that you're trying to look for and

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compile it and call that an article, you actually have to go to internal

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teams and get that alignment right. You got to talk to the product team. You

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got to talk to customer success, and sales and marketing brings that all

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together. And then that's when you have the alignment. Once you have that

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alignment, you can create collateral for anything. That's when

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distribution really revs up that engine, really turns

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on once that alignment is hitting. The problem is companies are trying to do

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strategy. They're trying to do all this stuff with no alignment. And again, it's

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because they're hiring freelancers to come in and say, okay, write this article

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on cybersecurity. And the person might not

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even be a cybersecurity expert or anything like that. So they're just trying to,

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like, pull things, and maybe they'll do a search for best

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cybersecurity software for enterprise teams.

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And they're looking at all the other results on Google, and they're like, okay, so

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I'm just gonna take what they say and compile it all together with our

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solution as the number one solution. But that's not the way to do

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it. In order to create a great bottom of funnel piece, you need

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input from every team. You need input, again,

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from cs, from product, from sales, and

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again, sales lets you know the pain points.

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CS is gonna let you know the benefits. The product team is

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gonna let you know how the product works contextually in their

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workflow. It's like all of these things are needed in order to create

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a good bottom of funnel piece. And it's like, you're not going to find that

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information on Google. Just not going to. Well, here's the kicker to that, Lashay. I

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think more and more the entire for content

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marketers, like, buckle up because that's the job.

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Now, top of funnel is the same way. Like, and the

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reason I say that is because you have to have at the

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top of funnel where teams go wrong, is no shared alignment

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on the pov, no shared alignment on the

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story, no shared alignment on the pitfalls,

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no shared alignment on the success, no shared alignment on the

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plan. All the things that would hook somebody in

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as to, like, why are, what all the pains,

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all those things. All those things you tease out at the beginning of the stage

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of a relationship to get somebody curious enough to even want to engage with you

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and your company, you have to have those in alignment

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so that you can repeat them all the stinking

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time at the top of the funnel. So then people are

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like, oh, you guys solve that problem.

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You know what I mean? How often do you have to talk about Bofu content

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before Bofu content equals Lashay? How

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much do I have to talk about repurposing distribution before

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it's, oh, repurposing distribution? I'm just going, I'm not even going to

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search anything. I'm just going to shoot Justin a DM and say, all right? I

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need help. We got a bottleneck with repurposing. Like, can you come in and help

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our company do? And that's so important.

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And it's like, I know my message was starting to resonate because I got tired

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of talking about it. I'm like, if y'all think y'all tired of me talking about

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Bofu, I'm tired of talking. But you know what it's like, that's when

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the message really starts to stick, and that's when you need to continue

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to push on that message. And again, it's like when I think of content repurposing,

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you are the first person that pops in my mind. It's like when people

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think about Bofu, I want myself to be the first

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person that pops into mine. Maybe I'm not the right solution for them, and that's

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okay, but I at least want them to come to me and say, okay, you

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need to do x, y, and z. I'm not the best fit for you, but

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this person might be a good, maybe they do BOFU

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on a freelance perspective, you know what I mean? So it's space for everybody,

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right? So I think, yeah, I think that's really important. And again, it's

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like when these companies are trying to hire freelancers and things like that to come

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in, it's just like they don't, the companies don't give the

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freelancers the tools they need to succeed, which

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was why my content marketing dashboard was

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born, because it really was derived out of pain,

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because I really wanted to work for this content marketing agency and I didn't get

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the chance to work with them. I didn't make the cut because I

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couldn't write good bottom of funnel content because my brain couldn't

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conceptualize, how do you write an article but

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not have to do a Google search? Again? Because me as a freelance

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writer, I was taught to find the target

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keyword, do a Google search, see what everybody else is talking

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about, and try to make it a little bit better than

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their stuff. And there's some truth to that. But what most

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freelancers do is they just compile the top ten results and put it together and

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say, okay, here goes your article. And the marketing leaders don't know any

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better. They're like, okay, we have an article. Let's throw it in this book black

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content marketing box, and let's just see what happened with sticks. But it's

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like if you give them the necessary tools that they need, because I'm not a

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subject matter expert in cybersecurity, but I've worked with a cybersecurity company.

