Creating Authentic, Memorable, 'Fun' Content for 'Not Fun' Industries

Intro:

Do you live in a world filled with corporate data? Are you plagued by siloed departments? Are your lackluster growth strategies demolishing your chances for success? Are you held captive by the evil menace, Lord Lack? Lack of time, lack of strategy, and lack of the most important and powerful tool in your superhero tool belt, knowledge.

Intro:

Never fear, hub heroes. Get ready to don your cape and mask, move into action, and become the hub hero your organization needs. Tune in each week to join the league of extraordinary inbound heroes as we help you educate, empower, and execute. Hub heroes, it's time to unite and activate your powers. Before we begin, we need to disclose that Devin is currently employed by HubSpot at the time of this episode's recording.

Intro:

This podcast is in no way affiliated with or produced by HubSpot, and the thoughts and opinions expressed by Devin during the show are that of his own and in no way represent those of his employer.

Liz Moorehead:

Hello, Maximilian.

MaxCohen:

Hi. It's just us.

Liz Moorehead:

It's just us.

Speaker 4:

It's only us today.

MaxCohen:

Do I know

Liz Moorehead:

what I'm saying? Gremlins. What are

MaxCohen:

you snacking on? What? Do you hear the crunch?

Liz Moorehead:

I do hear the crunch. Is it Cheetos? Nope.

Speaker 5:

What is it?

MaxCohen:

It's not a traditional snack, but it's, like, one of my favorite snacks of my entire life.

Liz Moorehead:

What is it?

MaxCohen:

Oh, no. This this is I get that.

Liz Moorehead:

What is that?

MaxCohen:

This is a Chatham Village a Chatham Village garlic butter crouton.

Liz Moorehead:

Okay. See, I would shame you for that. However however, Trader Joe's used to sell rosemary sprinkled croissant croutons.

MaxCohen:

Hold on. What? Say that one more time. Rosemary and what?

Liz Moorehead:

Rosemary croissant croutons. Did they ever get near a salad? Absolutely not. They went directly into my fascia.

MaxCohen:

How do you do a I don't get it. How do you do a croissant crouton? Or wait. Oh, well, I guess you chop up a crouton. You make croissants out of it?

Liz Moorehead:

No. You chop up a croissant and make croutons out of it.

Speaker 4:

Did I say it backwards?

Liz Moorehead:

Yes. You go collect all the croutons from the crouton tree.

MaxCohen:

And you fold them into a nice buttery soft croissant. I'm pretty sure these are just made from toast.

Speaker 5:

Yep. You can see the crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's

MaxCohen:

crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust's crust. Yep. You can

Liz Moorehead:

see gonna sit here and talk about snacks.

Speaker 4:

Yeah. Right.

Liz Moorehead:

Do you think George will ever leave us alone again?

MaxCohen:

Nope. Nope. Fantastic. This is a one time only.

Liz Moorehead:

One time only engagement.

MaxCohen:

This this podcast is an NFT.

Liz Moorehead:

We swear it's worthwhile.

Speaker 5:

Yeah.

Liz Moorehead:

Its value is limitless and 0.

Speaker 5:

Yeah.

MaxCohen:

It's the alpha and the omega. Goose egg. Goose egg.

Liz Moorehead:

Can you imagine if somebody is hearing this? Welcome back to Hub Heroes. I'm your host, Liz Moorehead, and I'm joined today by Max Cohen, and we are the only this is the first time you've encountered Hub Heroes.

MaxCohen:

This is gonna

Liz Moorehead:

be great.

MaxCohen:

This is gonna be the

Speaker 5:

worst.

Liz Moorehead:

No. It's gonna be great.

MaxCohen:

It's gonna be great. It's gonna be great.

Liz Moorehead:

It's gonna be great. It's going to be great because yes. Okay. Are we the chaos demons

MaxCohen:

Yeah.

Liz Moorehead:

Of hub heroes?

MaxCohen:

Yes. Yes. 100%.

Liz Moorehead:

Does our producer, Noah, often have to listen with a much closer ear whenever you and I open our mouths?

MaxCohen:

Yes.

Liz Moorehead:

Yes.

MaxCohen:

Yes.

Liz Moorehead:

Yes. Mhmm. Are we proud of that? Yes.

MaxCohen:

Yes. Absolutely.

Speaker 5:

I

MaxCohen:

was gonna say yes. Yep. A 100%.

Liz Moorehead:

100%. The one thing I will say, though, because we're not just gonna sit here and talk about snacks the whole time, although I would totally do a snacks podcast with you, Max. I feel like we our Venn diagram on snacks would be solid.

MaxCohen:

Oh my god. Just a perfect circle.

Liz Moorehead:

Just really? Yeah. One perfect seamless circle. But the other thing we share in common is that we are unabashed, unapologetic content creators.

MaxCohen:

Yes.

Liz Moorehead:

And so that's what we're gonna be talking about today because we are surrounded by people in our industry and in different industries who believe that they are too boring for creative content or their industries are too boring or they're scared to show their personality because it'll be unprofessional or da da da da. So that's cop

MaxCohen:

out.

Liz Moorehead:

Yep. That's what we're gonna be talking about today. In fact, Max, I wanna go ahead and just jump into this first question. Okay? Yeah.

Liz Moorehead:

What do you think is the reason why people really say it's hard to create exciting and engaging content for their boring industries? Is that actually true?

MaxCohen:

Well, if we break it down, it's hard to create content. Sure. It is hard. It's not, like, easy by any means. Like whenever, you know, I'm going back to my unpacking my my trauma chest of being an implementation specialist back when HubSpot was just the marketing hub.

MaxCohen:

Right. And, you know, you you always get to that awkward point where it's like, alright,

Speaker 4:

cool. Like, your your DNS records are set up. You've connected your subdomain, your email setting domains are good to go. And then we need to go make a campaign. And they're like, what are you talking about?

MaxCohen:

And I'm like, we gotta make an offer. We gotta make something that people actually wanna give you the email address for, not just you, you know, contact us page. And they're like, what? Sales guy didn't tell me that. And I'm like, yeah.

MaxCohen:

We gotta make content.

Speaker 4:

And they're like, what does that word mean? And I'm like,

MaxCohen:

you know what I mean? And and, like, it's you know, I always told people, I was like, listen, all the stuff that, like, we're doing when we're, like, setting up HubSpot and doing stuff in HubSpot, that's the easy part. Like, clicking the buttons, figuring out, you know, how to make a conversion path and write a blog post and link to it and CTAs and, like, all this stuff. That's easy. But then there was always, like, the awkward, you know, hey, man.

MaxCohen:

If you're not creating what people are actually looking for, they have no reason to find it in the first place. Right? It's like very awkward physics truth that we all have to, you know, come to realize. And obviously, people in the sales process aren't thinking about that whatsoever. Right.

MaxCohen:

And, you know, even I hate to, you know, call it HubSpot Academy, but, like, know, even when HubSpot Academy would be doing stuff like, you know, doing the, whole marketing software certification, they're kind of just, like, assuming that you're already creating all this great content that you're plugging into this machine you're building. Right? And it was almost as if, like, a lot of people, like, wanted to stay away from the fact that, like, content runs this whole thing. Right? But no one wanted to say this is the hard part because it is.

