Monthly Archives: August 2024

Weekend Favs August 10th

Weekend Favs August 10th written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing

My weekend blog post routine includes posting links to a handful of tools or great content I ran across during the week.

I don’t go into depth about the finds, but I encourage you to check them out if they sound interesting. The photo in the post is a favorite for the week from an online source or one I took on the road.

  • Funnelytics: Visualize and optimize your customer journeys to align marketing strategies with actionable insights.

  • SpiderNow: Improve your website’s SEO, speed, and performance through comprehensive scans.

  • Marketing Ideas by Tom Orbach: Receive weekly powerful marketing tactics inspired by successful startups.

These are my weekend favs; I would love to hear about some of yours – Connect with me on Linkedin!

If you want to check out more Weekend Favs you can find them here.

The Ultimate Guide to Integrated Marketing Strategy: The Pyramid Framework

The Ultimate Guide to Integrated Marketing Strategy: The Pyramid Framework written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing

 

 The Duct Tape Marketing Podcast with John Jantsch

In this episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast, I’m doing a solo show. I will talk about the marketing strategy pyramid and how it offers a comprehensive view of an integrated marketing approach that never ends. By refining and strengthening your strategy based on its core elements, you can effectively compete and dominate in your market.

Key Takeaway:

The marketing strategy pyramid provides a robust framework for developing a comprehensive strategy. The pyramid consists of three primary layers: brand strategy, growth strategy, and customer strategy, all built upon the foundation of your overarching business strategy.

 

Brand Strategy: Focus on identifying your ideal customer, refining your messaging to solve their biggest problems, and ensuring your visual identity supports your brand promise.

Growth Strategy: Employ tactics to attract, build trust, and convert prospects into customers. This includes content creation, advertising, and communication strategies that drive sales and create awareness.

Customer Strategy: Develop an excellent post-sale experience to wow customers, retain them, and generate referrals. This involves creating a seamless onboarding process, maintaining ongoing communication, and ensuring customer satisfaction.

Team Strategy: Ensure your team is aligned with your business, brand, growth, and customer strategies to deliver a consistent and high-quality experience.

 

Topics I Cover:

[00:00] Introduction to the marketing strategy pyramid.
John Jantsch explains the comprehensive nature of integrated marketing strategies and why they must be continuously refined and improved.

[01:34] The essence of marketing strategy.
Jantsch emphasizes that marketing strategy is about how you compete and dominate in your market, supporting overarching business objectives.

[03:17] The three layers of the marketing strategy pyramid.
A detailed breakdown of the pyramid’s layers: brand strategy, growth strategy, and customer strategy, and how they integrate to form a solid marketing approach.

[04:14] The foundational business strategy.
Before planning marketing activities, it is important to align marketing strategies with business goals and understand profit targets and market share objectives.

[05:12] Brand strategy components.
Identifying ideal customers, refining messaging, defining brand personality, and ensuring visual elements like logos and colors align with your brand promise.

[06:55] Growth strategy elements.
Discussing tactics for attracting and converting customers, including content creation, advertising, and sales communication.

[07:57] Customer strategy insights.
Highlighting the importance of a stellar post-sale experience, customer retention, and generating referrals to build a loyal customer base.

[09:01] Team strategy integration.
Ensuring that your team is aligned with your strategies and can deliver a consistent and high-quality customer experience.

By understanding and implementing the marketing strategy pyramid, you can create a seamless and effective marketing approach that supports your business objectives and drives growth.

 

John Jantsch (00:00): I think that this definition, this pyramid, this graphic, offers a much more comprehensive view of how integrated marketing or strategy needs to be. It’s not just a one-time thing that we do. It never ends. You’re always refining and making it stronger based on these three elements.

(00:25): Hello and welcome to another episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast. This is John Jantsch and no guest today. I’m actually just going to chat solo today and I want to address a burning, burning question or one of those things out there that I think just has gone unanswered for too long, and that is what is marketing strategy. Now, don’t click off or next or set it at three times speed or whatever it is that you do to fast forward through things because you think you’ve heard this before. I think that I am going to present, or at least that’s my attempt today to present to you an idea about marketing strategy to show you once and for all what I believe is the way that we need to look at it. Now, there’s a lot of confusion on this. I know that if I poll 10 people, that I’m going to get 10 different answers on what marketing strategy is, and I’m going to suggest eight of them would be wrong or maybe just have one piece of it and certainly you turn to the Google and ask and you’re going to get presented a whole bunch of tactics.

(01:34): Marketing strategy is really the through line for how you’re going to compete. So if I were going to give it a kind of an emotional definition, it’s the place or the way you’re going to place the flag in the sand to say, here’s how we’re going to compete, or better yet, here’s how we’re going to dominate. But that’s probably not very helpful in terms of, okay, how do you do it or what do you do or how do you explain it? So I want to today to present to you something I call the marketing strategy pyramid to show you that there are components to this and that they all actually need to be integrated and working together. There is no one magic marketing strategy or marketing tactic. It’s really more about the integration, and that’s really what we do for when we work with clients, something we call strategy first.

(02:23): It’s what we also teach to other agencies to do, and it really is built on this pyramid, or at least I think this is the way we all need to start thinking about the comprehensive nature of marketing strategy. So I’m going to use this fancy tool here, stream deck to show you a slide at the same time I disappear into the corner of the slide. So if you’re just listening to this, you’re not seeing the graphic, but if you watch the video, or you certainly will have the graphic at Duct Tape Marketing, and when you go consume or if you go consume the actual post, imagine if you will, or those of you looking at it, can see it that there is a pyramid that has five layers to it, and the middle three layers are really the marketing strategy component. But even those, quite frankly, need to rest on the overarching business strategy.

(03:17): When we come in to work with somebody, and we are there primarily, or at least initially to create a marketing strategy, we don’t do it based on what we think they ought to do or what we think. There’s certainly of our experience we bring to it. But the main thing we are doing, the main thing, that marketing strategy and then the list of tactics to employ that strategy are there to do is support the overarching business objectives. So if growth is a business objective, if dominance in a market is a business objective, if retention say of clients is a business objective, then the marketing strategy is built around that and only that to begin with. So the very first thing we do in working with a client is try to understand where they’re going, try to understand the profit that they want to make in this business, try to understand the market share that they want to enjoy before we ever start really suggesting anything.