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I'm not a subject matter expert in career development, but I've

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worked with a career development company. And it's because to me, in my

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opinion, like, strategists don't have to be subject matter experts

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in the thing. I'm a subject matter expert in

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Bofu. So if you give me the information that you need, and, like, we get

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the team on that, because we do, like, we do a workshop where it's like,

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I have a canvas laid out and we go through the product and the

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prospects and having that alignment between customer

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and product. So it's like, once we get through that, and you would be so

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surprised how many teams are like, okay, so do you have, like, a feature

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benefit list? Or they're like, oh, well, this person on that team, I think they

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have it, so let me go. No, I would not be surprised at all. Ashe,

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man, like, it gets crazy. It's like, I'm

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on calls with whole teams and they're just like, okay, so who

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has this thing? Okay, y'all got this thing over there, and it's like, it's

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almost like an awakening. They're like, ooh, our information is

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scattered. And it's like, if the people in house are

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having trouble getting this information, what makes you think that a freelance

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writer is going to be able to grab all this information? They've got other

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clients to deal with. They got. You know what I mean? So it's just like,

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I wasn't given the proper resources when I was trying to be a freelance writer

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to create good bottom of funnel content. So the point of the dashboard was to

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be able to consolidate all of that information. So if you do want to bring

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in a freelance writer, they don't have to be a subject. Well, they should be.

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That would help. But they don't necessarily have to be a subject matter expert

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on the thing because you have everything consolidated for them.

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They can learn the product at a deep level within two weeks,

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and then from there, that's when you get them to start

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publishing. Even then, there's still a little bit of bottom of funnel

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nuance and stuff like that. But the point is, right, it's better than just getting

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a random freelancer and saying, okay, write this piece and just look around our

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website for the stuff you need. Look on YouTube. Like, no. Have the collateral

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together for them. Yeah. Those alignment pieces are

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really so key, literally across

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every piece of content that you create. I can't think of

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a scenario where you shouldn't be doing this. But

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it is eye opening the amount of companies

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that completely skip over the

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pre, the research phase, if you

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will, to content marketing and go straight into creating

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and then wonder why it doesn't work. And it's like, of course this doesn't

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work. Of course it wouldn't work. You're literally just

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speaking to people you don't know

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and you don't care about, even though they're your customers.

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It's a kind of a wild reality. And the thing is, Justin, like, you don't

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know what you don't know. So there are one or two things. Either they

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genuinely don't know or they're trying to rush the process.

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I think both. It might be both. Yeah, for sure. And it's

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like everybody knows when you rush the process, that actually slows you

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down. If you were to just take a step back and be like, okay, let's

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get this out the way. It's a pain, but let's get it out the way.

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It's absolutely necessary for what we need to do. And again, like, when I work

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with companies, I tell them, like, this is the hardest part. Like the customer

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research, getting the different teams together. And that's the hardest part. Once

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we've got that together, oh, the bottom of funnel articles start flowing. Why?

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Because we have alignment. Then once you have that alignment, you can take that

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bottom of funnel article and repurpose it into something else with the

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data backed evidence that it converts. How do you know? Well, because you have

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tracking set up and, and that's probably like a whole nother tracking is a whole

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nother topic because I know people struggle with that, too. But if you have good

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tracking setup, you can see which articles are driving you the inbound

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leads. So if you know this does good as an article, why don't you repurpose

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it into an email? Right. Or why don't you repurpose it into a webinar?

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It just gives you that data backed information that

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you need to take the step forward. And again, even with me and teams, it's

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like they have to trust me to a certain extent because it's a lot of

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work upfront. But again, once they get through that, and here's

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another thing, usually smaller teams are,

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have the information together much better than larger

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teams, specifically like see through

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Series A, b

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maybe, but usually see stage companies very

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lean. They're just getting started. They have their information together. Teams are

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communicating with each other. They have cross functional communication. It's not siloed

Speaker:

like a. I've worked with some bigger company. Yeah, it's like. Right.

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And it's like the bigger the company gets, the more

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communication becomes siloed. It's like, oh, the sales team only

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talks to the sales team and the product team only. But why?

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It's like we're all trying to hit the same KPI's. We're trying to

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get to a specific number. Why are we not trying to help each other do

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that? Yeah, it's, it goes back again. It's internal teams in

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alignment. It's one of those things where as somebody who led teams

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and did that in larger orgs and now working across a

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myriad of like, the more companies you work with and work for, just

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the reality of like, man, people are the issue. They're the solution

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and they're the issue. Yes, I was talking with

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Ross Simmons about this. Like, those soft skills are going to really

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come back into like, necessity

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for teams to succeed. Like, if you don't have the soft skills to communicate

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internally, to be able to pitch those ideas, to be able to share why,

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to be able to help teach people internally why

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and show them, like, all of those things are really going to, going to come

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back into vogue for, for marketers especially because I think.