MaxCohen:

Like, you know, back when it was blog writing, like, putting pen to paper or fingers to keyboards or, like, whatever it is. Right? And actually creating something that you think somebody's looking for. Never mind all, like, the technical SEO stuff. Like, you could have the most well optimized, beautiful, great, amazing page, you know, that a search engine knows exactly what it's about.

MaxCohen:

Right? All that.

Liz Moorehead:

But still,

MaxCohen:

if no one's, like, looking for that content, no one's gonna search for it even though it's really easy to find because you did really good SEO or something like that. Right?

Liz Moorehead:

Oh, yeah. This has always been the big flaw of our industry. You know? I I remember when I first joined the inbound world, it reminded me a lot. Do you remember the South Park episode with the underpants gnomes?

Liz Moorehead:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

Totally.

Liz Moorehead:

And it's like, step 1, steal underpants.

MaxCohen:

Yep.

Liz Moorehead:

Step 2, question mark.

MaxCohen:

Yep.

Liz Moorehead:

Step 3, profit. Yeah. That's always actually how I felt when I was in the inbound world. So when I started in inbound marketing in 2014, I actually wasn't coming in as a content specialist. I was hired into my agency, yes, because I could write, but I was brought in as a marketing generalist.

Liz Moorehead:

It was only later on that I niched down. And it was because, like, to be and I say this with all love and reverence for our big orange sprocket overlords, but we have a a serious problem in the inbound marketing space in general, which is that we make assumptions, a, about content existing in the first place, b, people knowing how to do it well, and c, turning a complete blind eye to the fact that content is probably where organizations hurt the most for a variety of reasons. I mean, we're relying on scores of professionals to hearken back to their days in elementary school and middle school where the and the conclusion is the summary of what we said in the rest of the essay. Like, the we're still treating content in a way as not a separate discipline. Like, one of the biggest things I see in organizations is the problem is, you know, they're sitting there worrying about whether or not they have the ability or the wherewithal or the lack of fear gremlins to put personality in their content.

Liz Moorehead:

But the big problem is they do not know how to build a content machine inside their organization. Yeah. They don't know how to do they don't know what it means to have a sustainable, scalable content operations where you're not reinventing the wheel every single time you have to create a piece of content. Yep. You know, we're and we're asking people to do more dimensional content than ever before.

Liz Moorehead:

Like, it used to be the pain was only felt in blogs, but now we're asking people to get in front of the camera and make video scripts and be on podcasts and do all these different things. Like Yep.

MaxCohen:

We gotta do a podcast because everyone else is doing a podcast. We gotta start making short form video because I see all these, you know, folks doing TikToks and stuff about, like, our product and dah dah dah dah. Yeah. There's a lot of, like, pressure again. It's the same idea back when it was like, oh, we gotta do SEO.

MaxCohen:

We gotta do SEO. We gotta do SEO. We gotta do SEO. What does that mean? I don't know.

MaxCohen:

Everyone's saying we have to do it, and all these companies are trying to sell it to me. So, like, we have to do it. And it's like like, you're you're forgetting the basic physics about why someone goes to the Internet. Right? And, like, why so content will always be something that no matter what, that's a trend that will never die.

MaxCohen:

Right?

Liz Moorehead:

Oh, a 100%.

MaxCohen:

Like, it can't. Right? They're, like, there there isn't a reason for you to go on the Internet besides content. Right? And content can be anything, but it needs to be something that you want to consume and you want to do, like, a reason to go somewhere.

MaxCohen:

It's the same reason why it's like bait. Right? For a, you know, a a a mouse wants to eat, it's gonna eat the cheese. It's gonna want the cheese. It's gonna go search for the cheese and consume the cheese.

MaxCohen:

Right? Us as humans, right, we need content that's gonna help us, like, solve our problems and and and overcome certain challenges even if they're very small or even if they're very big. Right? You know, and I think the the problem is is, like, a lot of people just don't make that calculation that, like, the content someone wants is not buying something from me. The content someone wants is things that actually mean something to them and actually help them solve a problem.

MaxCohen:

Whether that problem is I am bored. Right? And I need to go mindlessly scroll TikTok for content to feed my boredom. Right? That is it.

MaxCohen:

Like being bored. I wanna see cute pictures of cats. That is a goal. It's a micro goal, but it's something you wanna do. And you're not gonna, like, stop the search for cute cat pictures until you satiate that need for that content.

MaxCohen:

Right? But, you know, same thing goes for I, you know, am a person who has a job, and I have a problem. Right? I have challenges or I mean, I have goals, but I have challenges that are getting in the way for me to see whatever success looks like in my job or what success looks like in my life or what success looks like, you know, 10 minutes ago where I was like, I want a salty, buttery snack, and I went and found my croutons. Right?

Liz Moorehead:

God bless croutons.

MaxCohen:

People always need stuff. Right? The Internet is just a place to go to get that stuff. Right? And I think, like, we forget, and we just hyperfocus and think, like, the Internet is the place to go to buy our products.

MaxCohen:

It's like, no. It's not. It's it's it's a way you can sell your product. Sure. Right?

MaxCohen:

But the the raw physics of it, again, like I talk about inbound physics all the time, is that people use search engines to find what they are looking for. And if you're not creating what people are looking for, they have no reason to find you. Right? The cheese is never gonna get eaten if the mouse isn't looking for the cheese. Right?

MaxCohen:

Mouse is always looking for the cheese, but you know what I'm saying.

Liz Moorehead:

Especially this mouse. I freaking love cheese.

Speaker 5:

Mhmm. Alright.

Liz Moorehead:

Let's let's dig a little bit deeper in here because one of the things that we mentioned at the top of this discussion is that it's not just the pain of content creation in general, like, in a broad sense. Right? There's also this distinct aversion particularly from folks who are consider themselves to be, in quote, boring industries or super hyper regimented industries where it's a, we can't show any personality. We can't have any fun. We can't do any of these things.

Liz Moorehead:

There is a distinct fear. There is a distinct aversion. Why do you think people are afraid, and should they be?

MaxCohen:

Well, I think it's it's it's, 1, if you're working at a company, at which the company produces some sort of product or service or something that is not something that you are inherently interested in. It's very easy to say, oh, this is boring and no one's gonna care about it because I don't care about it. Right? Mhmm. And so, you know, the the that's kind of, like, a classic thing.

MaxCohen:

It's, like, you know, one person's yuck is another person's yum or, like, you know, kind of whatever. I think, like, what folks forget is like, hey, if we were able to get to the point where we created a business that sells a product that solves a problem someone has, well, guess what? There's other people that's gonna be interested in your shit because they have those problems. Right? Like, interesting the word interesting, like, what interests me.

MaxCohen:

Right? I think people kind of they look at that word and they kind of, like, break it down into, like, what just personally interests me? What are my hobbies? What are the things that I like to do? Right?

MaxCohen:

You gotta remember that, like, interesting could mean, oh, this is an interesting way I found to solve a problem, or this is an interesting way to look at a certain challenge I have, or this is an interesting way to achieve some kind of goal that I have, even if it has nothing to do with, like, your personal interests. Right? So, like, people forget there's folks out there that, you know, could potentially buy your product. Right? They don't know they need your product.

