Podcasts about superside

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Best podcasts about superside

Latest podcast episodes about superside

Supermanagers
AI Creates Hundreds of Ads in Minutes with Fredrik Thomassen and Phillip Maggs From Superside

Supermanagers

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2025 50:11


Subscribe at www.thisnewway.com to get the step-by-step playbooks, tools, and workflows.In episode 6 of This New Way, Fredrik Thomassen and Phillip Maggs walk us through how Superside—a global creative services company—has fundamentally transformed its workflows using generative AI. From automating asset production to embedding AI directly into tools like Figma, Superside is pushing the boundaries of what's possible in creative automation. We also get a live demo of their “brief-to-draft” workflow and discuss how AI is reshaping the talent landscape.TIMESTAMPS: 0:52 – What Superside does and its global scale2:10 – Phil's role and what “Director of Generative AI Excellence” means4:08 – The turning point: DALL·E and Superside's AI transformation8:00 – How they approached AI experimentation via “shadow projects”10:54 – Testing AI-created assets alongside human work13:20 – How talent profiles are changing with AI19:00 – Where AI is most disruptive: video production22:00 – Live demo: from brief to hundreds of personalized assets32:00 – In-tool editing and automation directly in Figma36:00 – Image-to-video transformation with Runway41:00 – What's next for Superside and the creative industry46:30 – Final thoughts: what Fredrik and Phil are most excited aboutTOOLS AND TECHNOLOGIES MENTIONED:DALL·E – AI image generationMidJourney – Creative image ideationStable Diffusion – Open-source image genChatGPT / GPT-3.5+ – Prompt writing and copy supportFigma – Design collaboration with custom AI pluginsRunway ML – AI video generationZapier – Workflow automationSuperspace – Superside's internal platformFoul – Model inference layerNode-based AI orchestration – For prompt chaining and bulk generation

Demand Gen Visionaries
Driving Qualified Pipeline Through Meta

Demand Gen Visionaries

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2025 42:54


This episode features an interview with Jen Rapp, CMO at Superside, an AI-powered creative service, trusted by 500+ top brands. Jen has over 20 years of experience developing and executing marketing strategies for high-growth companies, with a particular focus on working alongside entrepreneurial leaders to scale.She discusses selling the vision and how doing good impacts marketing, sharing her lessons from her time at Patagonia and DoorDash. She also discusses winning on meta through quality creative and driving qualified leads through virtual summits. Key Takeaways:Don't sleep on meta ads. If your ICP is on Instagram, those ads can be some of the cleanest and most effective ads to drive pipeline, especially if you have quality creative. Virtual Summits, or essentially a stack of webinars, are a great way to get emails and drive pipeline if you are truly offering great content. Sell the vision, not the product. A focus on features, instead of stories, is rarely the way to go. Quote:“  I would not have said this a year ago, when I first joined the company - number one is our meta, paid meta spend. I came to this company and I saw how much we were spending on Meta, and I was like, whoa, what the hell are these people doing? They're making mistakes left and right. Nope. We drive a majority, or a lot, I shouldn't say a majority, a lot of our qualified pipeline through our Meta spend. Our Meta spend also acts as our top of funnel awareness driver.  When we turn off meta, we basically turn off the ability of our SDRs and our BDRs to convert people to SQLs. It is invaluable. So number one, my marketing team is like rallied around creating incredible creative for Meta.”Episode Timestamps: *(03:51) The Trust Tree: Making sure customers have confidence in you*(12:12) The Playbook: The power of Meta ads*(33:10) The Dust Up: Standing up to brilliant founders*(41:01) Quick Hits: Jen's Quick HitsSponsor:Pipeline Visionaries is brought to you by Qualified.com. Qualified helps you turn your website into a pipeline generation machine with PipelineAI. Engage and convert your most valuable website visitors with live chat, chatbots, meeting scheduling, intent data, and Piper, your AI SDR. Visit Qualified.com to learn more.Links:Connect with Ian on LinkedInConnect with Jen on LinkedInLearn more about SupersideLearn more about Caspian Studios

The CEO Sessions
When AI Goes Unleashed - CEO and Founder Superside, Fredrik Thomassen

The CEO Sessions

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2025 41:33 Transcription Available


Your AI EdgeFredrik Thomassen, CEO and Founder of Superside, stands at the forefront of the AI creative revolution. His mission is to empower in-house creative teams, often overlooked and under-resourced, by unlocking the transformative power of AI.Superside, serving giants like Amazon, Salesforce, and Vimeo, is proving that AI is the creative edge that teams need. You'll hear how Fredrik and his team are leveraging AI to...-Alleviate Strain: Reducing the immense pressure on teams, enabling them to focus on true innovation.-Drive Innovation: Fueling awe-inspiring campaigns that push creative boundaries.-Pioneer New Workflows: Redefining the creative process with AI-driven efficiency.-Deliver Unprecedented Savings: Providing significant cost and time benefits to clients.This is the new creative landscape. You'll also discover:✅ How to leverage AI to scale your team.✅ A strategy to build an AI-first system.✅ Why remote creative teams have become the future of work.✅ A step-by-step blueprint for implementing your AI workflow.✅ The unexpected benefit of AI for creative work.-----What are your thoughts on the future of AI?-----Follow Fredrik on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/fredrikthomassen/Learn more about Superside: https://www.superside.com/-----Connect with the Host, #1 bestselling author Ben FanningSpeaking and Training inquiresSubscribe to my Youtube channelLinkedInInstagramTwitter

The Agile World with Greg Kihlstrom
#651: AI and in-house creative teams with Jen Rapp, Superside

The Agile World with Greg Kihlstrom

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 29:27


With AI's ability to augment in-house creative teams, how does that change the way organizations should approach both their creative strategies and how they evaluate the value of creative as a business function? Today, we're joined by Jen Rapp, Chief Marketing Officer at Superside. Jen has had key roles at iconic brands like Patagonia, Arc'teryx, DoorDash, Owlet Baby, and Klaviyo. Now, she's leading Superside's rebrand with a focus on AI-powered creative services that augment in-house teams. RESOURCES Superside website: https://www.superside.com Wix Studio is the ultimate web platform for creative, fast-paced teams at agencies and enterprises—with smart design tools, flexible dev capabilities, full-stack business solutions, multi-site management, advanced AI and fully managed infrastructure. https://www.wix.com/studio Don't miss Medallia Experience 2025, March 24-26 in Las Vegas: Registration is now available: https://cvent.me/AmO1k0 Use code MEDEXP25 for $200 off registration Don't Miss MAICON 2025, October 14-16 in Cleveland - the event bringing together the brights minds and leading voices in AI. Use Code AGILE150 for $150 off registration. Go here to register: https://bit.ly/agile150 Connect with Greg on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gregkihlstrom Don't miss a thing: get the latest episodes, sign up for our newsletter and more: https://www.theagilebrand.show Check out The Agile Brand Guide website with articles, insights, and Martechipedia, the wiki for marketing technology: https://www.agilebrandguide.com The Agile Brand podcast is brought to you by TEKsystems. Learn more here: https://www.teksystems.com/versionnextnow The Agile Brand is produced by Missing Link—a Latina-owned strategy-driven, creatively fueled production co-op. From ideation to creation, they craft human connections through intelligent, engaging and informative content. https://www.missinglink.company

The Agile Brand with Greg Kihlstrom
#651: AI and in-house creative teams with Jen Rapp, Superside

