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  • Mar 25 2021

Top 10 tips from 2 years of the FINITE Podcast on B2B marketing

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We can’t believe its been two years since the very first episode of the FINITE Podcast in 2019 – and what an exciting two years it has been! Whether you’ve been listening to the podcast since it started or if you’ve just found us, thank you for listening and supporting us.

We made the FINITE B2B marketing podcast in response to our community of B2B tech marketers, who wanted a reliable source of useful, actionable content. We aim to provide tactical tips for our FINITE community of B2B tech marketers and beyond.

That’s why in celebration of its 2 year anniversary, we picked out our 10 favourite pieces of advice from the wonderful guests we’ve had on the show. It was no easy feat! All 46 of our episodes to date are filled to the brim with great advice from some of the best B2B tech marketing leaders in the world.

1. Oren Greenburg on balancing brand marketing with performance marketing

On one of our earlier podcasts, Oren gave us research-backed advice on how much a marketer should focus on brand building, and how much they should focus on direct response marketing. This ended up being quite a frequent topic of conversation with guests, as marketers grapple to balance long-term and short-term strategies for growth.

It’s difficult to attribute revenue to activities like brand building, PR and content marketing. It can be tempting to aim for immediate results which prove the value of marketing to key stakeholders. Oren thinks we should make an effort to stay away from this temptation, and thinks brand building should actually take the majority of our time and resources.

“I think there’s a recommended ratio, which ties into the second piece of research that I came across from the IPA, which suggested that you invest 60% into brand and 40% into direct response. I think that’s a really nice, healthy split in terms of your thinking of your budget and resource allocation to try and get the best of both of those worlds.”

Oren Greenburg

Listen to the episode here!

2. April Dunford on positioning for B2B companies in uncertain times

We were lucky enough to have renowned marketing speaker April Dunford on the podcast in 2020. It was a wild year but April had grounding advice. As an expert in positioning, April told us how marketers should adjust their focus during a downturn by responding to customer needs first.

April advised us to get all hands on deck in shifting messaging for customers, and shifting business objectives from growth to retention:

Positioning is not a static thing. It does change over time and it doesn’t mean you can’t change it a year from now. But if it’s going to be a year, then I need all hands on deck with this. I need to build new sales materials, I need to get my sales people trained to deliver this new message and this new reality so that we’re relevant to a new set of customers. The second thing is if I was hearing from my existing customer base again… I would absolutely be looking at whether or not I’ve got a serious risk of churn in my existing customer base and if that’s so then I would be redirecting a significant amount of my budget from growth related things to retention related things.

April Dunford

Listen to the episode here!

3. Matthieu Baril on the role of the Marketing Operations team

With the rise MarTech comes the rise of marketing operations. In larger organisations, an entire team can be dedicated to ensuring the smooth sailing of the overall marketing function. Even in smaller organisations and startups, some recommend that marketing ops be the first hire!

Matthieu Baril is a marketing operations professional who gave us his unique perspective on the role of marketing ops. He suggested that the main focus of marketing ops be on maintaining the internal processes of the rest of the marketing team. Whether this be through training or implementing automation, internal processes are crucial to marketing success.

“So when I think about the remit of the marketing operations team, I think one of the remits is to actually train the rest of the team on how work should get done within the team. Right? So, in particular, when I think about the different areas that marketing operations takes care of, the first one that comes to mind is internal processes.”

Matthieu Baril

Listen to the episode here!

4. Clemens Deimann on standing out amongst a flood of virtual events

In our 2021 B2B tech marketing trends research report, we found that 44% of B2B tech marketers think their biggest challenge going into 2021 is tackling ‘digital fatigue’. With the outbreak of COVID-19 moving the marketplace online, audiences became tired of digital events like webinars.

On our timely podcast about demand generation, Clemens Deimann gave us his insights into standing out amongst the crowd to attract B2B tech audiences. Alex asked how to stand out amongst a flood of virtual events, to which Clemens responded with a message of relevance and niching down:

“I think one thing that makes sense in this time is to, instead of making your events about geographies, break down your audience and hyper-focus on different segments of your audience and speak directly to them with their problems in their language. I think the targeting or becoming more niche and targeted will increase your relevance.”

Clemens Deimann

Listen to the episode here!