MaxCohen:

They don't know your you know, you even make your company even exists. Right? They don't even know that, you know, you sell whatever you sell. Right? But they're looking for ways to solve goals and challenges that they have and when they find little bits of that puzzle that can teach them something or get them, you know, over the hump or get them closer to achieving one of that challenge is, is.

MaxCohen:

That is interesting to them. Right? And I think, you know, should I when we talk about the boring industry thing, I don't know if we need to remind folks again because I've yelled it probably 38 times while you and me have had these, like, side conversations around boring content. Need we remind everybody listening? They made crab fishing very interesting, didn't they?

MaxCohen:

Right? Yeah. Like, before, you know, Deadliest Catch came out, who would ever have thought crab fishing was cool? Right?

Liz Moorehead:

Definitely not the crabs.

MaxCohen:

Yeah. Yeah. Definitely not the crabs. Right? Or even the people eating the crabs.

MaxCohen:

Right? But what they were able to do is they were able to take something that may seem like a mundane job, right, and turn it into using just, like, documentation. Right? That's all they're doing is they're just deploying documentation of your day to day work, right, and presenting it in a way that made it interesting, made all the intricacies of crab fishing industry, made all the drama of crab fishing industry interesting. Right?

MaxCohen:

You can do that, I think, with almost anything. Right? Because behind any sort of business or product or whatever, there's people, there's a story, there can be humor. Right? Because just like we sell to humans.

MaxCohen:

Right? And I always say, you're never b to b, you're always b to h. Right? Because, you know, b to c, b to h, always selling to humans. You gotta remember behind the b, there's also humans too as well.

MaxCohen:

Right? And there's a multitude, billions of different ways that you can make whatever it is that you're doing interesting in some way, shape, or form. But people don't really understand that. Yet they'll watch, you know, Deadliest Catch and be like, woah, it's so cool. Right?

MaxCohen:

It's like, well, dude, why can't you do that about dental insurance or something along those lines? You know? So I think it's just we're we're trained to kinda feel like, I'm not really interested in, like, you know, what my company does or what we do. It's hard for me to get excited about it. So it's very easy to have these mental blocks that someone else can't get excited about it.

MaxCohen:

Right? I get very lucky having worked at HubSpot, now working at a company that builds stuff on HubSpot, that it's easy for me because I think all this stuff is really cool, and it's, like, my whole personality, and I love talking about it. Right? That's not the same for everybody at their job. Most people hate like, a lot of people hate their job.

MaxCohen:

Right? So it's gonna be hard for them to, like, willingly go out

Speaker 4:

and be like, oh, let me make all

MaxCohen:

this awesome content about this thing they love so much because they probably you know, vast majority of people aren't in that situation. Right? So I can understand, I guess, how people would, you know, immediately jump to the conclusion of the business that we're in is boring, and there's no way we can make interesting content about it. But the fact of the matter is it's just as that's not true.

Liz Moorehead:

Yeah. It it's interesting. When I when I reflect on my experience so after I niched down into being a content manager back then at Quintain, which was a small agency in Annapolis, then I went on to become the editor in chief at Impact, which is a Diamond HubSpot partner agency, and I ran all of our publishing for a few years. And now I I work on my own, but also with George as well. I've spent a lot of time not only educating people about content, but also creating content.

Liz Moorehead:

And this is where it gets really funny, Max. I think sometimes people will look at people like you and like me. Yeah. Well, you guys are different. You get to have fun.

Liz Moorehead:

You're in a different interest. We ma'am's, sirs, and all others. We work in b to b marketing and sales with long sales cycles and deal sizes that are in the tens of 100 of 1,000 of dollars. If you think we're not working in an industry where us being taken seriously for our expertise does not matter, you really need to reevaluate how it is that you are looking at us and perceiving us and what it is that we do. Because when I think about what the real fears are that are driving people to say, well, I we just can't do it.

Liz Moorehead:

It usually comes down to a few things. 1, the thing that people won't say out loud is that they don't wanna get rejected for being themselves, for being a whole ass human being, and being the person who puts themselves out there only to get rejected in some way by someone disagreeing with them on public, on the Internet, for for someone getting upset, for upsetting their boss, for putting yourself out there, and for some way and for some reason, when you show yourself fully and allow yourself to be seen, it is rejected in some way. Another fear that I see quite a bit is something that you just spoke to. Right? It's that, well, we can't do it because this is our industry, and we and we can't, and we're not allowed.

Liz Moorehead:

You are. You are. And and one of the reasons when I was at Impact that I was such a hard ass about, like, if I can put anybody else's name on this piece of content, we've got a problem. Like, that was one of the things that I taught, and I was very much a hard ask about. And the reason why is this.

Liz Moorehead:

One of my favorite things that would happen is that so there was a long period of time where I worked with subject matter experts across our entire company in paid ads, sales, video marketing, standard inbound market, like all of these different disciplines. And we created dense pillar guides where they would showcase their personality. We would put their faces on it. We would do all of these things. So it would serve the purpose that we wanted, right, of driving search traffic because it was a basic pillar page topic cluster strategy, generating leads because it was also a premium downloadable offer, like, we could still see the whole thing on the page, but we gave you the option to download it as well.

Liz Moorehead:

But then our sales team started doing something really interesting. They would take a link to a pillar page. I remember one specifically, it was for paid ads, and it was featuring 2 guys named Jason Linde and Dan Baum, and they were just rock stars at paid ads at Impact at the time. And our sales guy, Mark, said to this prospect, hey. This guide is a really great showcase of the depth and, and width of our expertise in this area, but it will also give you a chance to get to know Jason and tan Dan, the 2 guys you will be working with.

Liz Moorehead:

Because if we think about the deals that we lose so often, particularly in b two b, the worst way to lose it is that ineffable way. It was a it was a better culture fit, which really means the other guy got them to like them Mhmm. Faster. So I like to think of content as, like, that digital handshake where you get to be as human as possible and give them the experience of being with you in their content. That's why I think it's so profitable.

Liz Moorehead:

That's why I think it's so powerful. But there is a fear wrapped up in that of, well, is it even worth it? Is it really worth putting it out there? The last fear that I think is really important to talk about, and I know we're gonna dig more deeply into this in our conversations, people think, well, I'm not funny enough. When did we say you had to be funny?

Liz Moorehead:

We're just asking you to just be human beings. Yeah. Max and I act this way because we show up at a 1000% in our lives, and it's probably best that you know that upfront. Let's let's know that we're not gonna do bait and switch. You need to know this.

Liz Moorehead:

This is who we are.

MaxCohen:

No. I know it's weird. I've had, you know, I've I've had people have, like, private conversations with me and say, like, oh, you know, I wanna be able to do content. Like, I love what you do. I'd love to be able to, you know, do, like, videos and stuff like that.

MaxCohen:

But, like, you you know, I'm I'm just not funny. I don't know how to, like, have your charisma or, like, do the and it's just like, you don't you don't need to. Like, no one said you had to go make a bunch of stupid TikToks about something. Like, there's a million and a half other ways that you can make content. Right?