The Agile Brand with Greg Kihlstrom

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 29:27


With AI's ability to augment in-house creative teams, how does that change the way organizations should approach both their creative strategies and how they evaluate the value of creative as a business function? Today, we're joined by Jen Rapp, Chief Marketing Officer at Superside. Jen has had key roles at iconic brands like Patagonia, Arc'teryx, DoorDash, Owlet Baby, and Klaviyo. Now, she's leading Superside's rebrand with a focus on AI-powered creative services that augment in-house teams. RESOURCES Superside website: https://www.superside.com Wix Studio is the ultimate web platform for creative, fast-paced teams at agencies and enterprises—with smart design tools, flexible dev capabilities, full-stack business solutions, multi-site management, advanced AI and fully managed infrastructure. https://www.wix.com/studio Don't miss Medallia Experience 2025, March 24-26 in Las Vegas: Registration is now available: https://cvent.me/AmO1k0 Use code MEDEXP25 for $200 off registration Don't Miss MAICON 2025, October 14-16 in Cleveland - the event bringing together the brights minds and leading voices in AI. Use Code AGILE150 for $150 off registration. Go here to register: https://bit.ly/agile150 Connect with Greg on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gregkihlstrom Don't miss a thing: get the latest episodes, sign up for our newsletter and more: https://www.theagilebrand.show Check out The Agile Brand Guide website with articles, insights, and Martechipedia, the wiki for marketing technology: https://www.agilebrandguide.com The Agile Brand podcast is brought to you by TEKsystems. Learn more here: https://www.teksystems.com/versionnextnow The Agile Brand is produced by Missing Link—a Latina-owned strategy-driven, creatively fueled production co-op. From ideation to creation, they craft human connections through intelligent, engaging and informative content. https://www.missinglink.company

Women in B2B Marketing
101: Trust the Vibe: Navigating Marketing Careers with Intuition & Impact - with Amrita Mathur, Marketing & Growth Consultant at Marketing Moonshots

Women in B2B Marketing

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2025 45:19


Design of AI: The AI podcast for product teams
Implementing AI into creative workflows: How to prepare yourself and protect your job

Design of AI: The AI podcast for product teams

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2025 58:21


There are many reasons to debate the ethics and implications of AI. But while we do that, hundreds of the world's biggest brands are rushing to implement the technology into creative and coding workflows. At a time when shareholders are being unforgiving and policy making is volatile, business leaders are looking to AI to gain any advantage possible.Jan Emmanuele is one of the experts that these Fortune 500 corporations rely on to identify and build GenAI creative workflow augmentations and automations. He works for Superside —whom you might remember from our episode with Philip Maggs (Listen here)— because they're on the leading edge of creating an LLM that interprets your briefing process, design system, brand guidelines, marketing campaigns, and data to automate high-volume creative tasks. In this episode, we focus on how and where AI is applied within organizations and workflows. It details how organizations can prepare themselves for implementing AI and how to address the core barriers and risks of the technology.Listen on Spotify | Listen on Apple PodcastsWhat was most interesting about this conversation was his prediction that the adoption of AI will explode in enterprise orgs starting in 2026 and that it could continue into the 2030s. He believes that the value of AI in enterprise has already been proven and that more use cases exist than anyone can believe. That adoption thus far has only been limited because of legal and procurement policies.If this is true, organizations that aren't already at least planning for this workflow-automated future will soon be at a huge competitive disadvantage. Finding 10x augmentations of creative output is routinely achieved, and more will be possible for organizations with highly-structured and easily-repeatable workflows. The gains will be largest in orgs that leverage the uniquely-LLM capability of contextualizing outputs based on data. Examples include localizing campaigns to micro-niche segments or regions of the world. Thanks for reading Design of AI: Strategies & insights for product teams! This post is public so feel free to share it.Headwinds will reduce the number of creatives earning a living wageAs we barrel towards the increasingly inevitable reliance on LLMs, it puts creatives in the uncomfortable position of fighting for their survival and protesting for what's ethically correct. The music industry is the canary in the coal mine in this battle. Many artists earn the majority of their income from their back catalogues and LLMS are effectively using those albums as mulch to improve generative capabilities. On one side, you have an entire way of life being threatened; on the other, you have artists that will quickly need to learn how to master generative capabilities to become an indispensable musician regardless of the headwinds that will reduce the amount of music earning a living wage. As platforms get better, we'll just generate the music and images we need instead of hiring professionals.Overcoming the uncanny valley: Not being able to determine what was generated by AIWhat has made all of us feel more comfortable has been that AI still sucks at a lot of creative tasks. Blooper reels and countless articles of AI creative generative fails give us hope that the technology isn't ready to replace anyone yet. But we've learned from our latest episode and many previous ones that the technology is much more ready for primetime than we might believe. Many of the failures we see today result from the false sense of confidence the platforms offer novices. While the simplicity of these tools has exploded the amount of experimentation happening, we're flooded with more fails than fantastic examples.Another factor is that the simplicity of the GenAI interfaces obscures the complexity happening in the background. We believe we can generate a campaign-ready 20-second video by typing in a prompt. But the complexity comes from knowing what models, protocols, data sets, and projects to connect for the best outcomes. This is an era dominated by creative technologists who can see these possibilities and stay up-to-date with the latest capabilities.In the hands of someone who understands how to overcome the rawness of the technology, the possibilities are limitless. And for every project we see published, there are at least another dozen working to push those capabilities further in the near future. Sesame is another example of technology overcoming the uncanny valley by delivering conversational voice capabilities indistinguishable from humans. These developments are happening at such a pace that it's impossible to keep up. For example, researchers have created an agentic, autonomous framework that iteratively structures and refines knowledge in situ.The point is that whether you agree with the hype of an AI-powered future or not, businesses everywhere will implement it because the impact is increasingly undeniable. Action items: What can we do to prepare ourselves and our workI hate that the ethics of AI seem like an afterthought to the beating drum of business automation. It's deeply uncomfortable that many professions and industries must adapt or face extinction. The only way to stare into this abyss and feel hopeful is to believe that the rising tide of resentment against big tech will fuel a renaissance of altruistic misfits building the models and layers that do less harm. But that won't calm the nerves of the musicians and artists who see an end to their way of life today.We can mourn the tidal wave of change while also preparing for the new world order that comes next.If you're a creative:* Stop undervaluing yourself and your work. Listen back to yourself explain the work you do. Recognize all the steps, decisions, and life lessons you neglect to mention. You need to document who you are to such a granular level that you spot where your genius is most pronounced and where you're on autopilot. Then consider how to leverage AI to amplify/automate each of those.* Tap into your most significant creative strengths. You are more than your outputs. You fell into this career for a reason and persist because of at least one exceptional creative strength. Document it and the conditions under which it enhances your work more than others. Now find AI tools that can make that happen more often and for longer periods. * Lead the change you want to see. Don't wait for inspiration and innovative products to land in your inbox. Go find them, test them, implement them, and prove if they can or can't help you achieve your goals.If you're a business leader: * Accept that change is coming fast. You can feel unsure about the technology, worried about the risks, and apprehensive about the costs. But you cannot wait to start imagining what the future of your business and industry might look like. Go through future casting exercises and monitor the countless startups slowly eating away at your competitive moat.* Empower your team to succeed. Even if people tell you they aren't worried about the coming change, they probably are. You need to lead them through this and create a shared vision of what the future version of your business and workforce can look like. Include teams in co-creation processes to determine the best ways to empower them to succeed by eliminating barriers and inefficiencies.* Structure your data and production workflows. AI is most effective in highly repetitive situations where success can be easily evaluated. Businesses will succeed that have standardized their key workflows and have structured data that adds critical context about situations and success. Do the work now before an expensive consultant charges you millions once there's a veritable gun to your head due to competitive concerns. Contact me if you need helpThank you for following the Design of AI podcast and this newsletter. This year, we'll spend more time discussing this seemingly insurmountable challenge of implementing AI effectively. Please comment if there are specific questions or topics you need us to discuss. And feel free to vent about topics that you're most frustrated or concerned about so we know what our community needs.We're also hoping to launch some events in major markets this year to bring together early adopters and experimenters with those eager to leverage this technology effectively.And if you need help with any consulting related work related to envisioning your AI-powered future, email me at arpy@ph1.ca Product of the month: RaycastRaycast is a perfect example of the disruptive potential of AI. While everyone else is running to add bullshitty AI features to make using their products easier, others are rewriting the way we interact with digital experiences. Raycast basically looked at MacOS and said, “Let's rebuild the entire finder and launcher experience.”It's ironic for me because one year ago, I worked on a project where the outcome was the real potential value of AI in a mobile phone experience would be as an assistive launcher experience that eliminates all the inefficiencies of Android. Well, here it is! Thanks for reading Design of AI: Strategies & insights for product teams! This post is public so feel free to share it. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit designofai.substack.com