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So this is the thing, right? Like talking through this, this got me

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thinking. Content and marketing is basically

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one thing now. Marketing is

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fueled by content in 2024. Yes,

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yes, yes. You can supplement it with ads, you can supplement it with other

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things, but you have to have

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content to do marketing. And in order to do the content

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well, you have to have all of the

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standard marketing, operating procedure stuff, positioning, messaging,

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benefits, features, understanding of all those things.

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And you have to know your customers and you have to know what problems they

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have and you have to know what pains they have. And you can't just rely

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on the sales team or the CS team to, oh, that

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they handle the problems. They handle those things. And

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then we're just ambiguously creating keyword content

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while they're down in the trenches dealing with the real stuff. Exactly.

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And I think that's the big misconception with why

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teams beef with each other because it's, I feel like, and I'm not in

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sales, I don't, I don't know, somebody tell me. But I, sometimes I feel like

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the sales team feels like, oh, we're held to these certain numbers and we got

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to hit x quota and we got to close x amount of

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people when it's like, oh, the marketing team, they just have to get, they aren't

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really tied as close to a number. And then the

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marketing team, and I could speak for myself, the marketing team was like, well, hold

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up. We're busting our ass on this side, too. Like, it ain't just, it's not

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all you guys, like, we have to. And I think the sooner

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we start to realize that the job of marketing is

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to drive qualified leads to the sales team.

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Our job is to make the sales team jobs easier. Right.

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The only way we can do that is if we know from sales what the

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prospects are telling them. So if they're like, okay, this feature slaps,

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and we love this, we probably know this needs to go into a

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bottom of funnel post somewhere. You know what I mean? But it's like,

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if you don't talk to the sales team, you don't know what they're dealing with.

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You don't know what they're struggling with. And usually when I talk to the product

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team, I just get, like, mixed reactions, like, oh, whoa, you need my

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help? Oh, I didn't, I didn't know that. I'm like, yeah, because you got to

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tell me how the product works, how it fits contextually in the

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workflow. It's like, give me an example. How would they use this in the day

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to day? It's like, all of this stuff has to go into the

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piece. The sales team doesn't always know what the

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product team like, these are different functions. They take different

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skills, and you know what I mean? So it's like, we all need each

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other for the broader vision, but it's like,

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companies and communication is so siloed, and again, it's

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like, oh, you know, well, I'm only talking to sales when there really should be,

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like, a slack channel. When you come out with a bottom of funnel piece, share

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that piece to the other teams. Be like, you know what, sales.

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Let me know if this helps you with closing a deal. Right? Cause maybe

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if that helps you close a deal, maybe we can repurpose that and put it

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on LinkedIn, or maybe we can do this, or do you know what I mean?

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It's just like data gathering and information gathering. And it's like, if you

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don't talk to the teams, you don't know what they're struggling with. What's

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the best way to drive that? You've got

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the marketing dashboard. Anybody can go grab it. Like, yes, I've got the

Speaker:

dashboard crap. Now I got to try to get somebody on these

Speaker:

calls. How do you facilitate? Because I think even with companies

Speaker:

where there's good communication, where like, hey, I can go reach out to John over

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here, but John's busy and now my piece is stalled

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out. Yeah, that was another

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reason for the dashboard, because there used to be a thing where I

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would have to hold an interview per piece.

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So another thing I love about bottom of funnel is that you only

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need a specific amount or a certain amount of information.

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And it's interesting because now we're getting a little bit deep into it, but

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it's like bottom of funnel articles are almost

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repurposed within themselves. So we're talking about the same

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features, the same benefits, the same paint, but we're talking

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about it in a different context depending on the use case that we're talking

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about. But a lot of it is the same thing. It's just different positioning.

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So it's like once I get that core information down that I need from these

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teams, I take that information and repurpose it. So maybe it's

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like, again, going back to the sales enablement, best sales enablement

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software for enterprise teams, then it's like best

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sales enablement software for small teams.

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Those might have different features in them, but again, if I talk to the product

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team and they list all the features down, all the use

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cases, so on and so forth, I don't have to mess with them too, too

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much unless the product roadmap is growing and things like that, and they want to

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add things to this, maybe they add a new feature that

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opens up a new segment, maybe it opens up a new

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list of competitors. That's like the information I really need

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from them. But that's not, it's not like the company is updating the

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product roadmap every day or we come out with a new feature every day. Oh,

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yeah. You know what I mean? So it's like once I get that core information

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down from them, I really, you really don't need them too much from

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there. But, yeah, I think it's

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funny, again, because it's like repurposing within

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bottom of funnel. I use the same elements over and over and over.