5. Ashley Gatehouse on communicating to the C-Suite

As a marketing leader, it is of vital importance to communicate the successes and needs of marketing to the C-Suite. This will help you to gain financial investment and support from key stakeholders.

Ashley Gatehouse gave us some great advice on what to prioritise when going into a C-level board meeting. This comes side-by-side with marketing attribution, in which he claims you should always measure what matters. With the amount of attribution tools on the market these days, you have no excuse not to!

Your challenge as a marketing leader is to define what are the three or four key things that in the C level board discussions, will allow you to draw lines between those things and the key financial statements and projections. And that is part art, part science, and it is at the cornerstone of your ability to be successful in a CMO board level.

Ashley Gatehouse

Listen to the full episode here!

6. Rory Sutherland on decision making psychology

Rory Sutherland is the Vice-Chairman of Ogilvy, where he co-founded a behavioural science practice. Now, Rory is a well-known marketing speaker who gave us helpful tips on marketing to a B2B tech buyer.

Rory let it be known that B2B buyers still respond to the same pressure of B2C buyers, with an emphasis on avoiding risks to their personal careers. Rory gave us an insight into one of the key factors in buyer decision making:

And bluntly put when a consumer buys something, the emotion he’s trying to avoid, and this is very important by the way, we’re much more driven in many ways by aversion than we are by desire. Not always, if we’re in a hot state, you know, this is why people who are sexually aroused or pissed will do totally bonkers things. But by and large, we’re driven by fear more than we’re driven by greed in a sense.

Rory Sutherland

Listen to the full episode here!

7. Emmy Granström on marketing with a limited budget

Not every marketer has a large amount of financial backing and a big team to support them. Sometimes, marketers are in small organisations, start-ups and solo teams. We had Emmy Granström on the podcast to teach us her tips to competing with a limited budget.

The overarching theme of the podcast was maintaining measurability to understand which campaigns work best and to limit the risk of investments. Emmy gave us the great advice of sticking to a plan and measuring new ideas against larger marketing objectives.

“So what I found helpful with prioritising is making sure I always have a well-defined plan annually and quarterly because annually at the beginning of each year, we do a plan. But then that changes as we progress through the year. But when someone comes up with a brilliant idea, measure it against that plan and say, will it help me achieve my goals?”

Emmy Granström

Listen to the full episode here!

8. Rand Fishkin on what you should do instead of product-market fit

Rand Fishkin is well known for rejecting the concept of product-market fit and the value that VCs tend to see in it. Rand thinks product-market fit generates unnecessary cut-offs in segments, which can limit your audience scope and stop companies from targeting a wide range of prospects.

Rand proposes an alternative approach. One that requires vigorous testing on multiple groups and seeing how they respond to your marketing as you grow. Listen to the episode to hear his full process, but here’s the start:

“So the concept that I presented around this customer adoption spectrum is that any given customer group for your product has some describable traits that separate them from other groups of customers, and that correlate with how much they like your product and how much traction you’re getting with them. And they predict how much they need your product, the value they’re getting and their behaviour…

And then you’re going to say, how are we doing with group a? Are we doing pretty well? Is group a, a big market size? Do they have brand awareness of us already? What’s their conversion rate or success rate? Or how much are they buying the product and sticking with it and are they referring other people to it? All those kinds of things.”

Rand Fishkin

Listen to the full episode here!

9. Angela Lee on taking it slow when starting ABM

ABM is becoming more and more popular for B2B tech marketers. This is largely due to technological improvements in data collection, the attraction of enterprise accounts and more conversation within the industry about the benefits of ABM.

We jumped onto the ABM train with a fantastic episode with Angela Lee – an expert in ABM from LinkedIn. Angela gave us sound advice about the preparation you need before you rush into targeting. Prepare your content, approach and long-term plan first.

“One tip I can offer to the audience is you may get pressured to have to start right away. It’s like, we need to start ABM right now. Like this month, we need to get an ABM program going, and I’ve definitely been in those situations. But what I’ve found is that I wished I had pushed back a little bit more and said, actually I need another couple of weeks to really nail down the plan because it just makes your life a lot easier and more streamlined if you get all of the questions answered ahead of time, everything aligned ahead of time, all the content created ahead of time.”

Angela Lee

Listen to the full episode here!

10. Arthur Nobel on preparing marketing for each funding round

One of the more recent episodes we’ve done is about marketing from the perspective of a VC. Arthur Nobel is a Principal at Knight Capital, an investment firm that specialises in B2B SaaS companies.