Design of AI: The AI podcast for product teams
How Can we Design a New Relationship with AI?

Design of AI: The AI podcast for product teams

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2025 85:37


Whether we admit it, like it, or believe it, we're in a relationship with AI.That's the first of many powerful reflections made by Sara Vienna, Metalab's Chief Design Officer, in her must-read manifesto about how design and product must evolve. Unlike the design leaders who speculate about AI's impact, Sara and her world-class team are years ahead. They are designing disruptive AI product experiences and leveraging AI to elevate their workflows. Sara's episode is one of the most important conversations we've had about the future of design and products.Listen on Spotify | Listen on Apple PodcastsShe believes that AI will change how we work and what we build. Those who embrace the potential of AI will succeed in the oncoming disruption. But most importantly, the future of product+AI will be in making five mindset shifts:They're fundamentally principles for humanizing experiences. The hope is that AI will finally bridge the divide so products can deliver the value we've always wished was possible in the most humanized way possible. But there will be challenges in accomplishing this:* Most product orgs are built around the concept of delivery, not design excellence* Unlocking user data: Getting access to valuable data and knowing how to use it in a meaningful way are still more fantasy than reality* In every direction we turn, trust is being diluted* Design as we know it will need to be reborn to adapt to move from creating pixel-perfect interfaces to ones that adapt and spawn based on user interactionsAgain, I highly recommend listening to the entire episode.Thanks for reading Design of AI: Strategies & insights for product teams! This post is public so feel free to share it.Envisioning the future of design & productIf we extrapolate on Sara Vienna's vision of how design should change, a couple of core reality checks come to mind:* Today, we can't even conceptualize what products will be able to do tomorrow. Just like new AI tools are being released faster than we can read about them, more teams than ever are competing to deliver the use case & interaction model that will redefine a category. It's a race to an undefined & moving finish line.* The underlying models may be the heartbeat of future products, but design will always be the brain. Products plug into whichever model suits them best at a particular moment, usually based on cost and accuracy. But just like each of our minds brings a different lived reality and way of using knowledge, the models are less important than the strategy that's been designed into the product.* Fewer designers and product managers will yield immense power. AI automation platforms —like Make and Loveable— can effectively replicate more than half of products today. This percentage will grow until such a point that any product will soon be able to be cloned, undermining its competitive advantage. The designers and product managers working on the future of design will have the funding that enables them to compete in a global race that they're likely to lose because they don't know what competition they're actually facing. The rest of us will be working to keep the lights on.Big question: How should we be using AI, today?Photoshop celebrated its 35th birthday today and is a perfect reminder of how disruptive platforms eventually become part of the boring vocabulary of the everyday.GenAI platforms, like ChatGPT, are in their infancy. Everything seems equal parts novel and confusing. We're still unsure how to use this superintelligence, only that we should be using it. Photoshop's rise was similar: a platform that opened up so many possibilities but whose ultimate impact wasn't felt until it redefined the designer role many years later. What's happening today is that employees are smuggling AI into work and this makes sense given the recent McKinsey report that finds that leaders are slow to adopt because of risks and a lack of vision.Our research finds the biggest barrier to scaling is not employees—who are ready—but leaders, who are not steering fast enough.Anthropic, the maker of Claude, published their Economic Index report and found that AI use is most prevalent in computer & mathematical occupations. Their AI model is mainly used for programming and administrative tasks.What the data also show is that design and creative tasks aren't core use cases, yet. And rightfully so, large language models best serve requests about processing content and code, not pixels and ideas. A report about how generative AI is used in journalism showcases this by highlighting that even the creative tasks are largely operational ones, like resizing images and animating.This data highlights the divide in how leading organizations, like Metalab and Superside, leverage AI compared to the everyday user. While the average person uses Midjourney to generate stock art, leading designers automatically generate localized creative based on design systems and content guidelines.The reality is that product teams have three core workstreams:* Operations: Planning, organizing, editing, describing (e.g. Notion)* Creativity: Ideating, revising, collecting, analyzing (e.g. Cove)* Productivity: Deciding, planning, organizing, explaining (e.g. ChatGPT)Every designer, product manager, writer, producer, and researcher completes tasks in these three workstreams. And every one of you should be taking the time to break down your typical workflows into discrete activities so that you can explore what AI solutions can either augment or automate non-critical tasks.An example of this is how Kyle Soucy is using AI to streamline person and journey map creation. This type of knowledge work is considered sacred by traditionalists but as you can see in her article, she's broken down her workflow to find effortful tasks to be augmented/automated. We can question AI's accuracy all we want. We can challenge if models were trained ethically. And we can debate what percentage of your job may benefit from using AI. What will not change is the undeniable truth that the intelligence and capabilities of these models and tools will only improve. The sooner we embrace that truth, the better positioned we are to control our own fates. For example, a recent study evaluated AI vs. human-generated therapy responses from 13 expert therapists (clinical psychologists, counseling psychologists, marriage and family therapists, and a psychiatrist). The report found (questionable) data to indicate that users couldn't tell if a human or an AI made the responses. The AI also outperformed human therapists on empathy, professionalism, and cultural competence.We'll soon reach a point where generative AI can output designs that are indiscernibly human or automated. In this near-term reality, the role of designers must evolve or be replaced.A recommended action plan for how you should be using AI today:* Plan projects and workstreams using templates, resources, and added context* Communicate ideas and insights better by using AI to iterate and expand* Question the rationale, assumptions, and factors that impact the project goal* Compile inspiration, ideas, and information that will broaden your thinking* Analyze larger data sets and more sources than you could have before* Challenge your concepts by making variants and exploring new directions * Create more deliverables by automating localization, multiple formats, and generating content based on systemsIf you enjoy this content, please make sure to listen to the Design of AI podcast on Spotify and Apple. Make sure to follow us and rate the show if you like the show!Add me on LinkedIn if you want to ask any questions or discuss a project. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit designofai.substack.com