Speaker:

It's just about repositioning the

Speaker:

elements based on who you're talking to. And when I, again, when I say elements,

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I mean like, oh, the benefits, the features, pain points, stuff like that. But

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it's really all about repositioning. Yeah. You don't have to get too, too much from

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them. Just get it down that one time. And then once you have

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it, you have it. Yeah, it's much more the,

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I break repurposing into two different areas, like macro and micro, macro

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being like typically the larger, like thematic, the type.

Speaker:

So in this case, features and benefits. Yep. Pain points. Yep.

Speaker:

These things you can repurpose over and over and over again throughout your content, especially

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bottom funnel, because they're not going to change. Somebody searching one

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thing and the next thing, like you don't have to reinvent the wheel. You actually

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shouldn't reinvent the wheel because the feature is the feature.

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What are you going to do? It's funny, one client that I started working with

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a couple months ago, we focused on solely bottom of

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funnel before. Like we're still working through all that. They

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have hundreds and hundreds of blogs that they already had. So literally we're

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going through and updating bottom of funnel content right now

Speaker:

with the sole purpose of driving conversion. So

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they're getting traffic, they're getting good impressions, all those type of things. And

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now we need to make sure the information is accurate. Correct, has the right

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CTA's, all that type of stuff to drive conversion. That's another thing.

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See, you just see, now you got my brain running another

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thing when it comes to bottom of funnel because I know we talked about

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intent. There are two main things I see. It's like with top of

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funnel, I see people pushing their product too much. And then with

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bottom of funnel, I don't see people pushing the product enough.

Speaker:

Interesting. Yes. So with bottom of funnel, and

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I'm not throwing shade to anybody, but if your bottom of funnel piece

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starts with oh, in today's marketing, dust yourself off and try

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again, like immediately. Right. Because when it comes

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to bottom of funnel again, the prospect is already

Speaker:

solution aware. So you don't need to say, oh, what

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is sales enablement and how can sales enablement help your team? Like

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they learn that already. Now they're here to see you

Speaker:

versus competitor. They're here to see best sales enablement for use

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case they're here to competitor alternative. Like that's what they're

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here for. And I tell people all the time, like when you do bottom of

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funny, you either need to lead with pain points or you need to lead with

Speaker:

benefits and then those pain points and those benefits should tie back

Speaker:

into the capabilities of the product. So it's like, again, because

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you triggered me a little bit when you said that.

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So I was just like, let me just get that off my mind before I

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forget. But yes, I don't see people pushing the product enough

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in bottom of funnel and they don't get deep with their product. If they do

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have their product and other products listed, it's like a little blurb

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about you know, oh, you know, we do this and we do that. It's like

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a little paragraph, but it's like you can get way deeper than that. Like, get

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more granular. Talk about, okay, this feature solves this

Speaker:

pain point. It has this capability. Boom, move to the next. This feature solves this.

Speaker:

And if you have a ton of features, one thing you can do, one strategy

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I like to do is group your features. So if you have high level,

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I call them, like, high level benefits. So to

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me, saving time and saving money is a high

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level benefit. It's not a differentiator, right? It's just like a high level

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benefit. But maybe you have features that fall within

Speaker:

these pools, right? So maybe it's just like a feature that helps

Speaker:

you save more time and help you save more money. Or maybe there's just.

Speaker:

And again, this usually goes for if you have a ton of features

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that solve multiple pain points and you don't want to

Speaker:

feature dump in the article, because that never works. Y'all don't feature

Speaker:

dump. If you do want to include a lot of features, you need to group

Speaker:

them properly by a high level benefit. So again, you

Speaker:

find the high level benefit, and then you group the features under the benefit that

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it matches with. Because how many. I mean, how many sections

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are you trying? I mean, it's gotta be around five, right?

Speaker:

Like, nobody wants to scroll, right? A bazillion

Speaker:

feature sets in there. And again, I think that one of the.

Speaker:

I use an example with my client. I gave them. It was funny

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enough, it was a pellet grill, like a smoker, to,

Speaker:

like, cook smoked meats. And I was like, what you have to do

Speaker:

is put your. It all comes back to the intent, right? You said, dive deeper

Speaker:

into the feature. Dive deeper into the. Why? If you wanted to

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buy a pellet grill, you really want to

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know what is good about this one, what isn't

Speaker:

in the reality? It's like, how much food can you put on there? How hot

Speaker:

does it get? Does it burn, like, pros and cons, all of those things

Speaker:

across different models or across different machines? That's what I

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actually need to know. What I don't need to know is the

Speaker:

specific. This one has a dial feature. This one has a this

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and that feature. This one has that. It's like, no. As a buyer,

Speaker:

what is all the information I need to be able to make a good decision

Speaker:

to say yes or no. Yes. And I think that's where a lot of people

Speaker:

miss the mark. And it's a whole nother thing. Some people don't even want to

Speaker:

talk about their competitors. They're just like, oh, we don't want to bring attention to

Speaker:

them. And I get it. Right. But here's the thing.