(04:14): And unfortunately, very few marketers actually take that approach. Very few business owners actually take that approach. They want to hire a marketer to generate some leads, and frankly, I think that leads them often to doing a whole bunch of things they shouldn’t do, let alone maybe not focusing on the things that are actually going to allow them to meet their marketing objectives. So that’s step number one. That’s job number one. Before we can even start going. But then what I want to suggest is that, or what we do is we then break marketing strategy into three distinct parts, brand strategy, growth strategy, and customer strategy. And the reason is that I believe that this is how somebody effectively moves through a business. This really reflects the marketing journey inside of marketing strategy. A lot of times people end marketing strategy with a clever tagline and colors and logos and call it a day.

(05:12): And what I want to suggest is a marketing strategy actually runs through the entire customer journey, the entire momentum that you’re trying to build inside of a journey. Now we use something called the marketing hourglass. I know many of you have heard me talk about that. That’s another tool that we use to reinforce this idea of the customer journey. But the three components, brand, strategy, growth strategy, customer strategy, brand strategy is where we will actually help identify who makes an ideal customer, narrow the focus to who makes an ideal customer, quite frankly, and really define the products and services that customer is looking for. We also are going to focus a great deal of attention on messaging. Are we promising to solve that ideal customer’s biggest problem as opposed to here’s what we sell, so nobody cares what we sell, they want their problem solved.

(06:03): So we’re going to focus the brand strategy on that. Then obviously things like personality, how do we want to be perceived? Are we fun? Are we very serious? Are we analytical? I mean, those are all things that come into the overarching decision about how we want to then produce things like content. And then lastly, and frankly, a lot of people put this first, when you say the word brand, we want to make sure that the names and colors and graphics and logos and things all support the message and the brand promise that we are trying to put out there. So that’s the first part of marketing strategy. The second then is probably the part that most people spend a lot of time on, and that’s the growth strategy. What are the actual tactics we’re going to use to attract, to build trust, to actually get people to try in some cases and then buy from us?

(06:55): So it’s all the sales things, it’s all of the communication. It’s a great deal of content that moves people through that stage. Certainly it’s advertising, it’s all the things that create awareness. And then the last piece of this is the customer strategy. Okay, what happens after somebody says yes? Do we have a marketing strategy or is part of our marketing strategy making sure that we have an amazing experience to onboard people, to really wow them in the first 90 days to communicate, to upsell and resell them, to retain them, to actually generate referrals? Those are all the components that go then into the customer strategy component of the marketing strategy pyramid. So everything is built on this base foundation of the business strategy. Those three layers of brand strategy, growth strategy, customer strategy, really allow us to intentionally focus on creating an amazing customer journey and attracting the right clients who expect to pay a premium.

(07:57): In fact, we’ll pay a premium now because we’ve focused on building trust, create a great buying experience, create a great customer experience. Those three things all get mapped together as we build a marketing strategy. And again, I think that this definition, this pyramid, this graphic offers a much more comprehensive view of how integrated marketing or strategy needs to be. It’s not just a one-time thing that we do. It never ends. You’re always refining and making it stronger based on these three elements. Now, I would be remiss if I didn’t add the fifth, the point of the pyramid, if you will, and that’s team strategy now. And quite often the business objectives, the brand strategy, the growth strategy, the customer strategy, are delivered by people in your organization, delivered by your team. Certainly as you grow, in many cases, you start having frontline people who are interacting with prospects and customers, and leadership is really not in tune with that.

(09:01): So you have to actually then understand how your business strategy, how your brand strategy, growth strategy, customer strategy, is both communicated and set into really a process that can be delivered by the team in the way that holds the brand promise, in the way that build allows you to build revenue and grow as your business strategy has suggested and certainly allows people to have a great experience anytime they’re interacting with anyone in your organization. So their overarching business really builds on this business strategy, has marketing strategy in the middle, and it’s really the cherry on top is then the team strategy that is going to deliver on all this. So you have to build it first, you have to then communicate it, and then you have to execute on it. But taking this, what I believe is a much more comprehensive view of marketing strategy is how you do it. So that’s it for today. If you would love to hear more about how we build that marketing strategy, certainly reach out John at Duct Tape Marketing and love to talk to you about building a marketing strategy for your organization that takes this comprehensive approach. You can also get some free resources at DTM world slash growth. Alright, till next time, take care.

Testimonial (10:25): I was like this founded. I founded. This is what I’ve been looking for. I can honestly say it has genuinely changed the way I run my business. It’s changed the results that I’m seeing. It’s changed my engagement with clients, it’s changed my engagement with the team. I couldn’t be happier. Honestly, it’s the best investment I ever made. What

John Jantsch (10:42): You just heard was a testimonial from a recent graduate of the Duct Tape Marketing certification intensive program for fractional CMOs marketing agencies and consultants just like them. You could choose our system to move from vendor to trusted advisor, attract only ideal clients, and confidently present your strategies to build monthly recurring revenue. Visit DTM world slash scale to book your free advisory call and learn more. It’s time to transform your approach. Book your call today, DTM World slash Scale.

 

The Power of Hospitality: Secrets to Successful Retreats

The Power of Hospitality: Secrets to Successful Retreats written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing

The Duct Tape Marketing Podcast with AJ Wilcox

In this episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast, I interviewed Kevin Rains, an expert in the hospitality industry and founder of Dappled Light Adventures, a company specializing in creating unforgettable retreat experiences. Kevin Rains is renowned for his innovative approach to hospitality and ability to transform ordinary spaces into extraordinary destinations. His background in community building and family-man personality offer a comprehensive guide to building and managing successful business retreats.

Kevin Rains’ love for nature and extensive experience with hospitality and retreat management provides listeners with practical tips and advanced techniques to enhance their retreat offerings. He explains the importance of understanding guest needs, the role of personalized experiences, and creating a welcoming environment that encourages relaxation and connection. This episode is a must-listen for anyone looking to elevate their business retreats and achieve outstanding results.

Key Takeaways

We’ve all considered a business retreat to rejuvenate our teams, but have we considered what makes them truly successful?

Kevin Rains and I discuss the rising popularity of business retreats and their unique advantage in fostering team cohesion and innovation. He stresses the importance of crafting personalized experiences and creating an environment that feels like a home away from home.

Kevin Rains shares strategies for effective retreat planning and execution, emphasizing the need for clear goals and robust logistical support. He states that attention to detail, understanding guest preferences, and creating memorable moments are essential for driving satisfaction and repeat visits. In this episode, you’ll learn how to design impactful retreats, why personalization matters, and why all these strategies are crucial for long-term success in the hospitality industry.

 

Questions I ask Kevin Rains:

[01:20] Could you share your background, especially your successful journey with your auto body business, and what led you to where you are today?