Modern Day Marketer
Investing in Creativity and Community to Build a Standout Brand with Kae Neskovic, Superside

Modern Day Marketer

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2025 27:21


“If you don't have anything interesting to say, people won't care, no matter how good your targeting is,” says Kae Neskovic, Executive Creative Director at SupersideIn this episode of The Content Cocktail Hour, Kae Neskovic, Executive Creative Director at Superside, talks about how branding is evolving in the face of competition and the integration of AI in creative workflows. Kae explores the balance between creativity and efficiency in a resource-constrained marketing landscape, sharing insights into how Superside invests in building brand foundations that drive long-term success. She also highlights the growing importance of human connection in B2B marketing and the rising demand for authentic, people-driven brand strategies.In this episode, you'll learn:Why branding is more important than ever in a competitive B2B marketHow AI complements creativity without replacing the human touchThe value of creating communities and fostering authentic connectionsResources:Connect with Jonathan on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathan-gandolf/Check out The Juice HQ: https://www.thejuicehq.com/Connect with Kae on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/koviljka/Explore Superside: https://www.superside.com/Timestamps:(00:00) Intro(01:05) From agency life to Superside(03:50) Navigating the pressures on creative teams(06:34) Using AI to streamline workflows and amplify creativity(12:35) Brand as a driver of efficiency(18:37) Remote work and its impact on collaboration(25:35) Building communities through authentic marketing

The Leaders Lab
Building a Global Safety Net for Global Workers: The Sondre Rasch Journey

The Leaders Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2025 36:16


From government policy advisor to pioneering founder, shares his journey in building a global safety net for the digital workforce. Growing up in Norway, his entrepreneurial spirit led him from web hosting to government policy, where he gained valuable insights into social systems. Frustrated by bureaucracy, he founded SafetyWing to create the first comprehensive social safety net for remote workers worldwide.InSondre reveals how he raised millions in venture capital and is transforming health insurance and income protection for remote workers in over 60 countries. His mission: to build "the first country on the internet"—a global system offering social benefits traditionally tied to national governments.This conversation dives into Sondre's unconventional path, key lessons, and his vision for supporting the growing remote workforce. Whether you're interested in entrepreneurship, remote work, or reimagining social systems, this episode offers valuable insights into the future of work and social protection.CHAPTERS: 00:00 - Intro00:14 - Growing Up in Norway03:45 - Entrepreneurial Ventures09:46 - Attraction to Policy Making12:18 - Family Influence on Politics13:44 - Political Involvement18:10 - Reasons for Leaving Politics22:24 - Founding Superside23:34 - Raising Funds for Startups26:10 - Departure from First Company29:23 - Understanding Global Social Safety Net30:17 - Current Company Overview33:01 - Remote Work Statistics38:10 - Future Aspirations40:33 - Next Steps for SafetyWingLINKS:Become a SafetyWing Ambassador: https://safetywing.com/ambassador/signupSafetyWing website: https://safetywing.com/Sondre Rasch LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sraschABOUT OUR HOST:Ken Eslick is an Entrepreneur, Author, Podcaster, Tony Robbins Trainer, and Life Coach. As the President & Founder of The Leaders Lab, he focuses on Leadership Talent Acquisition, helping companies scale from the Inc. 5000 to $100M+ in revenue. Learn more at theleaderslab.coSondre Rasch is co-founder and CEO of SafetyWing, an all-remote company that is building a global social safety net. Sondre studied economics and computer science then worked as a social policy advisor for the government of Norway. Dissatisfied with the slow pace of change, he founded the SuperSide platform (YC 2016) for freelance designers and discovered the lack of social safety net for people working on the internet.This inspired the creation of SafetyWing (YC 2018), which has so far raised $50 million in venture capital and whose globally-distributed team consists of 150 people from 60+ countries. In 2020, Sondre and the SafetyWing team founded the Plumia mission to build a country on the internet for digital nomads and remote workers.You can learn more about Ken and his team attheleaderslab.coListen to more episodes on Mission Matters:https://missionmatters.com/author/ken-eslick/

The Marketing Millennials
295 - The Struggles of In-House Creative Teams with Jen Rapp, CMO of Superside

The Marketing Millennials

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2024 33:27


In this episode, I sit down with Jen Rapp, CMO of Superside, one of the best marketers I know. We talk about how marketing has changed over the years and how the “digital age” means more touchpoints, more content, and more responsibility for brands. How can you get trained on new tools and keep up with them? How is AI going to affect our content?  Plus, we get real about working with creative teams: sometimes, there's a disconnect between what marketers ask for and what creative can handle. How do you create a concept that's realistic but also lets creative do their own thing? If you're interested in bridging the gap between marketing, creative, AI, ops, and more, this is the episode for you.  Follow Jen: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jen-rapp-3234aa10/ Follow Daniel: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@themarketingmillennials/featured Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/Dmurr68 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/daniel-murray-marketing Sign up for The Marketing Millennials newsletter: www.workweek.com/brand/the-marketing-millennials Daniel is a Workweek friend, working to produce amazing podcasts. To find out more, visit: www.workweek.com

The Accidental Entrepreneur
The Secrets Behind Successful Startups

The Accidental Entrepreneur

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2024 60:47


Keywords:  entrepreneurship, startups, Y Combinator, fundraising, remote work, digital nomads, business ideas, urban planning, SafetyWing, SuperSide Summary: In this episode, Sondre shares his entrepreneurial journey, detailing his experiences with startups, including SuperSide and SafetyWing. He discusses the challenges of navigating Y Combinator, the importance of testing ideas, and the realities of fundraising. Sondre emphasizes the need for differentiation in business ideas and explores the potential for new urban developments in the context of remote work. Takeaways Sondre's early interest in startups began as a teenager. The importance of being reckless and moving fast in the early stages of a startup. Y Combinator can significantly boost a startup's trajectory. Second-time founders have advantages in fundraising and execution. Focus on making a product that people want before administrative tasks. Testing ideas with potential customers is crucial for success. High competition can be a red flag for new business ideas. Identifying real trends versus fads is essential for startup viability. A strong economic rationale can support a business idea. Social impact can enhance the appeal of a business concept. Titles The Secrets Behind Successful Startups Testing Ideas: The Key to Startup Success Sound Bites "I knew I wanted to start a startup." "We were 99% expecting failure." "You make your luck by trying a lot." Chapters 00:00Introduction to Sondre's Journey 06:30The Birth of SuperSide 12:01Navigating Y Combinator 18:08The Evolution of SafetyWing 24:01Fundraising Challenges and Strategies 32:00Testing Ideas and Learning from Failure 45:00The Future of Urban Development and New Cities

EUVC
EUVC | E379 | Prosus Ventures' Sandeep Bakshi on the evolution of the European marketplace landscape