MaxCohen:

The reason I chose video as my primary tool to create content is I I I I could barely read, never write never mind write. You know what I mean? Like, I chose the delivery method that worked best for me so I could have a little bit less, what is it, decision paralysis or decision fatigue or, like, whatever or, you know, it it was just, you know, I I at a very very quickly realized written content's not gonna be my thing. Right? I tried to write, like, a couple blog posts on LinkedIn, and I'm just, like, this is my wife's the 8th grade English teacher, not me.

MaxCohen:

Right? And, like, it's way easy for me to, like, spit some crazy stuff into a video. Right? And do it that way, you know. So I played to my strengths.

MaxCohen:

Right? Like, if you don't think you're charismatic in front of a camera, try a podcast, try written content, try visual content. You can you can deliver your message and deliver value in other ways that aren't video. Right? And you shouldn't try to force yourself either into delivering content in a specific way if you know it's going to have a negative impact on the quality of it.

MaxCohen:

Alright? You should deliver it in the most quality way that's easiest for you to replicate and do as much as you can.

Liz Moorehead:

You can also build systems. And so do the content managers and content strategists or the business owners out there who are listening to this who have content nerds under your roof, you can also have so one of my clients is in a similar situation. Right? And we had they're they're incredible commute verbal communicators. They are incredible speakers.

Liz Moorehead:

They are an undeniable peerless expert in their industry. Like, the the way this guy communicates is absolutely incredible. He does not have the time to sit down and write, and when he does, it ends up looking more like an outline. And then we got into this weird situation where, like, he was now running out of time to actually just sit down and be interviewed with me so I could go straight with him. So we came up with this great system where I would give him a bunch of topics, and I would say, by the way, these are the questions I'm gonna

Speaker 5:

ask I would ask you, and this is the order in which I would ask them.

Liz Moorehead:

Here are the things you need to say at the beginning. Here are the things you need to say at the end. If you film this video, we can use it as video content, and then I can also translate this into a written blog article. So the moral of the story for my content nerds out there and the business owners who oversee content nerds is that if you have people like Max, if you have experts who you know are not gonna sit down and be the writers, it is incumbent upon you to create systems that support that. It is part of our job to empower people to communicate in the ways that make the most sense for them.

MaxCohen:

Mhmm.

Liz Moorehead:

And I think that's really important.

MaxCohen:

Yeah. And I think, you know, it a lot of this takes experimentation. Right? Like

Speaker 5:

Yes.

MaxCohen:

You're never gonna nail at the beginning. I never did. And I don't think anyone who's ever been successful nail it at the beginning on their first try either. Right?

Liz Moorehead:

Oh, not at all. In fact, Nick from Fargo put that just in one of his comments. He said, fear of getting low to no traction is such a perceptual barrier that holds me back a lot. We have a live audience if you ever wanna join us when we record, community.hubheroes.com. So I love that he brought that up and that you're pointing to that because at the beginning, can we talk about the first video I ever did for impact?

Liz Moorehead:

Because I had spent years being a writer, and then the pandemic forced me when I took over the video program. I took over the video program, it was right before the pandemic. I'm like, this is great. I can delegate. And then the pandemic happened, and so I had to film everything.

Liz Moorehead:

And the first video I ever did was a, hi. I'm Liz of Impact. Do you wanna know what it's like to work with a HubSpot? It was it was like worse than Stepford Wife, and it took practice. But I would say, Max, even now, not everything is a hit.

Liz Moorehead:

This is all about the at bats. No. This is you yeah. Talk to

MaxCohen:

me about that. Never gonna be at the beginning. Right? Like, it's it's a if if you if, you know, if you look at someone being successful, it always starts small, and then it grows big. Right?

MaxCohen:

So it's, like, low and no traction at the beginning is what you should exactly expect. Like, that's the that's I mean, that's just it. It's oh, it's not don't fear it. Know that that's always going to be the case regardless of if you're successful or not. Right?

MaxCohen:

You know, so, I mean, I think if you can kind of, like, get that you know, get get over that piece and start to say, hey. You know, the beginning of it is always going to be, an experiment. Right? And you're gonna be in this experimenting phase for a long time because that's how literally any successful anything starts is by failing over and over again until you figure out what works. I mean, that was I was just explaining this concept to my my, kid the other day because she was getting really mad that her drawings weren't good.

MaxCohen:

Right? And I was like she she's like, yeah. And she was, like, cutting up her drawings, and she's like, I keep making mistakes. And I'm like, listen. Like, learning is literally just making mistakes until you make less mistakes.

MaxCohen:

Like, that's the that's the whole process. Like, how do you know what to do if you don't know what not to do? Right? It's a process of elimination. Like, that's what learning is, and that's what experimenting is.

MaxCohen:

Right? Especially when you're talking about any sort of content creation. So it's, like, not only do you gotta experiment with the ways that you feel comfortable delivering and creating and deploying content, you also gotta remember you gotta experiment with the ways that your audience likes to consume it. Right? You might have an audience that's particular to reading depending on the, you know, subject matter.

MaxCohen:

You might have an audience that just wants to consume it all via video you might have an honest that has an audience that has a healthy mix of both be so you'll try to figure out ways to kind of deploy tactics in both ways you can make videos that you don't appear on right like especially with so much so many of the cool tools today like the script and stuff. And, like, I'm Ryan Gunn from aptitude 8 sent me a a a LinkedIn message the other day being like, bro, I just use Content Hub to write the script for a podcast and post it to HubSpot, and it created the entire thing for me. And I didn't even speak the words. Right? Like, you know, you can do audiograms and descript.

MaxCohen:

There's so many different ways to, like, build content in a way that other people like to consume it even if you're not comfortable building it in that way. Right?

Speaker 5:

Well, I would yeah.

Speaker 4:

But yeah.

Liz Moorehead:

I would say also, though, one of the things that people need to keep in mind as they're going through this process is that and this was particularly true for me. When I first started writing in the content marketing context, mine was very much that you may want to consider, like, kind of, like, very normal, like

MaxCohen:

Consideration stage content.

Liz Moorehead:

Yeah. Yeah. Well, that and also just, like, I'm gonna sound like everybody else. Right? Yeah.

Liz Moorehead:

And then I started to get more experimental with my writing and people would respond to it and that was really cool. As I started doing more videos, I started doing a lot more public speaking, which public speaking, by the way, if you're going to conferences and you're speaking about the things that you do and sell, that is also a form of content. Or the way I show up on this podcast, I was always wrong about what people would connect with and be attracted to. You know, I still have people who come to me as clients today who remember me from the online courses videos that I used to do for Impact that are still there about content management and creating memorable content. And I if I had listened to my instincts about the parts that I needed to repress or emphasize, I was usually wrong.

Liz Moorehead:

People liked that I was a little bit nerdy. Mhmm. I I have one client right now who I met through George who said, you do a lot of crazy shit. And I'm I'm sitting there like, is this supposed to be a sales call? Is this Yeah.

Liz Moorehead:

And he's like, you're out there, and you're just not you're not gonna apologize for for yourself and who you and I'm like, absolutely not.

MaxCohen:

Yeah.

Liz Moorehead:

And what was funny is that, you know, again, this is all about being honest about who you are and being true to yourself because my my my foil impact was a guy who worked with me. He's still there named John Becker. And that man, bless him, is my perfect balance. Right? Like, he he's like NPR come to life.