[03:06] What inspired you to start this venture? Was it purely a business opportunity, or was there a deeper drive, perhaps influenced by your ministry?

[04:26] What challenges did you encounter in turning a private residence into a retreat center? Were there issues with zoning, neighbors, or large-scale construction?

[06:29] You mentioned focusing on short-term rentals like Airbnb. Now, you’re shifting towards hosting retreats. What are you learning about what you need to offer for such events?

[10:59] How do you plan to impart the same connection with the land to your guests as you have? Is it challenging to create that ambiance for temporary visitors?

[12:47] What differences have you noticed between hosting business retreats and family reunions? Are there unique challenges or advantages?

[16:29] What are the logistics for hosting events? How many people can attend, and do you offer catering services?

[18:47] Do you have any advice for families or individuals considering starting their retreat center?

[19:55] For those unfamiliar with the area, Can you describe the location of your retreat center in central Kentucky?

[21:09] Where can people find more information about your facility, Dappled Light?

 

 

More About Kevin Rains:

 

Like this show? Click on over and give us a review on iTunes, please!

Connect with John Jantsch on LinkedIn

 

This episode of The Duct Tape Marketing Podcast is brought to you by ActiveCampaign

Try ActiveCampaign free for 14 days with our special offer. Exclusive to new customers—upgrade and grow your business with ActiveCampaign today!

 

 

Kevin Rains (00:00): Women tend to to talk to each other face to face. Men like to be facing the same direction. It feels safer for them to share more openly. So having these two seater UTVs going off road and we’re driving together and there’s an adventure element, once again, it allows…

John Jantsch (00:20): Hello and welcome to another episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast. This is John Jantsch. My guest today is Kevin Rains. He’s a devoted husband, father of three and grandfather who’s always embraced the joys of the outdoors. As a former body shop owner, entrepreneur, marketer, off-road writer and fisherman, some of my favorite things there, Kevin has prioritized family nature throughout his life. In 2021, he and his family transformed their 50 acre property in zoo Kentucky into a haven for outdoor adventures and simple living where they’ve created lasting memories for over 15 years. So Kevin, welcome to the show.

Kevin Rains (00:57): Thank you. Honored to be on excited.

John Jantsch (00:59): You and I have known each other for some time, like everybody knows each other these days right on the internet, but I’ve followed your journey, entrepreneurial journey, especially in the autobody days. So I thought this is a little different take on a show, but I frankly, I’ll just be honest, I had a personal interest in learning about it, so why not record it? So maybe give us a little background because I know you had a very successful autobody business that I believe you sold, and so I’d love to hear a little bit about your journey as an entrepreneur and then obviously where we are, where you got to today.

Kevin Rains (01:34): Yeah, so I started my career in the ministry actually in my twenties and early thirties. Pivoted into the family business when I was 33 and felt like I had a bit of a knack for that and started to grow in large part thanks to your books and learning. Coming out of Bible college, they did not teach marketing, so I had to learn it from John Jansch, and I learned step by step course by course, book by book, pieced it together. Eventually grew to five locations. So we went from doing about $250,000 a year in revenue to doing over $12 million a year in revenue and private equity. Came knocking on my door, wasn’t interested. They told me their number. I was interested, and that shifted quickly. So I thought I was going to retire. I was 50 51 at the time and thought, this is it. I’m going to kind of cash you out and do a lot of fishing.

(02:25): And quickly realized that I was not made for retirement. So my kids came to me and said, Hey, let’s do something different. Let’s do something else. I said, what do you want to do? They said, why don’t we start by developing these 50 acres we’ve owned for at that point, 18 years in zoo, Kentucky, and here we are, we’re building it out. We have 10, sorry, 11 rentable structures on the property. Now after a couple years, we’ve been doing a short-term rental business, and we’re pivoting now into more of a retreat business. So it’s been 80% short-term rental, 20% retreats. We’re just going to try to flip the script on that and go 80% retreats, 20% short-term rental starting in 2025.

John Jantsch (03:05): Well, first off, maybe what was your inspiration? I mean, what made you think, other than this is a what I want to do next or a business opportunity, was there any sort of driving, I’m envisioning the ministry playing a part, maybe even in just the retreats. I mean, was there any drive towards we want to have this place where people can gather?

Kevin Rains (03:24): Yeah, definitely. It’s not connected to any religious tradition. Our retreat center is not, but as a pastor, I would take retreats. I’d go to different, I went to monastery for a week at a time, at least twice a year, and that would fill me up and fill the pipeline with ideas and things that I could teach on to the church and all that. And it’s just always been a part of my personal formation as a person and how I’ve lived my life. And one of the things we talked about as a family is we have a high value for hospitality. So we said, what can we do to open this property up? We had really protected it for almost 20 years, 18 years, just for our family. And then we thought through the gift of hospitality, what would it look like to really open this up, use some of the resources we had gotten from the sale of our businesses and put those to work in a setting where we could invite more people onto this property. So I think that was the inspiration was kind of like my early formation going on retreats and then our family deciding together, we want to use our gift of hospitality and open it wide up.

John Jantsch (04:26): So what challenges did you run into turning a private resident, zoning, crazy neighbors, whatever it might be, and just even construction, large scale construction. What did you learn? What were the challenges? How hard was it?

Kevin Rains (04:43): So when we started this in 21, we didn’t have any utilities on the property. So my family would go there. We would basically be, at first, we would just literally camp and over time we’d get a trailer, but we didn’t have any running water, so we’d have to carry our water in. There was no place to really prepare foods. We had to learn to cook over the open fire. We eventually built a yurts on a cliff edge on one side of the property that became the foundation for a cabin that we built. It was kind of an off-grid cabin for all that time. So the earliest challenges were actually not zoning, believe it or not, that part of the world, central Kentucky, they don’t care what you build, as long as it’s like, honestly, I can’t think of it. We went to the building department and said, please give us any warning or restriction because we want to do this, right? They said, honey, it’s your property. You all do what you want. And we’re like, okay, well, we did. And cooling all those utilities on was probably the biggest challenging. So we wanted to bury the utilities. So we have, there’s no electrical lines running on the property, so everything’s in the ground, the water, the electric internet, everything is run under our driveway now. And then we branch out from there to the various structures.

John Jantsch (05:52): And then most of the buildings then outbuildings were built from scratch. Well, then

Kevin Rains (05:58): That’s correct. Yeah. We had a contractor come in and they started drilling posts in the ground and we built decks and then we put tents on top of those. Now we’re building a 2000 square foot, we call it the rookery, which is a place where birds gather because all of our tents are named after birds because they’re elevated in the canopy, so they’re kind of in the tree, like tree house type places. So we’re calling it the rookery, and it’s going to be a couple thousand square feet with a 2000 square foot deck. So great place for retreats to gather in that space.