EUVC

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2024 51:07


In this episode of the EUVC podcast, Andreas talks with Sandeep Bakshi, Head of European Investments at Prosus Ventures.Andreas and Sandeep discuss the evolving dynamics of early-stage investing across Europe and beyond, sharing insights into how Prosus Ventures identifies opportunities in a global landscape. Sandeep offers his perspective on navigating the European VC scene, reflecting on the unique challenges and opportunities facing founders today. The conversation also covers the role of strategic capital in scaling startups, with a focus on the sectors and trends shaping the next decade.At Prosus Ventures, Sandeep oversees a diverse portfolio targeting early-stage companies around the world. With notable investments such as Delivery Hero, iFood, OLX, Bilt Rewards, Corti, Superside, Avant Arte, and Oxford Ionics, Prosus Ventures continues to drive innovation by backing transformative startups across various sectors and geographies.Go to eu.vc to read the core take-aways.Chapters:02:56 Understanding Prosus Ventures04:03 Investment Strategies and Market Cap07:29 Focus on AI for Marketplaces14:22 Operational Efficiencies in Marketplaces18:04 Generative AI in Creative Services23:20 AI in Search and Discovery24:37 Challenges in Deep Tech Talent25:22 The Axis of Talent26:37 Europe vs. Other Regions in AI Marketplaces28:02 Innovations in India and Southeast Asia29:55 Social Commerce and Conversational Tools31:23 AI Tools for Marketplaces32:50 AI Reshaping Shopping Habits36:07 The Role of Agents in AI38:08 Investment Opportunities in Europe's AI Marketplaces43:29 Sandeep's Personal Journey and Insights45:32 Controversial Beliefs and Market Trends

Midjourney : Fast Hours
Midjourney at Scale: The Superside Blueprint for Teams w/ Phil Maggs (Superside)

Midjourney : Fast Hours

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2024 67:34


In this episode of the Midjourney Fast Hours podcast, Drew Brucker and Rory Flynn sit down with Philip Maggs, Director of Generative AI at Superside, who has quietly revolutionized how enterprise teams adopt AI. Leading a transformation that trained over 500 designers in 18 months, Phil shares the unfiltered truth about scaling AI operations - from running shadow projects and credit card purchases to building elite "pirate teams" that push the boundaries of what's possible. The conversation reveals Superside's blueprint for training/operationalizing teams at scale, including their peer-to-peer coaching program and how they measure success across 3,000+ AI-powered projects. Phil breaks down their innovative Discord-based workflow that processed thousands of images, their approach to client communication, and why they completely banned Photoshop for certain projects to force innovation. Diving deep into Midjourney's latest features, the trio discusses the reality of enterprise AI adoption, the balance between regulation and innovation, and why following the money in AI investment matters more than chasing the latest tools. Phil caps the episode with candid advice for agencies looking to adopt AI, emphasizing why over-regulation kills innovation and how to create the psychological safety teams need to experiment and grow. This isn't just another AI discussion - it's a masterclass in scaling creative operations from someone who's done it at the highest level. Whether you're leading a creative team or building an AI-first workflow, this episode delivers the practical insights and battle-tested strategies you need to succeed. --- ⏱️ Midjourney Fast Hour [00:00] Superside Story [09:00] Scaling Creative Teams [14:15] AI Client Projects [21:30] Building Frameworks [31:00] Discord Pipeline [42:15] Midjourney Editor Update [49:45] Automation Strategy [56:30] Real Results Using AI [01:02:00] New Tools [01:04:45] Future Vision --- Takeaways Generative AI is transforming creative services at SuperSide. The integration of AI requires a culture of experimentation. Client engagement is crucial for successful AI implementation. Building a diverse team enhances innovation in AI projects. Fear can drive motivation and action in adopting new technologies. AI tools are evolving rapidly, necessitating continuous learning. Scaling AI requires structured training and support for teams. Theoretical knowledge must be tested in real-world scenarios. Constraints can foster creativity and problem-solving. AI is not replacing jobs but creating new opportunities. Visibility over what's going on is crucial. Aggregation of prompts can reveal global trends. Using permutations can yield a higher quantity of quality images. Curation is essential but can lead to perfectionism. MidJourney is more akin to a photo shoot than stock imagery. Post-production is necessary for finalizing images. The creative process requires a balance between speed and quality. Photoshop remains a vital tool for detailed editing. API integration could enhance the functionality of MidJourney. The future of image generation tools is evolving rapidly. AI can bridge the gap between corporate and creative worlds. The goal is to reduce project timelines from days to minutes. Understanding AI's strengths is crucial for effective design. Clients expect faster turnaround times than ever before. Measuring the impact of AI on creative work is essential. Agencies should avoid overregulating AI adoption. Emerging tools like Flux and Comfy UI are game changers. Following investment trends can guide technology adoption. Creating a culture of experimentation is vital for success. AI should enhance, not replace, the human element in design.

Modern Day Marketer
Shifting B2B Content From Cold to Bold Through Creativity and AI with Jen Rapp, Superside

Modern Day Marketer

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2024 30:15


"If AI is making your work more creative and more beautiful, get on board," says Jen Rapp, Chief Marketing Officer at SupersideIn this episode of The Content Cocktail Hour, Jen Rapp, Chief Marketing Officer at Superside, discusses the future of B2B marketing, emphasizing the importance of creativity and AI in creating more engaging content. Jen explains how businesses can shift away from traditional, cold approaches by learning from B2C and D2C brands, making their content more human and relatable. She also shares insights from her time at Patagonia and discusses the role of AI in improving operational efficiency.In this episode, you'll learn:Integrating AI into your work and how it can boost operational efficiencyWhy you should start creating content like B2C and D2C brandsAI isn't a replacement for human creativity but a tool that enhances itResources:Connect with Jonathan on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathan-gandolf/ Check out The Juice HQ: https://www.thejuicehq.com/ Connect with Jen on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jen-rapp-3234aa10/Check out Superside:https://www.superside.com/Timestamps(00:00) Jen's work at Patagonia and background(07:40) “Creative is the new targeting”(11:54) How AI boosts efficiency and creativity(17:08) Repurposing content using AI(25:08) What B2B can learn from B2C and D2C brands

Real Leaders Podcast
Ep. 505 Fredrik Thomassen, CEO & Founder of Superside

Real Leaders Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2024 46:49


Fredrik Thomassen is the CEO & Founder of Superside, the leading AI-powered creative service that delivers fast, scalable, world-class design and creative solutions to over 450 globally-renowned companies such as Amazon, Meta, Salesforce and Shopify. — Read the Magazine and Join the Community for Impact: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://⁠⁠⁠⁠real-leaders.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Apply for the The 2025 Real Leaders Impact Awards: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://real-leaders.com/top-impact-companies-2025/