Liz Moorehead:

His his humor is dry in a good way. He's you know, where I'm loud and boisterous and big, like, he is balanced, measured, former English teacher, at a girl's all prep school, you know, or all girls prep school. Like, you just have to be authentically yourself, and he still brought the same level of impact that I did, but in his own unique way. And people responded to that part about him. The fact that we had a big contrast to each other is also something that was very beneficial to us.

Liz Moorehead:

And when I think about me personally, there were things where it was like, yeah, I don't always take myself seriously, but you better be damn sure I take what I do very seriously. I get this heated, and I get this excited about topics like this because I care. Yeah. This is what I love to do. Yeah.

Liz Moorehead:

So, Max, let's talk about your journey a little bit. You've already touched upon this a bit. You spend a lot of time creating content for a b to b sales and marketing space. And once again, we wanna emphasize this. We have real jobs that require us to make actual money and be taken seriously for our authority in what we do and what we sell.

Liz Moorehead:

Right?

MaxCohen:

Mhmm.

Liz Moorehead:

How do you approach it, and what can others learn from it? Because I follow you on TikTok. I follow all of your videos. I actually knew about you that way before you and I started before I joined this podcast.

MaxCohen:

Mhmm.

Liz Moorehead:

And I just remember being like, can this guy teach a class? Like, this was so human, so simple, so direct, like, the stuff you would talk teach about, like, CRMs and new HubSpot product updates. Because when I started following you, it was back when you were at HubSpot. Mhmm. So talk me through that a little bit.

MaxCohen:

Yeah. Well, I mean, lucky for me, I did teach some classes, running the new hire training program there. So I had a little bit of, I guess, a little bit of a head start on it. But, no, it's like I think that the thing that I realized, like, very quickly is, like, this whole CRM thing, this whole HubSpot thing, it's not businesses that are behind it. It's people that are using it.

MaxCohen:

Right? And, you know, I had noticed a lot of things, and observed a lot of situations that I found, like, inherently hilarious and relatable. Right? And, you know, I kind of approached it being, like, listen, you know, I'm not making content for businesses. I'm making content for the human beings that work at these businesses that that also use this thing that I'm intimately familiar with.

MaxCohen:

Right? And just kind of, like, understanding, you know, I don't think that differently from them. Right? So, like, they're gonna find this stuff funny that I find funny, and I'm gonna use that as sort of, like, my formula to kind of, like, express myself. Right?

MaxCohen:

You know, so really it was, like, all about remembering kind of what it was like with all my interactions with folks doing implementation, right, and seeing people use it in really bad ways, seeing people use it in really good ways, just funny situations that, you know, I knew someone else who used HubSpot would be able to relate to because I observed it multiple times. Right? You know, and I think a lot of it was a lot of, like, my own journey doing a lot of that was, like, me trying to, like, test to see if other people kind of thought the same way about it than I did. Right? Because, like, I had a lot of my own thoughts and feelings around HubSpot and, like, you know, who was actually using it and kind of the way I kind of built the mental map about it in my head and what I valued and what I didn't value, like, in the tool, right, and more nuanced ways of using certain pieces.

MaxCohen:

And, you know, I almost think a part of it because, again, like, I wasn't in a marketing role. Like, I was literally doing this for fun. Right? Because, like, I was really into it. I think but part of it was, like, trying was me trying to do this, like, exercise to see if other people thought about it the same way I did.

MaxCohen:

Right? And and felt about it the same way I did and thought the same stuff was funny about it than I did. Right? And once I quickly realized that, like, you know, I'm actually more connected with all these people than I think I am. Right?

MaxCohen:

And, like, I'm not alone in my ways of, like, thinking about it, approaching it, and talking about it, and feeling about it, and all that kind of stuff. It made it much easier for me to kind of, like, go down that rabbit hole, if you will, of, like, continuing to express myself around it. Right? So, like, that was kind of, like, my journey. But, like, I think the the when it comes down to, like, oh, well, like, you know, how does this, like, help HubSpot from, like, you know, a product perspective or, like, selling it or getting more people excited about it.

MaxCohen:

You know, I I felt that if I could communicate what I was, you know, excited about, I had kind of confirmed that I know other people kinda think the same way, and I could use that as a tool to get other people stoked or maybe even to look at HubSpot in a slightly different way that they were looking at before. Right? And do that using the most easy way for me to produce that was just, you know, doing the TikTok thing. I didn't want to sit down and, like, edit video for a super long time. I didn't have time to do that.

MaxCohen:

I was like, I was I had babies at the time that this was happening. Right? So it was like I there was no long hours sitting in front of, like, final cut or something that I had to spare. Right? I had to find quick ways of getting it out there and then seeing what the reaction was and then kind of, like, building off of that.

MaxCohen:

You know? So yeah. I mean, my journey was really just like a whole bunch of, like, experimentation. None of it was structured. There was no grand plan behind any of it.

MaxCohen:

It was more so me kind of taking advantage of the fact that I got lucky enough to really, really like what I was doing. Right? However, I do think it resonates with people because of the same formula I talk about all the time. Right? People have certain goals and challenges they're trying to accomplish.

MaxCohen:

Right? So when I think of who my audience is, that's folks in the HubSpot community. Right? They're looking for ways to solve goals and challenges that they have. So the little mental formula I always do in my head when I create a piece of content that I want to be a good piece of content.

MaxCohen:

Right? Because, again, I have my very hard line definition of what a good piece of content means. It's something that when you consume it, you get closer to achieving a goal or overcoming a challenge. Right? And what I'll tell people when they're saying, like, well, how do I know if this content's good?

MaxCohen:

Say that. Does does whatever I'm producing? Does this thing you're reading? Does this thing they're listening to? Does this thing that they're looking at with their eyeballs and having thoughts about?

MaxCohen:

Right. Does it do one of those two things? Closer to the goal, overcome the challenge. And I knew my content was doing that because a lot of it was inspired by stuff that I realized may have been difficult to do in the tool, stuff that I knew people were trying to accomplish in the tool that people have had trouble with in the past. Right?

MaxCohen:

And I started creating fun ways of saying this is how you solve that problem. Pretty simple. Right?

Liz Moorehead:

Well, the best part is is that they'll tell you too. Like, if you if you do this type of content once, like, I'm just gonna put myself out there once. I'm put out there once to experiment and see and see if it works. That that's not how it works. It it works as a cumulative effect.

Liz Moorehead:

Right? Because the best part is is when you do it consistently, people will tell you, oh, wow. That was really helpful. They will accost you at conferences and say, oh, my god. It's so good to meet you.

Liz Moorehead:

I remember I had somebody at inbound walk up to me. I wrote, our newsletter called the latest at impact for my god. It was for 2 years, I wrote a newsletter 3 times a week. My god. Mining for con and we were really emphasizing at that point.

Liz Moorehead:

We're putting we're putting the letter back in newsletter. Right? Putting a lot of personality into it. And, you know, we had we had a really great following. We had 70,000, like, lifetime subscribers, and about 45,000 of those were actual active reading subscribers over the lifetime of the newsletter, which is pretty good for an agency.