Arthur talked a lot about risk aversion, and how he as an investor makes his decisions based on risk. He gave us one big, practical tip for preparing marketing for a VC:

“If you’re approaching funding, I would just write down all the risks that you could think of. And then just come up with an answer on how you mitigate that. Or whether it’s it’s truly a risk, but there is also a very nice upside to it.”

Arthur Nobel

Listen to the full episode here!

Hope you enjoyed our top 10 tips! Make sure to subscribe to the FINITE Podcast on Spotify or Apple Podcasts so you never miss an episode.

For more information about the FINITE Podcast, head here!

And once you’re done listening, find more of our B2B marketing podcasts here!

The FINITE Podcast is sponsored by Clarity, a full-service digital marketing and communications agency. Through ideas, influence and impact, Clarity empowers visionary technology companies to change the world for the better.

Find the full transcript here:

Jodi (00:00)
Hi Chris, welcome to the finite podcast.
Kris Rudeegraap (00:03)
Thank you, Jenny. Thanks for having me.
Jodi (00:06)
It’s a pleasure to have you here today to talk to about a topic that is quite close to my heart as a community leader. We’re talking about community-led growth. Now, you’ve been doing this loads at Sendoso. It’s been one of your main key strategies that has really been pivotal to your success and your growth. I can’t wait to hear more about that, but I think as we always do, before we get started, I would love to hear more about your background and experience to date.
Kris Rudeegraap (00:35)
Yeah, of course. So I started Sindoso about 10 years ago. Prior to that, I spent about a decade in software sales myself. While I was at my last company, I was seeing… just the efficacy of email and seeing that response rates were kind of diminishing. And again, this was 10 years ago. I thought email was going to slowly die out as the spam hit it so hard. and so I thought about, Hey, what are some of the other channels that are less saturated and can still grab people’s attention? And that’s where really direct email and gifting came to mind. And so I was doing a lot of it very manually. I was in the office grabbing swag, packing boxes, or on a call here at dog. bar, go grab a dog toy from Amazon and ship it out to a prospect. and all those things worked really well. It was just a nightmare to manually track it manually, expense report, manually click on tracking links and follow up. So I dreamed of a platform that could do all this for me. That’s where Sendoza was born. we’re the leading global direct mail and gifting automation platform where we do all of the worldwide procurement fulfillment, all of the marketplace of gifts and mailers you want to send and then the software and data layer to bring it all together. And so over the years, I’m scaling that company from an idea to hundreds of millions in revenue, learned a lot and done a lot with community as part of a growth strategy over the years.
Jodi (02:00)
Yeah, absolutely. Really exciting to hear all about your gifting business and the thought process behind that. I mean, I’m sure it’s a lot more than a gifting business, but we’ll go into that in a bit. I did hear from you some really, really great results about what you’ve done with community and what it’s done for Sendoh. So I think community is so kind of a little bit abstract for marketers. They don’t really know how it can kind of impact the bottom line. So I thought, could you please share some really great key results that you can directly attribute to community?
Kris Rudeegraap (02:36)
Yeah, would love to. Maybe for the audience, I’ll take a step back to share a couple of different communities we have, and that will set the stage as we talk more in depth about them. the first community I was a super sender community, there’s about a thousand members in this, and this is a user community of active users, power users on our platform. This community, we engage through a Slack group, through a newsletter, through a sendy awards, a user conference, both virtual, we’ve done some in person, and then we have some AMA office hours through this community. The next group is our cab or our customer advisory board. This is kind of a dynamic community. Usually there’s a few dozen people that we engage quarterly to share product feedback, to get market intelligence from. And that community we typically pull from supercenters, but they could be executives that are not necessarily in our user community. I’ve then built a personal advisory group community. There’s over a hundred members here. This is mostly execs. and people that I’m sharing more details on the business, but a lot of them are our target ICP. But again, it’s a group of individuals that have opened their networks, opened their insights on. And then nurture our alumni. And this is probably 100 plus folks in this alumni community where I feel strongly that even after you leave, you could still be a valuable asset or you could still want to still, you Bleed Orange, as I like to say. And so I engage with monthly updates this alumni community as well. And so those are the kind of the different communities we have. A few stats. So our Supercenter community of Power Users, one of the areas that we wanted to do was we really want to focus on training and educating this community. And so we have this stat where any Supercenter who completes admin