This Anthro Life
Reimagining Creativity and Management in a Remote Work Era

This Anthro Life

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2024 44:55


How can we democratize access to talent and foster equal opportunities?In this insightful episode of This Anthro Life, we delve into the transformative power of the COVID-19 pandemic on the shift to online work. We discuss the potential of remote work to create a more equal playing field in the job market, Fredrik sharing his experience of building Superside, a platform that helps marketing and creative teams overcome design bottlenecks. Through this insightful discussion, we explore how this transition not only enhances productivity but also levels the playing field for individuals worldwide.From the importance of speed and quality in creative endeavors to the pivotal role of values and psychological safety in organizational success, we unravel the keys to building a future where talent knows no bounds. Join the conversation as we explore how remote work, accelerated by the pandemic, is reshaping industries, amplifying creativity, and paving the way for inclusive and innovative organizations. Timestamps:01:40 Exploring impacts of the pandemic on remote work adoption02:51 Origin story of Superside and its mission04:22 Founder's background in marketing and identifying creative bottlenecks09:31 Spreading remote work to smaller markets around the world11:22 Remote work enabling access to specialized global talent12:01 Remote work reducing discrimination and enabling diversity17:25 Flaws in traditional resume screening and interviews22:08 Innovating better methods for skills and values testing26:29 Focusing on career growth opportunities at Superside30:50 Rapid growth and exceptionally low turnover at Superside34:20 Fostering psychological safety for creativity and truth-seeking38:42 Leadership modeling openness to criticism and dissent42:09 Universal principles and truth-seeking in quality designKey Takeaways:The internet and remote work can create fair opportunities by providing access to talent and removing geographical barriers.The COVID-19 pandemic has sped up the shift to remote work, demonstrating that people can be effective while working from home.Overcoming the traditional hurdles in creative processes can be achieved by utilizing online platforms like Superside to streamline design and marketing tasks.Establishing a diverse and inclusive company is not only morally sound but also results in improved performance and innovation.Evaluating values and cultural compatibility is essential in recruitment and team building, and this can be accomplished through structured assessments and standardized testing.About This Anthro Life: This Anthro Life is a thought-provoking podcast that explores the human side of technology, culture, and business. Hosted by Adam Gamwell, we unravel fascinating narratives and connect them to the wider context of our lives. Tune in to https://thisanthrolife.org  and subscribe to our Substack at https://thisanthrolife.substack.com  for more captivating episodes and engaging content.  Connect with Fredrik ThomassenWebsite: https://www.superside.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/fredrikthomassen/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/supersidehq/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/f_thomassen?lang=en  Connect with This Anthro Life:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thisanthrolife/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thisanthrolife LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/this-anthro-life-podcast/ This Anthro Life website: https://www.thisanthrolife.org/ Substack blog: https://thisanthrolife.substack.com 

The People Factor
#67 - Marta Bisisi - VP, People @Superside

The People Factor

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2024 34:22


Marta Bisisi is VP of People at Superside, a fully remote company that provides creative services for the marketing and advertising world.Starting her career at Bain & Company as a management consultant, Marta eventually shifted gears towards what she loves most: working with people. At Superside, she works to make people strategy a factor of long-term competitive advantage and prove how the fully remote model is the way to go for the future of work.Shownotes00:00 - Intro & Context07:49 - Radical prioritization10:49 - Fully remote talent pool clusters18:23 - Compensation Framework in a fully remote company24:01 - Compensation Framework maintenanceMarta Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/martabisisi/Thomas Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thomas-kohler-pplwise/Thomas e-mail: thomas@pplwise.compplwise: https://pplwise.com/

Humans of Martech
115: Amrita Mathur: ClickUp's VP of Marketing on Optimizing for velocity of learning and balancing analytics with intuition

Humans of Martech

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2024 51:55


What's up everyone, today we have the pleasure of sitting down with Amrita Mathur, VP of Marketing at ClickUp.Summary: Building a brand from zero is all about diving deep into what makes your audience tick and tailoring your messages to hit just right. Amrita digs into this, stressing the gold in blending hard data with your gut in order to spot what truly connects. It's not about the immediate wins; it's hunting for those less obvious cues that hint you're on to something. When it comes to team-building, she's clear: bring on board folks who are curious, the ones who ask all of the questions and are unafraid of constructive criticism. For Amrita, the secret sauce to thriving in marketing, beyond all the strategy and insights, boils down to enjoying the ride and the people you're with, transforming work from a mere grind to an adventure worth every second.About AmritaAmrita kicked off her career at a startup in Toronto that was later acquired by OpenText, there she wore many different marketing hats, and later progressed to Redknee as Product Marketing ManagerShe briefly shifted to customer success at Jonas Software, concentrating on customer growth and retention and later returned to product marketing at Toronto Region Board of TradeShe then became Director of Marketing at PriceMetrix/McKinsey, where she led marketing planning and team hiringShe also led Demand Marketing at Vision Critical where she focused on go-to-market strategies, demand generation, and martechAmrita then moved over to Top Hat as Vice President overseeing Demand Generation, Marketing Operations & GrowthShen then joined a startup called Konsus founded by two Norwegian entrepreneurs who secured seed funding from Sam Altman and the Slack Fund. There she led the rebrand of the company to Superside and built a team that helped the startup grow from 0 to $4M in year 1 and reach $60M by year 4Finally, Amrita has recently joined San Diego-based ClickUp, the popular productivity platform valued at over $4B, known best for their SuperBowl ad or their music albumThe Myth of the Ivory Tower in Tech LeadershipAmrita's journey at ClickUp shatters the common myth of the ‘ivory tower' often associated with leadership roles in substantial tech enterprises. Despite the company's impressive valuation and extensive team, she emphasizes a hands-on approach that defies traditional expectations. At ClickUp, there's no detachment between the upper management and the operational workforce; instead, the organization champions a flat hierarchy. This structure not only promotes visibility across all levels but also encourages direct involvement in operational tasks, regardless of one's title.The ethos at ClickUp, as Amrita describes, mirrors what's often referred to as the ‘Stripe model'—a reference to Stripe's renowned flat organizational structure. This approach ensures that despite rapid growth, the company maintains an environment where every individual, from interns to VPs, is expected to dive deep into the minutiae of their work. It's a testament to the belief that understanding and engaging with the details are paramount to effectiveness. ClickUp's CEO reinforces this by advocating for a culture where being ‘in the details' is not just encouraged but required.This philosophy stands in stark contrast to what Amrita experienced towards the end of her tenure at Superside, where she could afford to step back, confident in her team's ability to manage without her direct oversight. At ClickUp, the scenario is vastly different. The expectation to remain operationally involved means leadership roles are as much about rolling up your sleeves and getting your hands dirty as they are about strategic oversight.The ClickUp model demonstrates a pivotal shift in how companies view leadership and organizational structure. It challenges the notion that senior positions are synonymous with distance from the day-to-day operations, highlighting the importance of a collaborative and transparent work environment. This approach not only ensures that leaders remain grounded and connected to their team's work but also fosters a culture of accountability and shared responsibility.Key takeaway: At ClickUp, success is found not in the isolation of leadership roles but in their integration within the operational fabric of the company. This model serves as a compelling blueprint for marketers: to stay relevant and effective, immerse yourself in the granular aspects of your work, foster transparency, and maintain a willingness to engage across all levels of the organization.Choosing Between Testing and Informed Decision-MakingAmrita sheds light on a prevalent misconception in the marketing world: the notion that every decision should be subjected to testing. This idea, while rooted in the desire to make data-driven decisions, often becomes a stumbling block, delaying action and fostering indecision. With ClickUp's significant web traffic and signup volumes, one might assume an endless capacity for testing. However, Amrita points out that this isn't always the most effective approach. Traffic isn't uniformly distributed across all initiatives, necessitating a more discerning strategy for deciding what to test and what decisions can be made based on informed hypotheses.For instance, the launch of ClickUp's AI product, Click AppBrain, presented a scenario with zero initial traffic, making traditional A/B testing impractical at the outset. Instead, ClickUp opted for a bold approach, deviating from conventional landing page norms to create something distinctive and engaging. This strategy, as Amrita describes, is about ‘zagging' when others ‘zig', striving for uniqueness in a crowded marketplace. The success of their unconventional approach is evident in the substantial interest generated for their launch event, demonstrating that not all marketing initiatives need to be prefaced by rigorous testing.Amrita's philosophy extends to broader marketing decisions, where not everything falls neatly into the ‘testing' bucket. Certain endeavors, like sponsoring a podcast, defy straightforward measurement. The decision to proceed often hinges on understanding the audience and trusting the medium's reach rather than on direct testing outcomes. This highlights the importance of leveraging different marketing disciplines to create compelling campaigns that might not initially lend themselves to A/B testing but are nevertheless rooted in strategic thinking.The approach to testing at ClickUp underlines a crucial balance between data-driven decision-making and intuitive marketing strategies. While A/B testing remains a valuable tool for optimizing conversions and understanding user behavior, Amrita's insights remind us that marketing's artistry lies in knowing when to rely on data and when to trust in creativity and market understanding.Key takeaway: Marketers should focus on cultivating an ability to discern which initiatives require validation through testing and which can advance based on informed hypotheses and innovative thinking. This approach not only streamlines decision-making but also encourages creativity and differentiation in a competitive landscape.Optimizing for Velocity of Learning in Early-Stage MarketingIn the formative stages of Superside, Amrita encountered the challenge many startups face: limited traffic and the pressure to demonstrate growth through experimentation. Instead of focusing solely on the quantity of tests, the emphasis was placed on the ‘velocity of learning,' a concept introduced by her CEO. This shift in perspective, from quantitative to qualitative insights, paved the way for a more flexible and insightful approach to growth.