John Jantsch (06:29): So I think we were chatting a little bit before we jumped on the air, and you said that to date, it’s been a lot of short-term rental, Airbnb kind of thing, but you are now really trying to move towards people having retreats, maybe coming in, reserving the whole facility. Are you just kind of learning what you have to offer for that kind of thing, ways to, whether they’re activities or adventures that you need to add? What’s that going to look like, you think?

Kevin Rains (06:55): Yeah, great question. So the area is really well known and it balloons in population on the weekends and in certain seasons. So there’s an underground kayaking area, there’s canoeing, there’s rock climbing all around us. There’s guided hikes and climbing. So there’s all kinds of, it is an outdoor enthusiast dream because of the way the cliffs are constructed. And we have great hiking on our property and we have access to Daniel Boone National Forest coming off of our property. So we’ve hiked, I think we hiked seven miles one direction with no trail in the national forest, just to see how far we could get and if we ran into anything, saw nothing. So we have this beautiful playground and we’re just introducing people to it. There’s a 200 foot waterfall that cascades off of our property into the national forest. People can hike down there. So we’re trying to think of some things we could do maybe eventually like a ropes course or some other things on property. But the area is so rich with opportunity. We feel like our main role is really to host people and create a very comfortable place for them to be as a base of operations for their own adventures.

John Jantsch (08:04): I’m curious, how are you running this as a family business then? The kids are all, everybody’s involved. So I’m curious, how has moving to hospitality business in a way changed any impacted your family dynamic at all? Because obviously that’s different than going to work and working on the cars now we’re hosts. What has that done to the family dynamic? I’m curious.

Kevin Rains (08:25): It’s been interesting. So it was a chance for my kids to kind of elevate into, because at the time they were coming into my business, we were already three, four shops at that time, ended up with five. So they kind got slotted as customer service reps or helping me manage the part room or something kind of simple. My daughter helped me organize my office and create an operations manual for our office team at the time. She was 17, believe it or not. But I did put ’em into some roles. It may have been a little bit outside to give them a chance to spread their wings, but now it feels like they’re really kind of at the top of an organization that’s going to grow over time. So we’re starting fairly small. We’ve invested a few million dollars at this point. So it’s definitely starting to be built out.

(09:12): We’re not seeing a big return on that. So they’re having to think through how do we do marketing? How do we sell retreats? How do we handle HR for this size of organization? So they’re learning the resource constraints that I had early on as a business owner. I’m letting them experience that as we go. And the secret for me is like I don’t care if it turns money for the next couple years, but at some point it’s going to need to so I can be patient even though I watch them kind of freak out about trying to get the break even.

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(10:51): So what are you waiting for? Fuel your growth, boost revenue and save precious time by upgrading to active campaign today. I’m curious, you talked about a lot of people that really love outdoors experiences. It’s not just the doing, it’s actually the being in a relationship with land. I’m curious if bringing guests onto that, if that’s going to, are you going to be able to impart that same sort of feeling or ambiance, and I’m making some assumptions that you have for the land itself now that you’re bringing in guests that are going to be there very temporarily. How do you get them to experience that?

Kevin Rains (11:29): Yeah, that’s a great question. I would say that initially a lot of the retreats that we’re running are people that we know love and trust to use your language. So we’re being very selective about some of the early days of people that we do bring on to the property. They share many of our values. They understand how important this space is to our family. Now through the short-term rental, there’s been a lot of people on the property that we don’t really know,

(11:55): But it’s been an opportunity to get to know other people and to bring them into the fold. So I travel down as often as I can. My son travels down very regularly and we have an onsite property manager as well who welcomes people onto the property. So I think having eyes on the property is helping us feel a little level of comfort about, it’s just not come one come all. We have a gate at the front and we’re kind of making it a secure environment for people to feel safe and to have an experience that their family can enjoy. And we make it clear that this is really for families

John Jantsch (12:30): Just because a lot of my listeners expect me to talk about business and entrepreneurial ventures. Have you had business retreats? And if so, what have you learned from doing those? Because I’m sure they run a little differently. And again, I’ll stop there and just ask one question at a time. What have you learned from hosting some business retreats and how they kind of differ from say, the family reunion?

Kevin Rains (12:54): Yeah, great. It’s interesting. One of the things I found that I actually love is when you get men in particular around a fire, sometimes there’s an adult beverage and a cigar involved in that as well. But the fire, the adult beverage is cigar. The relaxed environment, it really tends to open people up, especially men who may not be as open with their feelings or how they’re really doing or peeling that onion or not trying to posture or position. So I’ve taken several retreats that led several retreats there with small business owners from my area who want to scale, who want to leave a legacy, who want to do what my family’s been able to do and enjoy that space with them and get them into an environment where they can start to open up. So I love getting around that fire. Sometimes there’s tears, there’s always laughter.

(13:42): It’s a place of transparency. Transparency. The other thing that we do along those lines is we have side-by-side, kind of those off-road vehicles. And I don’t know, I’d have to do a little more research on where this came from, but I’ve heard that women tend to talk to each other, face-to-face. Men like to be facing the same direction. It feels safer for them to share more openly. So having these two seater UTVs going off road and we’re driving together and there’s an adventure element, once again, it allows some of those walls to fall. So retreats for me are really about helping business owners lower their defenses and get real and honest about what’s really going on in their life and their business.

John Jantsch (14:27): So on that vein, have you seen a lot of times, I do a lot of events and we some struggle with how much downtime or playtime versus say, working on whatever it is. Ostensibly we came there to work on have you seen some mixes or best practices or even ways in which people have incorporated those two

Kevin Rains (14:51): Of the opinion? And it may not be the majority opinion that whatever needs to be talked about will get talked about. So I go very low on the curriculum side for my retreats, and I trust my own facilitation skills in that moment to kind of pull the group together to talk about what we need to talk about. Sometimes it is a business topic and I’m more than comfortable talking through those topics as well as family or personal challenges that they may be facing. So we’re not trying to pigeonhole people and say, come to a retreat, and you end up crying and sharing your heart and going through all the layers, and it’ll be like therapy. That’s not the point. It’s just the point is to let them be the curriculum so the content comes out of whatever they bring into the retreat versus me having a script or a pre-packaged. I love teaching, I love content, I love books. But I also think there’s, the wonderful thing about retreats is it’s kind of open-ended, and I can bring some of those things I’ve learned to bear on their real call ’em live animals, whatever live animals they come with, we wrestle with those

John Jantsch (15:59): Well, and even people that go to conferences constantly comment on, I heard some good things in the meeting rooms or in the keynote, but it was the three or four conversations I had at break that really made the difference. And you hear that all the time, and I do think there’s a real feeling by event organizers still like, let’s pack a whole bunch in. But sometimes you just bring people together around an idea and just see what happens.