certification will spend 71 % more on our platform. And so that’s really a critical area where we try to, first we try to qualify people into this super center community and then we try to get them into certifications. So that’s a big one for us. The next one is. You know, we know that people switch companies often. And so we track all of our super senders through a tool called user gems and we’re tracking job changes. And then we go out and outreach to them when they’re at their new company, reminding them that they should continue to use Sendoso again. ⁓ and we have over a 60 % response rate from that list, which is huge compared to typical, like cold outreach, which is like, you know, in the. you know, few percent response rates. So really we re-engage our community after they switch jobs. And then the last stat for this ⁓ personal advisory group community, we’ve generated over 7 million in pipeline from this advisory community through warm intros. And that’s been a critical lever for us as we’ve continued to scale the business.
Jodi (05:31)
very interesting and some definite impact there. I was wondering, this is something that I don’t feel like is talked enough about in B2B is people moving jobs, you know, and your database is based on contacts and their associated companies and when they leave, you know, all you get is bounced emails and tracking them is quite a laborious process if you have thousands and thousands of data points, like…
Kris Rudeegraap (05:42)
Mm-hmm.
Jodi (05:56)
Do you automate that? How does that work from a practical standpoint?
Kris Rudeegraap (06:00)
Yeah, 100%. So the tool user gems we use, we will monitor all of our users through supersenders. And then when they switch jobs every month, user gems goes out and looks to make sure they’re at the same job. And if they’re not and they switch jobs, then user gems flags that creates a new profile in our Salesforce links back to the old record because so we can have some history of like how they use this before. And then it kicks off some automated engagement through this tool they have called GEMI, where it’ll actually then do the outreach for us. So even before we let any human into this, we might already have somebody to raise their hand and say, hey, thank you for welcoming me. Will you then use Cendoso to send them gifts celebrating their new role? And that is all very automated.
Jodi (06:56)
Very cool. Yeah, I thought so. That’s great tips and great tool recommendation, but we’re just to say we’re not paid. is is totally just organic recommendation. Yep. Nice Cool. So I suppose I’m thinking, you know, what was it about Sendoso that made you think community strategy was compatible?
Kris Rudeegraap (07:04)
Yeah, that’s just something that I love personally.
Jodi (07:19)
you know, is community for everyone or is there something unique about when you were like this decision making process when you were founding Sendoso that led you to this?
Kris Rudeegraap (07:29)
Yeah, you know, it’s a good question. I’d say, I mean, honestly, at first, I’d say community as a strategy wasn’t necessarily a strategy was almost more of like survival, where in the very early years, you’re obsessed with your customers, you want constant feedback. So you’re really trying to engage them very frequently. And that ended up driving a couple things. One was, you know, our best customers were already becoming advocates themselves. They were already shouting out that they loved us. And so that was already happening. Two, we really realized that… you know, some of the original channels, like I thought, Hey, I’m starting this company because email is dead. Well, what are their channels can we leverage? And so kind of the community engagement as a strategy was really critical for us. Because if we built relationships, even if they switch companies, it was much easier to engage with them than just do a cold email outreach. So we thought, Hey, let’s build these relationships. So we really optimized for the kind of the long-term when starting this. But I think. For us, we sell into a lot of marketers, sales, and CX roles. Those are kind of our three core kind of personas. And I think that certain ICPs tend to have better success with community. I think for us marketers, they enjoy talking to their peers, they enjoy sharing best practices, they enjoy learning. And so that’s really helped us build a… community based on our ICP. I could imagine maybe some ⁓ ICPs maybe are less interesting for like a community strategy. But I think also because we were a cool new tool years ago, we were a new category where marketers didn’t fully understand like how do I leverage direct mail automation? And so having this community with education and peers lent itself to people wanting to almost brag about it and join a community to share more about it.
Jodi (09:20)
Yeah, absolutely. definitely seems like education is a big piece there and it almost seems like a lot of the more mature communities that exist in B2B now started with a forum of customers talking to customers experience managers troubleshooting and figuring it all out together. So actually did the start of your community strategy really look like? You’ve mentioned kind of advocates and maybe wanting to encourage word of mouth, when did it start to become more kind of structured and strategic and maybe measured?
Kris Rudeegraap (09:57)