New World Of Work
How Superside uses global hiring to build a team of top creative talent with Fredrik Thomassen

New World Of Work

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2024 36:02


Welcome back New World of Work! In this mini-series, we are focusing on the power of distributed teams to take companies at all growth stages to the next level. How do start-ups and entrepreneurs leverage global hiring to build teams made up of top talent? Host Katie McCauley is in discussion with Fredrik Thomassen, founder and CEO of Superside. Superside has been a distributed company since its inception, and uses a global hiring strategy to recruit the best creative talent the world has to offer. Frederik discusses why a global hiring strategy is part of Superside's core mission, the importance of competitive wages, and where distributed teams and global hiring are going from here. Join Oyster's Free People Builders CommunityThis podcast episode was produced by Quill.

Rebrand Podcast: Marketing Campaigns Explained by the Brand & Agency
Pioneering Brand Designs for Google, Amazon, Epic Games, Salesforce -- Amrita Mathur // Superside

Rebrand Podcast: Marketing Campaigns Explained by the Brand & Agency

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2023 19:01


As AI continues to gain popularity and use, can brands rely on them for the creative side of their rebranding or brand refresh? And if you have to create designs at scale, are you better hiring in-house, using an agency, or a creative-as-a-service? Listen to Amrita Mathur, VP of marketing at Superside, as she discusses the role of AI in total rebranding or a brand refresh and deciding what is suitable for you. Show NotesConnect With: Amrita Mathur: Website // LinkedIn // TwitterThe Rebrand Podcast: Email // LinkedIn // TwitterI Hear Everything: IHearEverything.com // LinkedIn See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Rebrand Podcast: Marketing Campaigns Explained by the Brand & Agency
Total Rebrand or Brand Refresh? -- Amrita Mathur // Superside

Rebrand Podcast: Marketing Campaigns Explained by the Brand & Agency

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2023 20:50


At what point does a brand require a refresh or total rebrand? Only consider a rebrand if there is a need for the company to change its image in a big way. For instance, if there's a barrier to more consumers not coming on board, it's provable. What about a refresh? Listen to Amrita Mathur, VP of marketing at Superside, discussing when to do a total rebrand or brand refresh. Show NotesConnect With: Amrita Mathur: Website // LinkedIn // TwitterThe Rebrand Podcast: Email // LinkedIn // TwitterI Hear Everything: IHearEverything.com // LinkedIn See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

That's Marketing, Baby
Marketing in Hypergrowth with Amrita Mathur

That's Marketing, Baby

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2023 42:37


Amrita Mathur is a badass. As the VP of Marketing at ClickUp and former VP of Marketing at Superside, she knows exactly what it takes to grow teams and revenue at high-growth, high-value startups.After Wayne-ing and Garth-ing out a bit (we're not worthy!) Jess and Susan chatted with Amrita about: Her 30/60/90 plan at ClickUp [4:37] Why every marketing team needs someone with an economist's brain [10:33] Why Payback Period is her one metric to rule them all [12:44] How she thinks about pipe and fuel instead of organic and paid [22:30] How her team at Superside balanced quality, creativity, and speed [24:35] Where to begin with content when you're starting from nothing [31:39] What to do when a program fails [39:13]That's Marketing, Baby is sponsored by the incredible people at ércule (ercule.co) and Teal (tealhq.com).Can't get enough? Subscribe to Rants & Raves, the official That's Marketing, Baby newsletter: https://bit.ly/rants-and-raves-sign-up

Talking Too Loud with Chris Savage
The Future of Design Work with Fredrik Thomassen

Talking Too Loud with Chris Savage

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2023 60:31


When Fredrik Thomassen, the CEO of Superside, isn't talking too loud about nature, he's talking too loud about the future of design work, or what he's dubbed “the Amazon Prime for creative services.” On the latest episode of the podcast, learn how the Norwegian founder started his business, somewhat on a lark, and morphed it into a values-driven, multi-million dollar company that manages design at scale.ALSO in this episode… TTL guest Fredrik Thomassen, CEO of Superside, is talking too loud about nature and the need to restore ancient forests across Europe. Amen.Chris Savage is talking too loud about the joy of seeing a movie in a theater. Popcorn, soda, and candy, OH MY!And Sylvie is talking too loud about the elite instagram movie trivia game she created during the pandemic, titled “Name That Movie.” She still owes people prizes.Links to learn more about Fredrik:Fredrik's LinkedInFollow us:twitter.com/wistiaSubscribe:wistia.com/series/talking-too-loudLove what you heard? Leave us a review!We want to hear from you!Write in and let us know what you think about the show, who you'd want us to interview on future episodes, and any feedback you have for our team.

Winning the Challenger Sale
#91: Expand like You Land: Account Growth Strategies that Work

Winning the Challenger Sale

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2023 26:04


What's the top predictor of customer loyalty? It's not service. It's not even a great product (although that doesn't hurt). It's an exceptional sales experience — and that only happens when you bring all of the elements of the customer experience together, from product to marketing. And when you align sales, marketing, customer experience, customer onboarding, and support against the customer journey, magic happens. When Amrita Mathur took on the role of VP of Marketing at Superside, she prioritized intertwining product and marketing, aligning Superside's approach to gaps they viewed in the market and their ICP. Much of the company's success can be attributed to this cohesive approach, and other companies should follow suit. Join us as we discuss:The importance of doing deep discovery to identify market gaps, then putting in the work to fill themWhy the experience prospects have needs to carry over throughout their journey as buyers and customersWhy your business needs a customer community and advisory board

Winning the Challenger Sale
#91: Expand like You Land: Account Growth Strategies that Work

Winning the Challenger Sale

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2023 26:04


What's the top predictor of customer loyalty? It's not service. It's not even a great product (although that doesn't hurt). It's an exceptional sales experience — and that only happens when you bring all of the elements of the customer experience together, from product to marketing. And when you align sales, marketing, customer experience, customer onboarding, and support against the customer journey, magic happens. When Amrita Mathur took on the role of VP of Marketing at Superside, she prioritized intertwining product and marketing, aligning Superside's approach to gaps they viewed in the market and their ICP. Much of the company's success can be attributed to this cohesive approach, and other companies should follow suit. Join us as we discuss:The importance of doing deep discovery to identify market gaps, then putting in the work to fill themWhy the experience prospects have needs to carry over throughout their journey as buyers and customersWhy your business needs a customer community and advisory board