Kevin Rains (16:23): That’s it. I think it could

John Jantsch (16:24): Feel scary, but yeah. So let’s go over the numbers. How many people could come to an event? Is it get catered? I mean, what are the logistics?

Kevin Rains (16:37): Yeah, so if you could imagine that the 10 rentable structures, each of the tents are set up very well appointed hotel rooms. We have large like queen size or even king size mattresses, Tempur-Pedic, wonderful pillows. They’re beautifully designed. They’re probably a few hundred square foot. I think they’re 310 square feet each. So it’s a big space of big room. So you could put one person. So when I do men’s retreats, one guy in each tent, so they have solitude. If we do a couple’s retreat, then it’s like obviously two per tent. So if it’s a couple’s retreat, easily 25 people. And then we work with a local barbecue joint. There’s a kind of a grass fed beef that does hamburgers and tacos. Also in our area, we partner with local restaurants to bring food on. The rookery that we’re building is going to have a nearly almost like commercial grade kitchen in it. And our dream is to bring chefs down for certain retreats so that there can be meals prepared on site that are healthy, beautiful, and delicious. So that’s the dream. But I’d say our retreats tend to be anywhere from five to six people all the way up to 25, even 30 once the rry is completed.

John Jantsch (17:56): And any plans for making it a hundred person place or is this kind of the intimate sort of scope that you want?

Kevin Rains (18:04): Yeah, so I have a partner in that area and we’ve bought up more property down there. So we have about 500 acres in that area, and we’re currently using seven acres. So yeah, the long-term answer is yes, we plan to go bigger, but we want to get really good at those five to 25 retreats before we start thinking about more conference level type stuff.

John Jantsch (18:31): So any advice that you would give now? I don’t know that there’s going to be a lot of people listening to say, I’m going to build a retreat center myself. But to majorly pivot, whole different industry, whole different skillset, whole different customer based, different vibe, everything. Is there any advice or something you’ve learned along the way to somebody, a family or an individual that was contemplating their next thing?

Kevin Rains (18:55): I would say that I’ve learned most of what I’ve gained over the last 20 years of being in business applies to what I’m doing now. So there’s not a huge disconnect. It’s still we want to do great customer service now we call them guests. Previously, I called them customers. But really it’s the same idea. We’re dealing with people that need to be cared for and given an effortless experience and done, they need to be communicated with in a way that’s meaningful and helpful to them. So a lot of those skills are highly transferable, I would say if somebody’s considering a big pivot to feel like you’re not starting over, you’re just taking what you’ve learned and you’re applying it in a different context. And for us, it’s like any fears that I had around, could we do this or not? Over the last two years have been completely set aside. Our confidence is very high that we can make this happen, drawing on the skills we’ve learned in our previous enterprises.

John Jantsch (19:55): So how would you describe where Z Kentucky is?

Kevin Rains (19:59): It is in central Kentucky, so it’s probably about an hour east of Lexington, so it’s not easy to get to. It’s a couple hours from Cincinnati, an hour from Lexington, a couple hours from Louisville. So some of those major metropolitan areas, like three hours from Nashville. So it’s not always easy to get to the payoff is the cliff edges. We could have bought property a lot closer, but to have these 200 foot soaring cliffs on one whole side of our property, you can’t get that within an hour of Cincinnati. So we feel very lucky to have what we have.

John Jantsch (20:34): Yeah, I spent some time, what’s the national park in Kentucky? Down in Southern. It’s a cave, wind cave or something like that. Right?

Kevin Rains (20:41): Mass

John Jantsch (20:42): Cave. Mass cave. There we go. So I’m envisioning some of that same limestone.

Kevin Rains (20:46): It’s a lot of limestone, some sandstone, Mitch, which makes it really good for climbers. I don’t know a lot about climbing. I’m not built for climbing. I’m more built for podcasts. But the climbers tell me the way the rock formed down there, it’s just ideal. So it’s a world-class. It shows up in almost every climbing magazine every month

John Jantsch (21:03): Somehow. Oh wow. Wow. Awesome. Well, Kevin, again, I appreciate you stopping by the Duct Tape Marketing podcast. Where would people connect with you or certainly find out about a facility, which I don’t even think we’ve mentioned. The name Dappled Light, is that right?

Kevin Rains (21:17): Yeah, that’s right. Dappledlightadventures.com. So dappledlightadventures.com, everything’s there. You could see our facilities, you could reach out. If you email us there, you’ll get to my son Isaac. But would love to have any dialogue with people who are interested either in retreats, talking about a business pivot or want to talk about the hospitality industry. Things that we’ve learned in our first two years. I’m an open book.

John Jantsch (21:40): Alright, awesome. Again, I appreciate you stopping by. Hopefully we’ll run into you soon. One of these days out there on the road.

Testimonial (21:55): I was like this. Found it. I found it. This is what I’ve been looking for, I can honestly say has genuinely changed the way I run my business. It’s changed the results that I’m seeing. It’s changed my engagement with clients. It’s changed my engagement with the team. I couldn’t be happier. Honestly. It’s the best investment I ever made.

John Jantsch (22:11): What you just heard was a testimonial from a recent graduate of the Duct Tape Marketing certification intensive program for fractional CMOs marketing agencies and consultants just like them. You could choose our system to move from vendor to trusted advisor, attract only ideal clients, and confidently present your strategies to build monthly recurring revenue. Visit DTM.world/scale to book your free advisory call and learn more. It’s time to transform your approach. Book your call today, DTM.World/Scale.

Weekend Favs August 3rd

Weekend Favs August 3rd written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing

My weekend blog post routine includes posting links to a handful of tools or great content I ran across during the week.

I don’t go into depth about the finds, but I encourage you to check them out if they sound interesting. The photo in the post is a favorite for the week from an online source or one I took on the road.

  • FlowChat: a tool for managing social media conversations and leads, automating outreach, and enhancing engagement across platforms.
  • Muraena: an AI-driven B2B lead generation platform that automates the process of finding and engaging potential clients to improve sales.
  • UpMyInfluence: a B2B sales consulting agency that helps businesses build authority and generate high-ticket sales through personalized sales strategies and relationship-building.