Liz Moorehead:

Yeah. And I remember there was this one time this girl came up to me at inbound like she knew me and was like, hey, Liz. How's Pumpkin, your cat? I'm like, hi, straight. So nice to meet you.

Liz Moorehead:

We ended up having a fantastic conversation. But the thing is is that people will start to talk, man, that was really helpful. Or your sales team will be like, this will help you get to know Jason and Dan when you read this Google Ads thing. You I have We have people who probably still come to both of us this day about content we made months or years ago. It made a difference.

Liz Moorehead:

It helped me out. There is a long tail impact when you take this type approach to your content.

MaxCohen:

Yeah. And I think the other thing too is I don't want people to listen to this and be like, well, Max, you were in a a, you know, an advantageous position that most businesses or marketing teams aren't in where you really enjoyed what you were doing. So, like, you did this for fun, and then it caught on. Right? That same process I followed.

MaxCohen:

Like, a marketing team can do that. Like, the marketing team can have that journey on behalf of the business, and the business is just me in this case. Right? Like, you guys can start by just experimenting with stuff and see what resonates with your audience. Not everything has to be a home run.

MaxCohen:

In fact, almost everything should be failures so you can figure out what not to do as fast as possible. It's all process of elimination. Right?

Liz Moorehead:

Well, the other thing too is that, like, you could say that about both of us. Liz and Max, you were in this advantageous position. You were given the tools of no. Do you know what we did? We woke up one day and said, well, if we're gonna be doing this, we might as well, like, enjoy ourselves, Or we just for me, it was a little bit different.

Liz Moorehead:

It was more like, well, if I stop turning on the filter to make myself sound like everybody, and I just started being myself in everything I did. Mhmm. I mean, it was per as a lazy person, it's way more efficient. I'm exerting way less energy just being a 100% myself. But you know how many of the things I did at Impact were as a result of ask for forgiveness, not permission?

MaxCohen:

Mhmm.

Liz Moorehead:

The unhinged videos that I did, it's not that Bob Ruffalo and Marcus Sheridan wouldn't have been supportive. They were. But they're we made music videos. We did off the wall shit where we were just like, hey. What if we just tried this out?

MaxCohen:

Mhmm.

Speaker 5:

But

Liz Moorehead:

it all started with us taking micro steps. I'm just gonna tell a personal story in this blog article. I'm just gonna be perfectly honest that the reason why I'm writing this article is because 6 months ago, I told you this was true. And after 6 months of experimentation, I forgot to inform all of you that I was wrong. I'm the wrongest wrong since the wrong came to wrong town.

Liz Moorehead:

Now let's talk about what I've learned in the past 6 months. Like, it there there we weren't in an advantageous position. We just did it.

MaxCohen:

Yeah. And and here's the other thing. Like, I want people to, like I want to be very very clear about me being like super into HubSpot and like absolutely like loving

Speaker 5:

it and, like, making it my

MaxCohen:

own personality. That's not, like, a thing that's just, like, unique to me. I am a product of my experience working at HubSpot. Right? HubSpot did a really, really, really good job at getting their people excited about the thing they built Yes.

MaxCohen:

And excited about understanding the impact that it had on people that worked these businesses we were selling it to. Right? And it was really easy through my exposure to see that. Right? They also did a great job with their culture.

MaxCohen:

Like, it was a fun place to work. I grew to quickly fall in love with HubSpot very quickly. Right? And all of that added to it. Right?

MaxCohen:

There are things leadership at a business and managers and product people or whoever, there's things you can do to communicate to the folks who work for you why that thing you build is the shit and why they should care about the people you sell it to. Right? You can communicate that in a number of different ways. You can communicate that just in the way that you treat your customers. Right?

MaxCohen:

And, you know, set your business up in a way that isn't just, like, a scam trying to, you know, squeeze as much money out of people as, you know, possible and actually, like, building a culture around, you know, how do you make your customers successful versus how do you just drain their wallets. Right? You know, you can get people really stoked about the positive impacts that your product can have on someone because people like doing good things for people. Right? Like, if you think about it, that's kinda really what comes down to, like, the core of it for me is, like, I like doing good things for people.

MaxCohen:

The best way that I've learned to be able to, you know, scratch that itch as much as possible is showing how they can do some dope shit inside of HubSpot and make their professional lives better and make them look like a rock star internally at their company or build something really cool that saves them time or, you know, do something that, you know, makes the sales rep's life better or the marketer's life better so they can, you know, focus on doing more of the hard stuff and not get so bogged down with, like, their CRM. Right? That's like it feels good for me knowing that I can do that for other people. Right? But HubSpot did a really good job at showing me how I could have that impact.

MaxCohen:

Right? If if you have no idea, like, what people use your product for, you know, and, like, the positive effect it can have on them, it's gonna be really, really hard for you to wanna go out and do that on your own. Right? And a lot of that comes from the top down. You can't just, like, assume you're gonna, like, have employees.

MaxCohen:

They're gonna be like, woah. Wait. Woah. Wait a minute. This thing is sick.

MaxCohen:

It's actually really fun talking about this thing. Right? The software that we have. Like, you can't just assume, like, you're gonna get these folks that kinda figure it out on their own, and they get super excited about it. Like, there's things you can do, you know, to to help promote that.

MaxCohen:

Right? And you do that through your culture, through the way you treat your customers, through, you know, being able to communicate why you're doing certain things to your product and understanding the problems that it's actually solving and talking to, you know, like, making sure, like, your, you know, frontline employees or the marketers or whoever feel well connected to the folks that you're trying to sell to and understand the problems that they actually have and why this thing is so great and it solves it because of x y z. Right? And then people feel like that your product has, like, a sense of purpose. Right?

MaxCohen:

And, oh, I'm marketing this thing for a reason. I'm selling it for a reason. It's going to create positive outcomes in people's lives, and that feels good. Right? You know, just like getting a paycheck feels good and stuff like that.

Liz Moorehead:

You know, you you dig into something that I think is a really important way to to cap off our conversation here because one of the things I've seen a lot of organizations wrestle with is this idea of, well, how could we have a cohesive brand voice if we're just allowing all of our people to sound however they want? Okay. So if we wanna break this down at a very tactical way as someone who has man, I I've managed it for 1 company. I now manage this for clients. The division is very simple.

Liz Moorehead:

If it is a website page or a piece of content that is written by that omniscient third person narrator, that is written in your brand's voice and tone. If it has a specific person's name on it, like a blog article, or it's a video that they're starring in, guess what? Cupcake. They could just show up and should show up as the whole ass human version of themselves. Mhmm.

Liz Moorehead:

Now, I always find this fascinating because and and I get where the cognitive distance can come in or why people feel there's some sort of disconnect. Well, how can we provide a cohesive brand experience if we're giving multiple different experiences in our content of what we sound like? What makes your company great is the thing that every single freaking company tells me makes them great. Our people are our greatest differentiator. Stop hiding them.

Liz Moorehead:

If that is what you believe, then prove it. But, also, number 2, you have to remember providing a cohesive brand experience to your end users, your visitors, your customers. It's very confusing if every single website page is written by a different person, But if they're experiencing something that has someone specific name on it, and it sounds like them, and it's written in the first person, and they're using personal stories to illustrate experiences, concepts, examples, and things like that that and their unique voice and tone, that's fine. Because the thing that unifies all of your people isn't the fact that they walk, talk, and sound the same. That it's it's not uniformity.