Yeah, mean, looking back on it, think very early it was scrappy. It was these small dinners. was these, you know, more of an informal Slack group to get going that then was formalized as we brought on like a customer marketer. So no grand vision or, you know, fancy tooling, I’d say day one. It was just getting smart people in a room and getting them to talk to each other. We did have some fun early stories. So one that comes to mind was we had an early community event where I gave everybody fake prop money, like the money that they use in like Hollywood. And then I acted as an auctioneer and I made people bid on the features that they wanted us to build the most. That was probably my, one of my favorite community moments because it just got everyone so excited and the limited money made them really think about the trade-offs of which feature on our roadmap they really cared about most. And so I think bringing in some creativity and fun. You know, again, continue to make this community interesting. And I think that you need to bring interesting content or interesting initiatives into the community.
Jodi (10:58)
I’m interested because you’ve you really made it clear that there is kind of a bubbling excitement for your product and that that is interesting to me because it it almost seems like maybe third-party communities might be more kind of trusted or seem more objective in their recommendations for like tools or you know brands products and things like that. How did you engage customers to be brand advocates? How did you encourage that bubbling enthusiasm without feeling too salesy or like you were pushing Sindoso too much, if that makes sense.
Kris Rudeegraap (11:39)
Yeah, I think a few other things we did. You know, we, ⁓ we oftentimes had these office hours or AMAs where it was just the community, in these like, ⁓ zoom meetings. There was, and at some points we would have a customer market and they’re just to, kind of moderate or just to kind of chime in and help. But for the most part, it was community led. So I was, you know, one of our customers standing up saying, Hey, I’ve got a great story. I’ve got a successful Sendoso campaign I’ve done. I want to share with you what I did, what I learned and what I’m doing. And so it was really intentional for us to have them come in and share their success as a community member versus us coming in and saying, hey, here’s what you can do with our platform or, let’s teach you something instead. It’s like, hey, let’s let a peer teach you something. And so I think that was really strong. Even our Sendy Awards was that on steroids where we would award people for having success on our platform. And then the award ceremony was them sharing what they got their award for and what campaign drove that award. And again, I think that just goes back to feeling more real and authentic than having like some Sendoso member pitch.
Jodi (12:51)
Yeah, that’s absolutely makes sense. It’s, I feel like so many communities can mistake thought leadership or just kind of content strategy for community strategy. And really the heart of community is facilitated, facilitating those peer to peer connections and really encouraging those conversations between your, your audiences. And I can see, so that’s how you kind of, you’re not sales and you’re not blasting a message out. You’re really.
Kris Rudeegraap (13:11)
Exactly.
Jodi (13:19)
Yeah, encouraging those conversations. Is there anything else you do to encourage those conversations? I guess, you know, bringing your customers to events and you mentioned you’ve got a Slack channel. Is there anything else that you do?
Kris Rudeegraap (13:31)
One thing that we launched last year that I think is interesting too is we wanted to bring more customer conversations to the top of the funnel or earlier in the sales process as a community strategy. we really realized that customers love talking to customers. And then we also realized that a lot of peers or prospects wanted to talk to customers as part of the buying cycle. And oftentimes those were like back channels or harder for prospects to find. so, you know, one we are trying to that more prospects into this community. We don’t want it to become too prospect focused because you won’t have the value add yourself if you’ve never used Sindo. So, but one tool we recently rolled out was a company called Slash Experts. And what I loved about that is it really created a portal where we could showcase a couple dozen of our customers and then anyone could come instantly book a meeting with them. And so it eliminated us. feeling like we’re gating and only allowing prospects or customers to speak to people we’ve like purely vet first or purely say, hey, you want to talk to a reference? Here’s one person. Instead we say, here’s a bunch of people. You pick who you want. And that’s opened up more conversations. And I think at the end of the day, it all goes back to more conversations. And if people are organically talking to each other about you, it just spurs more engagement. so we’re trying to, back to facilitating conversations.
Jodi (14:55)
Absolutely. Yeah, that’s really interesting. And you’re lucky that you have so many kind of power users. Just out of curiosity, from a practical standpoint, how do you incentivize those advocates to kind of give up their time and promote or talk about Sendoso to prospects?
Kris Rudeegraap (15:12)