These are my weekend favs; I would love to hear about some of yours – Connect with me on Linkedin!

If you want to check out more Weekend Favs you can find them here.

Mastering LinkedIn Ads: Transforming Clicks into Clients

Mastering LinkedIn Ads: Transforming Clicks into Clients written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing

The Duct Tape Marketing Podcast with AJ Wilcox

In this episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast, I interviewed AJ Wilcox, a LinkedIn Ads expert and founder of B2Linked, a company specializing in LinkedIn Ads account management. Wilcox is renowned for his in-depth knowledge of LinkedIn’s advertising platform and his ability to optimize ad campaigns for maximum ROI. His insights provide a comprehensive guide to transforming clicks into clients through effective LinkedIn Ads strategies.

AJ Wilcox’s extensive experience with LinkedIn Ads offers listeners practical tips and advanced techniques to enhance their B2B marketing efforts. He explains the nuances of LinkedIn’s advertising tools, the importance of targeting the right audience, and how to create compelling ad content that resonates with professionals. This episode is a must-listen for marketers leveraging LinkedIn Ads to drive business growth and achieve substantial results.

Key Takeaways

I know we’ve all clicked on a Facebook ad or two before, but have we clicked on a LinkedIn ad? Though we see them every time.

AJ Wilcox and I discuss LinkedIn ads’ rising popularity and unique advantage in B2B marketing. He stresses the importance of optimizing ad spend and creating high-impact content. He shares strategies for effective targeting and measuring success, ensuring every dollar spent contributes to achieving marketing goals. He states clear messaging, strong visuals, and robust targeting options are essential for driving engagement and conversions.

In this episode, you’ll learn how to hack LinkedIn Ads, why Meta struggles to compete, and why all these strategies are essential for long-term agency growth.

 

Questions I ask AJ Wilcox:

[01:56] What challenges do B2B clients face when using LinkedIn ads effectively, and why do they often find them expensive and inefficient?

[04:45] Can you explain why many businesses struggle with LinkedIn ads and how your approach differs to ensure success?

[05:35] How does the concept of thought leadership integrate with LinkedIn ads? Can you describe the process and benefits of using a boosted post strategy?

[08:21] What common pitfalls should be avoided when running LinkedIn ads to maximize their effectiveness and avoid wasting money?

[14:29] Do you have a specific methodology for managing LinkedIn ads, especially for those new to it or managing multiple clients?

[15:50] Does LinkedIn offer a business manager platform similar to other social media networks?

[18:30] How effective is the strategy of selling a low-ticket item first to convert LinkedIn ad leads into long-term customers?

[19:37] Where can people learn more about your work or connect with you for further insights on LinkedIn advertising?

 

More About AJ Wilcox:

 

Like this show? Click on over and give us a review on iTunes, please!

Connect with John Jantsch on LinkedIn

 

This episode of The Duct Tape Marketing Podcast is brought to you by ActiveCampaign

Try ActiveCampaign free for 14 days with our special offer. Exclusive to new customers—upgrade and grow your business with ActiveCampaign today!

 

 

Testimonial (00:00): I was like, I found it. I found it. This is what I’ve been looking for. I can honestly say it has genuinely changed the way I run my business. It’s changed the results that I’m seeing. It’s changed my engagement with clients. It’s changed my engagement with the team. I couldn’t be happier. Honestly. It’s the best investment I ever made. What

John Jantsch (00:17): You just heard was a testimonial from a recent graduate of the Duct Tape Marketing certification intensive program for fractional CMOs marketing agencies and consultants just like them. You could choose our system to move from vendor to trusted advisor, attract only ideal clients, and confidently present your strategies to build monthly recurring revenue. Visit DTM world slash scale to book your free advisory call and learn more. It’s time to transform your approach. Book your call today, DTM World slash scale.

(01:03): Hello and welcome to another episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast. This is John Jantsch. My guest today is AJ Wilcox. He is a LinkedIn Ads Pro who founded b2linked.com, the LinkedIn ads agency in 2014. He’s managed over 150 million in spend on the platform and he’s an official, or his company is an official LinkedIn partner. He is also the host of the LinkedIn Ads Show podcast has managed five of the world’s top 10 LinkedIn ads account. So aj, welcome to the show.

AJ Wilcox (01:35): Thanks so much, John. I’m excited to be here.

John Jantsch (01:37): I think we’re going to be, I saw your name somewhere. I’m speaking marketing profs maybe, or agents have Change Marketing World

AJ Wilcox (01:44): Or Inbound Agents of

John Jantsch (01:45): Change for sure. Okay. All right. So one of those coming up, depending upon when you’re listening to it, the fall of 2024, so I was saying all air. I wanted to have a LinkedIns ads specialist on the show because I hear from so many of our clients, particularly B2B clients who feel like, Hey, my target market is on LinkedIn, but I can’t figure out how to do LinkedIn ads. I’ve tried, they’re just expensive. So give me the high level. Maybe start with why everybody else is failing and you’ve cracked the code on it. What are they doing wrong?

AJ Wilcox (02:15): Yeah, so LinkedIn ads, as you compare it with any other platform, they look very similar, especially to Meta, but they act very differently. The really big positive we get, this is the reason why people, they just, even if they failed at LinkedIn ads, they keep getting drawn back, no substitute for the audiences that you can reach there. You can target people by their job title, their seniority, their size of company, their industry, and it just goes on and on. So LinkedIn owns, they have an absolute monopoly on our business data. So if you’re trying to reach a specific B2B professional, it’s the only way to go. But the challenge that everyone finds is, wow, the costs are three to five times higher than meta. They’re oftentimes in line with Google, and when you’re paying bottom of funnel kinds of prices, but your traffic acts like top of funnel, there’s always going to be a little bit of friction there.

John Jantsch (03:07): Well, one of the things that I find, I mean I’ll be the first minute. I mean, I don’t hang out on Facebook and frankly I go to LinkedIn for some engagement and things, but I’ve probably clicked on ads in Facebook. I don’t know that I’ve ever clicked on an ad in LinkedIn. Is that just me? Is that because the environment is so different that they haven’t kind of gamified it the way that the Facebook seems to have? Again, I’m willing to be completely wrong on this, but I, I’m in the same camp as the people that I haven’t been able to figure it out either. So help me out. Is the environment different in a way that makes us respond to ads differently there?