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If you talk, and again, this is about talking, the cross functional

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communication. If you talk to the sales team and they tell you, oh,

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we're losing deals to this person and that person, and that person, you probably

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need to talk about it again, because people are searching for

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the bottom of funnel terms anyway. Just because you don't wanna think about

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it doesn't mean they're not searching for it. And the only thing you're

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doing by not writing bottom of funnel content is you're letting these other

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companies control your narrative. Cause you better believe if you're not

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talking about yourself, they're definitely talking about you. And something I

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caught the other day that was really, really cool on

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capsule's website. So, capsule video, they do something really cool

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on the homepage. So they have like competitors

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listed out across the homepage. But it's like

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they list the thing that they do better than the competitor.

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So they say, twelve times faster than descript,

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eleven times faster than v, nine times faster than

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Adobe. Like, they're not even hiding the fact that we have

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competitors. And these could be competitors that they're probably

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fighting for deals on, or losing deals too, but they're very

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upfront about it. They're like, boom, okay, we're faster than this person, this person

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and that person. So it's like, I would encourage people to not

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be afraid about talking about your

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competitors, because it's not like you're talking about them and you're saying, oh, you know,

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this company. I mean, let me preface that too. You

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should not, should talk your competitors. I just

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wanna, I just wanna put that out there. Like, don't do

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that. The best thing to do is to explain what

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your competitors do well versus what you do well. Because what's gonna

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happen is the prospect, or the potential prospect is gonna come to the

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article they're gonna read. And what happens is if they are

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a better fit for, for the competitor, they're going to self select

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and honestly self deselect from

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wasting time from the. Sales team, which people do not

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understand the reality

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of helping the buyer make a better

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decision and helping sales have more qualified

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sales conversations. Yes. And that people,

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buyers today, like you said, with the competition, it made me real. Like, do you

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think they're not googling the

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competition or like reading or reading a review

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on YouTube or like, like watching a third

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party give a x, Y and Z thing about the three.

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Of course they are. Of course they are. They're making a decision, asking their

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friends. It's honestly a little bit dense of us as

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marketers to think that people aren't

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going to our competitors and reading about them and

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seeing, okay, who's the best fit? Even, let's take it for consulting to a

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minute. When people look for bottom of funnel, maybe they

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come to me first if I'm the first person that comes to mind. But they

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probably hit two or three other people up and they're like, oh,

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they're, you know what I mean? They're surveying the field. They're trying to figure out,

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okay, is this the best solution for us? Why are you different than the

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other person? And it's like, here's the thing. If you're differentiated

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enough in your features, you don't have to compete on price. I think

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that's another important thing too, because again, I work with some companies

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where their benefits are a little bit high level. They're like, oh, save money and

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save time. I'm like, no, no, no. What's the benefit

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of the feature? What's the benefit of them

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achieving the job to be done? Not just, oh, we're going to save

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time. And everybody says that. What data, what proof do you have to

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back up what you're telling them? And again, and I know you mentioned

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people coming to the article and like scrolling and things like that. And again,

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that's why I think when people list their features out in

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the article, I believe the features should lead with the capability

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or the benefit. Because again, if they're skimming and they

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probably have your page up and they probably have a competitor page up and they're

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skimming through and just leading with

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capabilities and benefits is just really, really good for skimmers.

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Cause it gives them a quick way to digest what you're able to

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do without having to read a 13 or 14 minutes piece. You know what I

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mean? Yep. So I want to, nobody wants to read the 13

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minutes piece. Nobody wants to read it. Right? It's boring,

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you know what I mean? And it's like they are trying to make a decision,

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but still it's like they might not want to read every

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tiny specific, you know what I mean? So it's good to make

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those headers really stand out and get the point across

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in as few characters as possible. That headline

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needs to make them want to read the rest of the piece. And when I

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say headline, I mean like the headers, h two, s, h three, the way you

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position those needs to make them want to say, oh, okay, yeah, that's my

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problem. Okay, let me read about this a little bit. This feature does this, for

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example. And that's another thing. I think people should

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always include contextual examples in their

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articles. Again. So this confused me for a long

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time. But the easiest way to understand, like, contextual examples is just to

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think, like, once you explain the feature, say,

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for example, let's say, imagine

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if taking, and again, this is where the product

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team comes in because they help us understand how the feature is used

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contextually. That's why I said every team has to

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be involved in this, because every, yeah, it's like every team

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has different information that has to go into this piece, but it all works together

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cohesively to get a conversion at the end of them reading that piece.