Yeah. So some of them do it because they want to have peer to peer network. And it’s almost like something that is context switching for them. It’s getting out of their day to day to, you know, talk to somebody else that’s interesting peer and share their success. It’s almost like brag, you know, being able to brag. for some of them too, we offer up like a thank you, or we’ll give them some compensation for their time. but it’s mostly driven by people that are raised their hand and they just want to, you know, celebrate their successes, share what they’re doing. And I think that a of people are in that boat where, you know, maybe their day-to-day job is, you know, something that they want to break out of and, and, know, do something a little bit different. so speaking with a peer randomly about a cool tool they’re using in their tech stack, ⁓ is something that they are willing to raise their hand for.
Jodi (15:56)
Yeah, awesome. Thank you for sharing that. I guess you are a gifting platform as well, so I guess, you know, it’s about recognition and it’s about, you know, rewarding that kind of advocacy. So I’m sure you do that as well. On gifting, how does that come into this? it?
Kris Rudeegraap (16:02)
Yeah.
Jodi (16:18)
impact your community strategy at all? Do you send gifts to new members or ambassadors? I think you’ve mentioned it briefly. Do you want to go into that a little bit more?
Kris Rudeegraap (16:27)
100%. Yeah, I think one of the best ways to engage a community is to ⁓ reward good behavior or just to surprise and delight. Because I think that goes a long way too. And so we will, there’s welcome kits, there’s things around ⁓ holidays, there’s thank yous, there’s life moments. So we try to track. know, life moments of our community. And if, you know, if they’re having a kid, they’re getting married, those are celebratory life moments that we can gift them. A lot of times we’re gifting swag items because again, they want to wear the Sendo so logo proud, proudly and go out and showcase to the world that they’re a super center or that they love the Sendo. So brand. I think swag plays a big part in, you know, gear that they want to wear and merge. but like you said, I think there’s different reasons why, rewarding good behavior tends to drive more good behavior. But I think the life moments is something that. some companies don’t think about, you we think about it because we’re, you know, a gifting platform, but it goes a long way if somebody, you know, has a big life moment and you step up and, you know, send them a nice little gift and that really helps build that relationship.
Jodi (17:41)
Yeah, I’ve never thought about that before. guess in B2B particularly, there is such a kind of boundary between business and personal life. know, I mean, we’re starting to cross it even more as B2B marketers use kind of consumer driven platforms like YouTube or even TV advertising. how do you kind of, how do you feel?
Kris Rudeegraap (17:48)
Mm-hmm.
Jodi (18:07)
Audiences react when a business kind of knows their personal life events and how do you see that line kind of maybe fading away in the future?
Kris Rudeegraap (18:19)
Yeah, you know, I think, for what we’ve seen is that that line is becoming blurred, especially since COVID where more and more people were working from home. And also people spend the majority of their day at work or working. And so if you can bridge the gap between what they’re doing for work and what they’re doing at home and or make that feeling, make them feel like you care about more than just their work. I think that builds the connection. and it builds, you know, if you have similar interests, you can build connections. If you, know, can, ⁓ thank people and, you know, at more of an emotional level, because I think a lot of business is transactional, and community, can really find people that care deeply about your brand. so if you can, you know, again, connect more emotionally with them, it tends to build that stronger bond and that stronger relationship, which then means. you know, when we do follow up after they switch jobs, they want to rejoin the community, you know, they want to feel a part of it again. And part of that is the warm and, you know, fuzzy feeling they felt when, you know, we sent them a gift, congratulating them on, you know, a job promotion and something that was a little different than just a, you know, or sending them a, you know, baby onesie with their favorite sports team logo on it. Things like that go a long way, even if they’re small.
Jodi (19:42)
I guess that’s another way that community marketing is described. It is one to many and I guess all one to few and that means that you are really making people feel special and like they’re being heard and like you’re not just some big brand hidden behind a website and fancy graphics. You are people behind that brand and you really are having those kind of one-to-one conversations. Would you agree?
Kris Rudeegraap (20:09)
Exactly. 100%. Yeah. And we’ve also done some stuff too, where we’ve, you know, we see actions where community members are talking with other community members and we’re rewarding that behavior too and thanking them for participation. So I think a lot of different ways you can use gifting in your community strategy.
Jodi (20:27)
All right, well, that’s all we have time for today. So thank you so much, Chris, for coming on the finite podcast. It’s been a pleasure to hear about community marketing from your perspective.
Kris Rudeegraap (20:36)
Yeah, thanks for having me on. What a fun conversation.