AJ Wilcox (03:45): It definitely could be. We find that when we launch a normal ad, because a normal ad will show as being from a company and you see a company post, come down your feed and you’ve never seen or heard of that company before. Most of the time you’re just going to keep scrolling. We see the average click-through rate being half of a percent, so 200 people scroll past your ad, one’s going to click on it on average. All of that changes when just last year, LinkedIn released something called Thought Leader ads. This is the ability to promote an individual’s post on LinkedIn and we see click-through rates. Being anywhere between about 2% on the low end to 11% is as high as I’ve seen. And so I think the fact that it’s coming from an individual, not a faceless organization, totally changes those mechanics.

John Jantsch (04:31): And you opened the door there. I was going to go certainly down the thought leader ads track because it seems, I mean definitely what you just explained, I’m more on LinkedIn. I’m way more likely to engage with a person, and in a lot of ways that’s what you’re saying a thought leader ad is. Tell me a little bit about how it works. Like you do a post and then that ad, it’s almost like a boosted post if

AJ Wilcox (04:53): You will. Exactly, yeah. You’re boosting an individual’s organic post that they put on LinkedIn, and it used to be that it could only be an employee, so they had to be an employee of your company in order to boost. But here, just a few months ago, they gave us the ability now we can boost anyone’s post so long as they have to give approval. So this opens us up to influencer promotions, customer testimonials, all of those kinds of things that are

John Jantsch (05:21): Well, or even just agencies, right, running the campaigns. Right. Yeah. You probably couldn’t do that before. So is it kind of one of those things where the consensus is, oh, LinkedIn ads don’t work, so people are not paying attention, and then this thought leader ad now is for people to get it or is really rocking it. Would you say that there’s an, why aren’t people using it more, I guess is the real question there?

AJ Wilcox (05:46): It’s an apt question. They’re really difficult to make work. You have to have a lot of things in place to even be able to sponsor one of these posts, so you have to really know what you’re doing. I think that’s keeping most people from trying ’em out. But to your first question, why is everyone saying LinkedIn ads don’t work? I think I know what it is. I think it’s because one reason is LinkedIn has a whole bunch of pitfalls in your way as you go to create the campaign. So we can sure talk about what those things are that are making people pay too much. But I think there’s also this aspect of people, they start advertising and they go, well, if I’m paying 10 to $16 a click, I better send them right to a demo

John Jantsch (06:29): To talk to sales. And

AJ Wilcox (06:30): We know cold audiences, they are not ready to talk to someone. They’re not ready to start a product trial, they’re not ready to get a demo. They’re still in research mode. And so if you start out by showing these perfect, ideal cold audiences, your talk to sales ad, they’re not going to respond and you’re going to say it doesn’t work. If you can segment things, sorry, not segment. If you can give them in the right order, first touch with them is something valuable and interesting. Second touch is something a little bit more involved. Maybe the third touch is where you finally get to say, okay, now do you want a demo? Talk to someone in sales. When we set up the funnel that way we actually do see actual results.

John Jantsch (07:09): Yeah. So you mentioned the word demo in terms that maybe are more related, like software companies. Are there industries or types of businesses that you see this working for? You mentioned a couple. I mean, imagine the high ticket consultant or even agencies. Is it working for service type businesses like that as well?

AJ Wilcox (07:30): Yeah, it’s mostly B2B because especially if we’re paying 10 to $16 a click on average, most B2C does not have that high of a ticket, but we do see some B2C working, so it’s mostly B2B. We’ve seen products and services work equally. It’s really LinkedIn, add this access to this audience that you can’t reach any other way. And as long as you approach them the right way, giving them the things that are engaging to them, then they’ll respond no matter what kind of product you have.

John Jantsch (08:00): So you started to mention, especially DIYing is a little tough on this platform, Swiss, I always find ’em frustrating because as soon as you figure ’em out, then they completely change where everything went. But what are some of the things that you have found like on Google Ads? I mean, if you just follow the path that Google tries to take you down, you’re going to spend three times as much money. So what are some of the pitfalls in LinkedIn ads or some of the things that people need to definitely watch for so that they get at least the most at or at least not waste their money?

AJ Wilcox (08:32): Oh yeah, several I could cover, but just for brevity, I’ll cover the very biggest ones. First one is after you design who your audience is, there’ll be a little checkbox that LinkedIn auto checks called LinkedIn audience expansion. We’re already paying a premium LinkedIn, please don’t put irrelevant audiences into our audience and say that you’re helping us, you’re not. So always uncheck that box. Another recommendation is down a little bit below that. LinkedIn will sometimes yes and sometimes no. Include the LinkedIn audience network. And when you advertise to the audience network, these are people who are supposedly the LinkedIn members, but when they’re around the web on trusted sites, sounds really cool. And when you advertise, you see, oh, I’m getting higher click through rates. My cost per click is a 10th of what I’m used to on LinkedIn. This looks great, but we don’t see very much quality come from that traffic. And a hundred percent of your traffic will go to the audience network and none to LinkedIn, so not super worth it.

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AJ Wilcox (10:47): When you go to pay LinkedIn, there’s the section that’s all the bidding and budgeting. The default bidding method that they set there and that they recommend to everyone is called Maximum Delivery. And it’s a pay by the impression, and LinkedIn can bid as high as they want in order to spend your budget for the day. And so we find that’s the most expensive way to pay for your traffic 90% of the time. And they’ve actually hidden the option for manual cost per click bid, which is the lowest. And so I always recommend always start manual cost per click bids significantly less than what LinkedIn recommends because their recommendations are trying to pad their pocket not yours. And if you can get past those three initial roadblocks, chances are you’ll probably pay a third as much as what you would’ve. Yeah, I

John Jantsch (11:34): Always loved those recommended bids. It’s like, here’s what we recommend, you should pay us. Exactly. It’s like, wait a minute,

AJ Wilcox (11:41): Should I just hand you my wallet and you

John Jantsch (11:43): Just take

AJ Wilcox (11:43): Whatever you want and give it back.

John Jantsch (11:45): Talk a little bit about creative. I mean, have you seen, again, this changes all the time, I suspect, but what’s working right now? Is it the same thing that’s working well in the feeds for ad creative? Yes, of course. Yeah. So what does that look like?

AJ Wilcox (11:57): I noticed as I’m scrolling through my organic feed, just seeing what my friends are posting and other thought leaders, I get a feel for what engages me. And I generally use that to come up with ideas for creative video is working really well, but it’s not just any video, it’s personal video. So just like you and I are talking right now, if an ad pops up in your newsfeed and it’s someone giving you good advice, sharing a viewpoint, someone who’s authoritative, even if it’s only 15, 20 seconds, that’s going to perform really well, people eat that up and you can retarget anyone who’s watched at least 25% of that video to show them another touch. We see that if it’s single image featuring faces is great, especially if the photographic of an image, sorry, photographic image of a person, if they’re either looking directly at the camera or if they’re looking towards the call to action, that performs really well. And we’re also finding that documents are working really well and it’s not just, I’m going to upload my whole white paper or something like that. It’s you design each page of the document, like it’s a blown up version of, here’s one big stat, flip to the next slide. Here’s one big stat or one main takeaway. Those also tend to be performing really well.