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And they may not even read that. They might just skim it. Because I've, you

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know, seen people on hot jar and we've, like, they'll

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skim it, read through it a little bit. Two minutes or so, boom, sign up

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for a demo, right? Because when it hits that hard, they're like,

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oh, okay, this is my company. Let me just reach out and see what they're,

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what they're talking about. And if you have alignment with the sales team, when they

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talk to sales, everything they read in that blog post is going to align from

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what they hear from sales. Yep, yep, exactly,

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exactly. All right, we're cruising here. I want to give some folks some

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tactical advice, right? Like, hey, we're,

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we're struggling with BOFU, or like, we've got a lot of what

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I would maybe think are BOFU articles, but what are my steps

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to step in here and actually start taking, like, in the next

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two weeks, I can do these things. The first thing I would

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say is to,

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hmm, attempt to get your team together

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and lay out who you're talking to so

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your Personas, lay out your ideal customer profile, your

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pain points, benefits, features, capabilities, and

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you can get one person from each team. Usually that's how I do it. Try

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to get one person from each team together and come together and lay out these

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things, like, make it like a feature benefit list and put that together.

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From there, I would start searching for bottom of funnel terms, and I tell people

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the way I like to find. Well, again, we talked about this a

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little bit before the episode, but my brain is just like a continuous stream of

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consciousness. I'm going to try to condense this down to tell you all how to

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do this, but the way I like to find bottom

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of funnel keywords. Is a bottom of funnel keyword

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usually describes what the product is or what it does,

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right? So start there.

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Another thing I like to do is something called the homepage test. If I

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scroll down your homepage and I can find two bottom of funnel keywords,

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usually I don't want to say they're on the right track. Like they know all

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about bottom of funnel and things like that. Usually it's an indicator, like they have

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a good sense on like who they're talking to and their product market fit.

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And that's another thing, side rant. If you do not have your product market

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fit, don't start bottom a funnel. It's not time yet. You got to know

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your value props, you have to know your competitors, you have to know where you

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fit contextually all this stuff. But I would say

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get alignment again, one person from each team

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or get as close to that as you can and start doing some bottom

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of funnel keyword research again, what the product is or what it

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does. Understand the different use cases. So you know, again, when you look

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type best sales enablement software for use

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case, right? So start to understand your use cases. Start to

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implement that into your keyword research. And then from there

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grab my dashboard and grab like, but seriously,

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like there are like two or three frameworks in there that

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can kind of guide you and help you along with knowing where

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each team inputs goes in the piece. So like,

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okay, pain points go into a specific section that comes from sales

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benefits go into a specific. So that's what

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I would say. And again, if a team is like really, really pressed, I want

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to say look for a bottom of funnel specialists. I'm not the only one, right?

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Like, you know, there are other people that are bottom of funnel spot. Maybe

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they do it from a freelance basis or, and different people have

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different opinions on what bottom of funnel is. I did a LinkedIn

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poll and I said, when you think about them, a funnel, do you think of

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comparison pages? And they're like, it was almost 50 and 50

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50 yes and 50 no. And people were like, oh, well, I look

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at knowledge based stuff as bottom of funnel. I

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look at just white papers as

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bottom of funnel. I'm like, I was getting all types of stuff and I was

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like, oh, okay, okay. So I think having

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somebody with a BOFU focus come in and help the team kind of

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drive that. Again, I use templates and frameworks because that's how my brain works

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and it helps people easily conceptualize what I'm trying to do because it is

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nuanced. There's a huge learning curve. It's complicated, but I find that

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templates and frameworks kind of help people conceptualize it a little better. So,

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yeah, that's my parting advice for people that want to start

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bottom of funnel, again, it is nuanced, but if you take the steps that I

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mentioned in this episode, you're going to be

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miles ahead of your competitors. Because again, one of the

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reasons that it's kind of easy to rank for bottom of funnel content, I'm not

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trying to make it seem my job is easy, but one of the reasons that

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it's kind of easy to rank for bottom of funnel content is because a lot

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of people don't do it right. So when you do do it right, it doesn't

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take that much to rank. So as people start to catch on and start to

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do it right, might get a little bit more competitive. But as of right

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now, it's not too, too difficult to rank for. If

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you do what I talked about previously in this episode, yeah, you're going to be