Liz Moorehead:

It's that you are a harmonious symphony of different people from different walks of life, from different levels of expertise, from different niche areas of subject matter, like but you're all united to say around a single vision of what is possible. You all carry within you the same core values in theory. So as long as you're expressing a commitment to the same values, as long as you are expressing that shared vision, it doesn't matter if every single byline and every single person sounds different. They should. That is called being human.

Liz Moorehead:

So that's where that kind of division comes in. And I think as we think you know, we started this conversation today talking about, you know, the start of inbound, the genesis of inbound, and how far we've come with content. The other reality is is if we wanna talk about this from a profitability perspective, guys, everyone's creating content now. Everyone is creating content. You are not new.

Liz Moorehead:

You are not unique for doing it. So how are you gonna create content in a way that people remember that not only that you gave them the answer they were looking for, that you were the ones who did it. Yeah. I was a human and and this is even particularly true now that we have AI running amok in a bunch of organizations that's creating what we were talking about, what, a few episodes ago, Max? More people than ever saying, well, that was clearly written by AI.

Liz Moorehead:

Like, the BS meter of your viewers, your visitors, your readers, your whomever, it is even higher than before. It is incumbent upon you to bring your humanity, your authenticity, your personality to everything you do now. Your profitability depends on it. This isn't just about having fun at work. This is this is what you need to be.

Liz Moorehead:

This is how you need to show up.

MaxCohen:

Yeah. And I think also, like, you gotta think about the way that, you know companies interact with brands online right? Like especially in a space like LinkedIn no one gives a shit about talking to your company page and your company page isn't really talking back to people. Right? Like, sure, maybe it's commenting on something here or there, but that's, like, totally different than, like, creating a product or a service or a business that, like, your employees can rally behind and go out into your respective microcommunities that you and your customers live in on LinkedIn and be like, man, if even the employees genuinely think it's cool and, like, they're going out there and talking about it and making content about it and they're, you know, putting their own name on it.

MaxCohen:

Right? Well, there must be something going on there. Right? And, you know, people you you interact with people on social media channels. Right?

MaxCohen:

So you gotta make sure, like, your people are enabled and empowered to do that when it comes to something like LinkedIn. Right? Like, you're seeing this giant surge, especially in, I guess, like, what we would call, like, the b to b space of, like, employee advocates. Right? Where, like, you'll see content creators that are, like, SDRs or or BDRs, like, at a company, you know, make it a ton of, like, video content.

MaxCohen:

It's, like, dude, that's the way they're prospecting now. Right? They're it's, like, you're starting to see, like, SDRs kind of be, like, maybe make less cold calls and maybe make more content on LinkedIn and go exist in those spaces and show people stuff and get them to wanna talk to me. And and then I'll book them a call with the AE. Right?

MaxCohen:

You know, which is much more efficient and much less brain and personality and life destroying than it is making a 100 cold calls a day. You know what I mean? Like, what we're what we're very much gonna see over the next couple years is that the people going into the entry level BDR and SDR roles grew up using Snapchat and TikTok and are very comfortable getting in front of a camera and communicating that way, they never picked up a phone in their life as opposed to the SDRs and BDRs in the past grew up using telephones. Right? And that was a normal thing to them.

MaxCohen:

But, you know, the kids who were used to sending, like, DMs and, like, you know you know, creating, you know, their own kind of content in their own spaces, the concept of calling someone in the phone is completely foreign to them. Right? And the other thing You

Liz Moorehead:

call me. Why are you calling me?

MaxCohen:

Yeah. You also gotta remember, like, the the generation of buyers or the people moving into buying roles are also the generation of people that got, like, you know, block unknown callers, the features on their iPhones. You know what I mean? So, like, I, like, I literally, I I block all unknown numbers on my phone. Right?

MaxCohen:

Cold callers ain't touching me. Right? And so are, you know, the the the rest of the generation that grew up not doing business over the phone. Right? Or not using the phone.

MaxCohen:

Right? So, like, it is gonna be really, really important for companies to kind of rethink the way that they leverage their own people to to to be able to speak to and interact with buyers that don't use the same traditional methods of communication that SDRs and BDRs have been trying to reach them on for so long.

Liz Moorehead:

Well, the other thing that's interesting too, and I love that you bring up the generational the generational thing that we're talking about here because it wasn't very long ago that quite frankly, marketers didn't take my generation seriously. I'll be 42 in October. I am an elder elder millennial born in 1982. We were talked about how we were going to ruin everything, and maybe we did, maybe we didn't. I don't know.

Liz Moorehead:

But we grew up communicating with blogs and YouTube when it started, and videos and memes and things like that. And guess what? We brought content with us into marketing, into sales. This is something where you can keep it at an arm's length and act as if this is not something you need to start integrating into your marketing or thinking about, but it's going to come whether you like it or not. And then there's gonna be a generation behind them.

Liz Moorehead:

We're already seeing this stuff on TikTok. I'm sure you've seen it. Gen z is complaining about Gen Alpha. Now they're like, maybe we should be friends with millennials. I don't know.

Liz Moorehead:

We're being attacked. Like, this is a cyclical thing that is going to continue to happen. We're gonna have to continue to adapt and evolve, but that's what makes this so much fun. Okay. Max, I have one more question before I close out today's conversation.

Liz Moorehead:

I'd love to hear from you. What are practical ways in which folks who think their industries may be too boring for creative and personality driven content? What are things they can start doing immediately to subvert that, to bring more of their profitable personality game to the table?

MaxCohen:

I think we've we've talked about the Gary the Gary Vaynerchuk quote that I keep kinda going back to, and, you know, say what you want about Gary Vaynerchuk. But, you know, I remember I used to watch his videos all the time, you know, back when he was more about

Liz Moorehead:

Wine.

MaxCohen:

Creating content and less about, oh, NFTs and, you know, some of the crazy shit he says.

Liz Moorehead:

He's just kinda crazy. Stuff back then, and he was creating content about crazy things. Yeah.

MaxCohen:

Yeah. He's a crazy guy. You know, but he I remember watching this video where it was a company that was, like, they sold some kind of services to, like, medical offices. Right? And they were asking the same exact question that we are that we're kind of, like, exploring today which is just, like, our our industry is boring.

MaxCohen:

Right? And he literally just said, start documenting stuff. Like, there's a story behind what you're doing and what you're building and people find that interesting. Right? So, you know, like, just document your everyday kind of, like, what you do, you know, and, like, try to be if, like, if you're talking about video, like, do something behind that.

MaxCohen:

Right? But I would say, like, the first thing you should be doing is just rapidly experimenting with stuff. Right? And seeing what catches and seeing what resonates. Right?

MaxCohen:

Practice with different formats. Start to think about how the rest of your company can get involved in the content creation process. Go to the people who know your customers the best and be like, bro, what, like, what what is important to these people beyond just buying our product? Or before way before, Like, they even know our product exists. Right?

MaxCohen:

Start to think about the goals and challenges of your buyer persona. Right? Understand that they're looking for ways to solve that stuff. You know? It doesn't matter.