John Jantsch (13:20): Talk a little bit about segmenting again on some of the traditional, or I should say other ad markets. You want to segment small and have your ads be very relevant to that segment is a similar type of activity on LinkedIn.

AJ Wilcox (13:36): Very much. I’ve heard a lot of people who advertise on meta saying, Hey, we used to micro segment and choose these very specific audiences, and now we find that the broader we go, the better it performs. LinkedIn is totally the opposite. I think it’s LinkedIn just doesn’t have the same level of data that Meta has. And so even though LinkedIn says, we recommend that your audiences have at least 300,000 people in them, oh wow, I recommend segmenting those down to 20,000 to 80,000. Keep a really small, tight segment ‘EM based off of specific job titles or departments or seniority industries, company sizes, you can get really specific and then treat all of your data a private focus group where you get to see how each of those segments performs and reacts to your ads.

John Jantsch (14:22): And I’m sure everybody has their own way to organize, but in terms of structure, campaign structure, how you keep things straight, do you have a methodology that you really have developed that again, especially when you’re working with multiple clients, it’s really important, but just for that person trying to do it themselves, are there some tips?

AJ Wilcox (14:41): Oh, absolutely. I name all my campaigns. There’s this natural reaction to name a campaign after the asset that you’re advertising. So if a marketer goes, Ooh, I just got this new ebook, I want to go publish, they go in and they create a campaign and they call it ebook. And we don’t do that. What I highly recommend is you name your campaign after the things about that campaign that won’t change. So the things that won’t change about that campaign, the ad type that you’ve chosen, the objective that you’ve chosen, those all stay the same. You’re going to add all this targeting. Maybe it’s like these job titles at this size of company in this geography, put all of that in the campaign name. And now as you’re looking through all your campaigns trying to keep things straight, you have this one entity. It’s an evergreen entity that anytime you want to show that kind of ad to that audience, you can put in it. And that campaign’s going to live forever. Otherwise you’re just creating like, here’s an ebook, here’s a guide, here’s a thought leader. And all of these campaigns just clutter up your account and after they’ve served their purpose, you throw ’em away. And then LinkedIn never gets a chance to learn from your history.

John Jantsch (15:50): So do they have, showing my ignorance here, do they have a business manager type of platform? Yeah. Okay.

AJ Wilcox (15:56): Yeah, they totally do. I would say it’s fairly recent. We’ve gotten in the last couple of years, but it’s actually gotten a lot better in the last couple of years.

John Jantsch (16:04): So you mentioned retargeting. That’s a fairly new capability on LinkedIn ads, isn’t it?

AJ Wilcox (16:10): Yeah, it’s had the ability to retarget website visitors since, I want to say 2017, but LinkedIn keeps adding all these others because retargeting your website visitors is totally based off of you having a cookie in your browser.

John Jantsch (16:24): And

AJ Wilcox (16:25): IOS devices wipe the cookie. Mozilla doesn’t store it either. There’s lots of reasons why people would delete their cookies in between, so it’s not all that great. LinkedIn realized that and said, well, hey, when someone is logged into the platform, we know who they are and all we have to do is pay attention to what it is that they’re clicking on and interacting with. So now we can create what we call engagement based retargeting audiences. I can go to LinkedIn and say, Hey, build an audience of anyone who’s watched at least 50% of one of my video ads in the last 180 days. And it can go, oh, I remember all the people who did that. I’m going to build that. And then two days later, I have an audience to target. They have a whole bunch of different retargeting audiences like this, and I don’t know of any other ad platform that has that capability that many different ways of building these retargeting audiences.

John Jantsch (17:18): When you launch campaigns on LinkedIn, you probably have a hypothesis about what will work, how do you approach testing ad copy, ad creative segments the whole bit? I mean, how do you go about really launching a bunch of things to see what works?

AJ Wilcox (17:33): Yeah, we could definitely go really deep here, but in general, when a client comes to us and they say, here’s an audience we want to go after, I’m trying to define what is an AB test going to look like? So if they came and said, Hey, we have three different podcast episodes. We want to try advertising here, I’m going to say, alright, let’s test episode against episode. We have a lot of things, but if they came to us and just said, we only have one guide. This is our big research report that we do every year, I might suggest, Hey, let’s come up with two different variations or four different variations, all that are covering that same asset. And then let’s test and find out which assets are more interesting to your audience and what wording imagery are you using to try to draw people in. And so we design everything like an AB test to gather later and find out what works to which segment of the audience.

John Jantsch (18:30): A very common funnel for marketers is, let’s sell a low ticket item. Obviously they become a buyer of that low ticket and then we’ll sell them other things. Do you find that working that works pretty well on Facebook? Do you find that type of approach or anybody running that kind of buy the $12 ebook kind of thing?

AJ Wilcox (18:49): Not great on LinkedIn, because the cost per click is so high, you’d have to have a really high conversion

John Jantsch (18:55): Rate. So there’s no way to get your ad spend return. Yeah, okay. Yeah, makes sense. So it really is, so to summarize a bit, the thought leader ads really kind of promoting education and just what you talked about, the thought leadership is really the approach that you’re seeing the most effective

AJ Wilcox (19:12): And realize that these audiences you want to go after because they’re perfect for you, they’re not ready to buy until they’ve had multiple positive interactions with you. So quit jumping right to the bottom of the funnel with these audiences and warm ’em up. Use the retargeting to graduate them down to where they’re going to be more open to that kind of interaction.

John Jantsch (19:32): Yeah. Awesome. Well, aj, it was great catching up with you. Has spent a few moments on the Duct Tape Marketing podcast. Is there somewhere that you would invite people to learn more about your work or connect with you somehow?

AJ Wilcox (19:42): Yeah, if they go to b2linked.com, that’s our website. So there’s plenty there. There’s our podcast, our blog. I’d also love for you to connect with me on LinkedIn. Find me, I’m AJ Wilcox, and just make sure you send me a custom connection request. Just say you’ve heard me on John’s show, and then I’ll make sure I see it and accept the connection. I share. Lots of good stuff there.

John Jantsch (20:03): Awesome. Again, I appreciate you spending a few moments. I look forward to seeing you when we’re both out there on the road.