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on the right track. Are there specific? So you mentioned, like

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grabbing bottom of funnel keywords. What did you

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mean by, like, scrolling the homepage and seeing two keywords? Like, what's an example of

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that? You're putting me on the spot. I

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gotta see, like, what would you be looking for? I guess

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I'm looking for. So when I scroll the homepage,

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I'm looking for a bottom of funnel

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keywords specifically. So, like, again, what the product

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is or what it does. So let me, let me pull up and

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see if I can pull up an example. I think drift does this really

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good. So if you look in Drift's

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header, it says, one conversation at a time. Meet drift,

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an AI powered buyer engagement platform. That's a bottom of

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funnel keyword, buyer engagement platform. Right? So that's

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one. If I scroll down some more, I'm seeing like a

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bunch of, no, they've only got one. But I know they

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obviously, like, they have. Sure. I know what you're talking about them. You know what

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I mean? So it's like usually when I can come in and find that

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right away, I'm like, okay, they have a good grasp on

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what they're doing and who they are. Even if you go to gong, right? If

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you go to gong and you scroll all the way down into their footer, they

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have a ton of bottom of funnel keywords in their footer because they get it

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right. So it's like, I got you, you. Know, gong versus this and best this

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for that. And so, and again, that's how I usually

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decipher quickly if a company gets it or they

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don't. And if they don't, it's okay. We just got to, like, go through the

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alignment steps and things like that. But yes, that's the homepage

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test. My own made up homepage test. So if I, if I feel like we've

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got pretty good alignment, I've gone through and done the checklist with

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my team. What are the first few, like, pieces of

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content that we should be thinking about making? X verse

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y verse z? Should I be

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focused on? You mentioned, like, product for

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x use case? Like, are there particular pieces of content that I should

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be thinking about driving faster than others?

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Yes. Well, again, people have

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different meanings of what they think bottom up funnel is or what it means to,

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to them. That's what I mean. Because if you say, oh, go create bottom of

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funnel, they might be like, oh, all right, our knowledge base, we've got

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100 bottom of funnel pieces of content. So

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to me, in my opinion, I think it's gonna be the

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blog that you should focus on. Specifically, when I

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say bottom of funnel, I mean comparison pages. So best

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versus an alternative, and then even within

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that. So I heard you say versus, versus.

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So you could do competitor versus competitor versus

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competitor. And that's a strategy I like to do as well, because

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what you can do is take the search volume from two other competitors

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and inject yourself into the conversation. So if it's like

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gong versus clary and outreach is like, well, hello, what about us?

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You can do gong versus Clary versus outreach. And what's going

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to happen is outreach is going to collect the search volume that gong versus

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clarity was getting. But now they've inserted their self into the conversation, you

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know what I mean? So it's like little strategies and tactics like that that come

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from blogging. And again, once you

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kind of get a flow of the blog and things like that, and again, you

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don't have to publish a whole lot of bottom of funnel in order to make

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moves. So typically it takes nine

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bottom of funnel posts. And I'm not. Y'all. Just don't take it with a grain

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of salt. Typically it takes, this is a scientific. She's done the study.

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I've done this so many times, guys, like, based on my. Because I

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like to always preface based on my data, it takes around nine

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bottom up funnel articles to start driving pipeline.

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For a company I'm working with, they had a lead that had a

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chain of hospitals, like 70 hospitals, you know what

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I mean? So it's like. And then the cool thing about that is that it's

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enterprise software. Bottom of funnel

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works across product, led sales, led

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all types of things. You know what I mean? So it is versatile in that

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sense. But to me, if you want to start driving, inbound

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leads you 100%. First of all, need to focus

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on bottom of funnel. What I like to focus on is the

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blog, again, because people don't do bottom of funnel correctly, so it's

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not difficult to come in and get some quick wins. I love quick wins, right?

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I love to come in and redo a piece and it ranks in two or

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three days. And they're like, oh, my gosh, is this magic? Or like, no,

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people just don't do it right. So it's like when they come in and we

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do it right, they're like, whoa. Like, this is awesome. And it blows

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their mind that a keyword that gets 150 searches a

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month converts twice or three times as much as a keyword that

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gets triple the amount of traffic. It just blows their mind every single

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time. And I love it. I live for it. So that's my final

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question, tactically, because you mentioned SEO software for the

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teams that go in and they're looking in search console or

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they are looking in Semrush or an ahrefs or something like that,

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and the volume is ten or non

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existent, what's the advice to say?