MaxCohen:

Like, the the whole idea of you having a boring industry again it's not boring to people that have goals and challenges within that industry or else you would have never made a product that sells to that I get it that it's boring to you but it's gonna be interesting to something else. So step 1, you know, get get that idea out of your head and just come to come to truth with that physics question. Right? It's going to be interesting to somebody otherwise you would not have a marketing job at a company that make a made a product that solves a problem. The problems are out there.

MaxCohen:

The question is how can you figure out what those problems are in their most basic forms and experiment with creating content around it. It could just be blog posts at the beginning that's fine people still search Google and people still read We haven't forgotten how to read yet people still do that. There's plenty of folks that still like to consume information that way especially if they're in research mode right? This does not mean you have to jump on TikTok but hey, maybe try it. Right?

MaxCohen:

There's nothing wrong with trying stuff, you know? But again, really try to understand what the goals and challenges are because that's what people are looking for and that's what so many people skip. And that's also, like, the very simple formula that everyone ignores when they think content is this big giant crazy difficult thing. Right? Sure it's hard to do it and to produce it but the formula is simple.

MaxCohen:

Right? So come to terms with the fact that the formula is simple. Come to terms with the fact that just because it's born to you does not mean it's not born to other people or it does not mean it's not interesting to somebody. Right? And you gotta start there, and you gotta start experimenting.

Liz Moorehead:

I love that. My version is just start simple. Yeah. Just the next time you sit down to write a blog article or video script, engage with the words you have on the paper and ask yourself, is this how I would say it out loud if somebody was talking to me and ask me this question? All it takes is just experimenting once.

Liz Moorehead:

Like, the one of the reasons I started doing it is not only because I thought it would be more effective and not only because I thought it would be more efficient with my time because it would for I didn't have to, like, put myself through a filter, but I just started entertaining myself. You know? I just started having fun. I started telling stories, meaningful stories, purposeful stories, but I just decide, well, what would happen if Liz showed up in this piece today instead of Liz the robot? And I just kinda went from there.

Liz Moorehead:

Like, you don't have to suddenly turn around and have this, like, massive multidimensional, personality driven content process. A lot of it is about building your own confidence and starting there. My other piece of advice to business owners is that if your people are your greatest differentiator, act like it. Stop hiding them.

MaxCohen:

Yeah.

Liz Moorehead:

And you can have that differentiated differentiation I talked about. If somebody's actual name is on it, they should be allowed to sound like themselves. If it's a page on your website, yes, have that polished brand voice, and it should be it should be cohesive across all of your website pages. Absolutely. But the story I wanna leave everybody today is with this.

Liz Moorehead:

Right before I hopped on here today, I had a walkthrough of a website page with a client. This is not a website page that's gonna have one specific name on it. It is a careers page for this company. They, they provide technology, for financial institutions. That is their industry.

Liz Moorehead:

And this page in particular was about careers, company culture, and stuff like that. I had worked closely with the CEO to craft the initial copy on the page, but when we did the walk through, he brought employees into this conversation. And as we were going through it, I watched him more than once say, okay, Jackson. Okay, Abby. What do you think about what's here?

Liz Moorehead:

Is this truly reflective of do you think this is an accurate representation of what we do? So you can bring your peep you can empower your people in your content to sound like themselves when their name is literally on the line, but also bring them into the process when you are creating content about your company. That is a representation of them. It empowers them. It makes them feel like they're a part of it, but that begins, business leaders, with you relinquishing control, with you not only saying that you believe your people are your greatest differentiator, that you champion the fact that you are a diverse range of voices who all believe in a shared mission.

Liz Moorehead:

And it's okay that you sound different. It's okay that you are different. I mean, you can sound the same, but if you'd like to be invisible, go for it.

MaxCohen:

That's boring.

Liz Moorehead:

Boring. Well, Max, we did it. We made it to the end.

MaxCohen:

We did.

Liz Moorehead:

We didn't set everything on fire.

MaxCohen:

We didn't get canceled. We I know. Nick cancels us in the chat.

Liz Moorehead:

Yeah. No. He said, oh, this was a great end to the week. Thank you so much, Nick. You're the best.

Liz Moorehead:

The one thing I do wanna shout out, Nick, he earlier said, a brand is a band, and the members make the music. And I think that's a great way to end this episode. Do you wanna give us one more content crouton crunch stuff? Yes. We love you all.

Liz Moorehead:

Talk to you next week. Bye.

MaxCohen:

Bye.

Speaker 6:

Okay, hub heroes. We've reached the end of another episode. Will lord lack continue to loom over the community, or will we be able to defeat him in the next episode of the hub heroes podcast? Make sure you tune in and find out in the next episode. Make sure you head over to the hub heroes dot com to get the latest episodes and become part of the league of heroes.

Speaker 6:

F FYI, if you're part of the League of Heroes, you'll get the show notes right in your inbox, and they come with some hidden power up potential as well. Make sure you share this podcast with a friend. Leave a review if you like what you're listening to, and use the hashtag, hashtag hub euros podcast on any of the socials, and let us know what strategy conversation you'd like to listen into next. Until next time, when we meet and combine our forces, remember to be a happy, helpful, humble human, and of course, always be looking for a way to be someone's hero.

Creators and Guests

Devyn Bellamy
Host
Devyn Bellamy
Devyn Bellamy works at HubSpot. He works in the partner enablement department. He helps HubSpot partners and HubSpot solutions partners grow better with HubSpot. Before that Devyn was in the partner program himself, and he's done Hubspot onboardings, Inbound strategy, and built out who knows how many HubSpot, CMS websites. A fun fact about Devyn Bellamy is that he used to teach Kung Fu.
George B. Thomas
Host
George B. Thomas
George B. Thomas is the HubSpot Helper and owner at George B. Thomas, LLC and has been doing inbound and HubSpot since 2012. He's been training, doing onboarding, and implementing HubSpot, for over 10 years. George's office, mic, and on any given day, his clothing is orange. George is also a certified HubSpot trainer, Onboarding specialist, and student of business strategies. To say that George loves HubSpot and the people that use HubSpot is probably a massive understatement. A fun fact about George B. Thomas is that he loves peanut butter and pickle sandwiches.
Liz Murphy
Host
Liz Murphy
Liz Murphy is a business content strategist and brand messaging therapist for growth-oriented, purpose-driven companies, organizations, and industry visionaries. With close to a decade of experience across a wide range of industries – healthcare, government contracting, ad tech, RevOps, insurance, enterprise technology solutions, and others – Liz is who leaders call to address nuanced challenges in brand messaging, brand voice, content strategy, content operations, and brand storytelling that sells.
Max Cohen
Host
Max Cohen
Max Cohen is currently a Senior Solutions Engineer at HubSpot. Max has been working at HubSpot for around six and a half-ish years. While working at HubSpot Max has done customer onboarding, learning, and development as a product trainer, and now he's on the HubSpot sales team. Max loves having awesome conversations with customers and reps about HubSpot and all its possibilities to enable company growth. Max also creates a lot of content around inbound, marketing, sales, HubSpot, and other nerdy topics on TikTok. A fun fact about Max Cohen is that outside of HubSpot and inbound and beyond being a dad of two wonderful daughters he has played and coached competitive paintball since he was 15 years old.
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