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Because I'm sure you see, I'm sure. You'Ve seen a whole nother episode on

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search volume because some people might want to kill me for this,

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but I'm being totally honest. I've gone after

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keywords that have zero search volume and it

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converts like crazy. And again, these tools are

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just an estimate of what the search volume really is. Another

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thing, I just keep dropping gems on y'all. Another thing, the

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most overlooked keyword tool is Google itself.

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So if you go into Google and you start typing in best, and again, I

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keep going back to sales enablement. Example, if you type in best sales

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enablement software for, you're going to see the

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different use cases come up that people are searching for just because

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you put it into ahrefs or you put it into Semrush, or you put it

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into enter tool here and it says, oh, it only gets ten

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searches a month or it gets zero. You always have to take that with a

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grain of salt because I've written around keywords that get ten searches a month

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and we were getting 20 visitors a day. Right? And again, also

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with keywords, you don't just rank for the thing that you're trying to rank for.

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You also rank for permutations and things like that. So

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I think that plays a really big role into it, too. But yes,

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tactically, that's what I would do step by step. Like if you're like, okay, we

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got to get leads in the door. We got to just, I would do that

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step by step. Find the alignment, find the keywords. Either

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get a specialist to come in and help you put this together, do some more

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research, compile your own research and put that bottom of funnel

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piece together. You usually need about nine good pieces before you

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start to drive pipeline. And again, yeah, that's literally what I

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would do if I was coming in. That's how I do it when I come

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into companies, right? We just go and it's the same process every single time.

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Step one, alignment. Step two, keyword research. Step three, we

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write. Step four, we track like it's the same thing every single time. And I'm

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gonna, I'm gonna throw more at you because you're here and I'm curious what your

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take is on it. So you type in that thing,

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enterprise, you know, or sales enablement, four, and it comes up with

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seven different things. Is your plan. Then again,

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are we writing seven posts all for

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this and for that and for this and for that?

Speaker:

So that's tough because

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different clients experience different things. With one of

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my clients, the thing that started converting for them,

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the ooh, ooh, hold up.

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Okay, so for two of my clients, their first

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converting piece was alternative. So if I had to

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rank within bottom of funnel, it's probably going to be

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competitor alternative and then it's going to be best

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software for use case. And then it could be like you

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versus this person. And another thing about the

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versus is this episode is going to go on forever. Another thing

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about the verses is if you type in google,

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your company versus another company, and you see g

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two and Capterra and all these

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other review sites and you're not up there, you

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immediately need to write around that, like immediately

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again, because that's other people controlling your narrative. Like

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g two is awesome, but I'm sure you don't want them controlling your narrative, right?

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You want to control your narrative. So if you see search volume

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that has your brand name in it versus somebody else, and you do not have

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a piece around that, that's probably the most

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important. After that, then I would go after competitor

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alternatives. But if you're good with like your name

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and versus competitor not having any search volume, nothing is there. At that

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point. I would start with competitor alternative again, then

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go down to best software for use case and then go competitor versus competitor.

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Got you. Okay. Yeah. So there's a little bit of a method to the madness

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of a little bit. It's some structure in his

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brain. Well, Lashay, it's been

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awesome dropping massive knowledge bombs all throughout this

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on bottom of funnel and how it ties in. I think the biggest thing for

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me, honestly, and I know we've got some cool stuff that we were chatting

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about before this, but I think for marketers to really

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understand that it truly does all tie together.

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It's not a segmented siloed strategy where we're going to

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focus only on bottom of funnel and has no impact at the top or I'm

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going to only do top of funnel as no impact at the bottom. Yup.

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All of these things tie together and I think building out

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a strategy that's manageable,

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reasonable, sustainable, where you can tie all those things together

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makes a ton of sense and I think teams can do it. I just don't

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think they know how. Yeah, well, that's what we're here for, right? That's what we're

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here for. Absolutely. So we're here to save the day.

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Awesome. Awesome. Well, Lashay, it's been a blast having you on and we'll

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definitely have to have you back because an hour went by like 15 minutes. So

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thanks for coming on. Thank you so much for having me. Appreciate you so

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much. Awesome chess soon.

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All right, I hope you enjoyed this episode of distribution first

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and thank you for listening all the way through. I appreciate you so,

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so much and I hope you're able to apply what you learned in this

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episode one way or another into your content strategy as

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well. Speaking of strategy, we have a lot of things going on this year that

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are going to help you build your brand ten x your content and

Speaker:

transform the way you do content marketing. Make sure to subscribe

Speaker:

to the show and sign up for my newsletter at Justinsimon Co.

Speaker:

So you don't miss a thing. I look forward to serving you in the next

Speaker:

episode as well. And until then, take care and I'll see you next time.