Wantrepreneur to Entrepreneur | Start and Grow Your Own Business
666: Removing RISKS and giving you a SAFETY NET to help you launch and grow your business as a digital nomad w/ Sondre Rasch

Wantrepreneur to Entrepreneur | Start and Grow Your Own Business

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2023 39:27


We have a very special guest joining us today: Sondre Rasch, the co-founder and CEO of SafetyWing. SafetyWing is an incredible company that aims to build a global social safety net for digital nomads and remote workers. Sondre has an impressive background, having worked as a policy advisor for the government in Norway before founding SafetyWing (among other startups beforehand!). Today, we're going to dive deep into the challenges and fears of starting a business, particularly for digital nomads and remote workers. Sondre will share his journey with us, from his work in social policy to founding SuperSide, and ultimately, creating SafetyWing. We'll discuss the lack of a social safety net for people working on the internet, as well as the affordable health insurance options that SafetyWing offers. We'll also touch on the unique challenges faced by entrepreneurs and the concept of being a digital nomad. If you've ever considered freelancing or entrepreneurship but hesitated due to the fear of losing benefits, this episode is for you.ABOUT SONDRESondre Rasch is co-founder and CEO of SafetyWing, an all-remote company on a mission to build a global social safety net for digital nomads and remote workers. Sondre studied economics and computer science then worked as a social policy advisor for the government of Norway. Dissatisfied with the slow pace of change, he founded a platform for freelance designers called SuperSide (Y Combinator 2016). Through this work, he discovered the lack of social safety net for people working on the internet. This inspired the creation of SafetyWing (Y Combinator 2018), which has so far raised $50 million in venture capital funding and whose globally-distributed team consists of 150 people from 60+ countries around the world.LINKS & RESOURCESVisit SafetyWing's websiteTune in to Sondre's podcast, Building RemotelyVisit PlumiaConnect with Sondre on LinkedIn

Inside Marketing Design
Solving problems as cross-functional 'astropods' - S04E05 with Piotr Śmietana

Inside Marketing Design

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2023 50:20


In this episode, Charli talks with Piotr Śmietana, Director of Brand and Marketing Creative at Superside. They discuss the innovative structure of Superside's marketing creative team and the significant role of each individual's creative voice in shaping the brand's future. Piotr dives into Superside's brand refresh, the use of the “Brand Collab” Slack channel for fostering collaboration, the concept of Creative as a Service, and how they have bridged some of the difficulties of remote work with “astropods”. Key Takeaways 01:22 - Inside the marketing creative team at Superside 03:07 - How Piotr describes his responsibilities 04:00 - Collaboration and creative challenges 11:16 - How Piotr describes the Superside brand 15:03 - Superside's brand refresh 19:14 - The challenges of rebranding 22:47 - What are “astropods” and how do they work?  33:43 - What is “Creative as a Service”? 44:52 - Metrics, and how Superside tracks performance 46:00 - Challenges, and what's next for Superside 47:06 - Piotr's advice for anyone who wants to create really impactful brand and marketing design work Links  Superside Piotr on LinkedIn Connect with Charli CharliMarie.com Charli on Twitter Charli on Instagram InsideMarketingDesign.com Subscribe and stay in touch Apple Podcasts Spotify Google Podcasts YouTube

L&D Disrupt
Leading With Empathy And The Power Of Facilitation | Path To CPO | Episode 11

L&D Disrupt

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2023 37:08


Join Chris Chesterman (Head of Sales, HowNow) as he speaks to Aki Friedrich, Director of Learning Experience at Superside. They discuss the importance of following your curiosity and creativity, the facilitation skills he picked up from teaching German, lessons from stepping into internal leadership roles, and much more. Book a demo of HowNow: https://hubs.la/Q01RWy9P0Download your FREE Death of the LMS guide: https://hubs.la/Q01RWyMr0 See HowNow in action! Sign up for a live walkthrough: https://hubs.la/Q01RWzht0  Running order 0:00 Intro to Aki and his career journey 5:56 Confidence from performing experiences 7:29 Lessons from teaching German 11:52 Skills from high-growth period 15:03 Lessons from a career win 17:14 Leading with empathy 20:48 The influence of learning experiences 23:11 Understanding business context 25:25 Lessons from things that didn't go as planned 28:32 Advice to new leaders 31:18 Quickfire questions Find Aki on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/akifriedrich/  Find Chris on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chris-chesterman/ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/gethownow/message

This Week in Startups
Next Unicorns: Making surgeons bionic via computer vision & AI with Proprio's Gabriel Jones | E1790

This Week in Startups

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2023 53:35


This Week in Startups is brought to you by… Superside. Design and creative are crucial for growth. Tech companies like Shopify, Amazon, and Meta have found the perfect solution: Superside. Get $2000 off with Superside's Startup Accelerator package superside.com/TWIST Vanta. Compliance and security shouldn't be a deal-breaker for startups to win new business. Vanta makes it easy for companies to get a SOC 2 report fast. TWiST listeners can get $1,000 off for a limited time at vanta.com/twist LinkedIn Marketing. To redeem a $100 LinkedIn ad credit and launch your first campaign, go to LinkedIn.com/nextunicorn. * Today's show: Proprio CEO Gabriel Jones joins Jason to discuss the struggles surgeons face in the operating room today (23:05), the solutions Proprio's Paradigm system provides (27:14), the future of surgery (37:03), and much more! * Time stamps: (00:00) Proprio CEO Gabriel Jones joins Jason (2:09) Proprio's Light Field-Enabled Surgical technology (7:03) Gabriel demos the Proprio Paradigm robotic computer vision system (10:26) Superside - Go to https://superside.com/twist to get $2000 off with Superside's Startup Accelerator package (11:58) Generational shifts in medicine (18:03) The ultimate impact of this technology (21:58) Vanta - Get $1000 off your SOC 2 at https://vanta.com/twist (23:05) The data Proprio operates on and the struggles surgeons face today (27:14) Bench-top simulation (32:05) Use of AI and robotics in surgery today (35:36) LinkedIn Marketing - Get a $100 LinkedIn ad credit at https://linkedin.com/nextunicorn (37:03) The choice to utilize Proprio's technology for spine surgery first (39:03) Reducing the time needed to perform surgeries (44:17) Academia vs. Venture, and the importance of “proof points” for investors (46:44) The FDA approval process * Check out Proprio: https://www.propriovision.com/ Follow Gabriel: https://twitter.com/aGabrielJones * Read LAUNCH Fund 4 Deal Memo: https://www.launch.co/four Apply for Funding: https://www.launch.co/apply Buy ANGEL: https://www.angelthebook.com Great recent interviews: Steve Huffman, Brian Chesky, Aaron Levie, Sophia Amoruso, Reid Hoffman, Frank Slootman, Billy McFarland, PrayingForExits, Jenny Lefcourt Check out Jason's suite of newsletters: https://substack.com/@calacanis * Follow Jason: Twitter: https://twitter.com/jason Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jason LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasoncalacanis * Follow TWiST: Substack: https://twistartups.substack.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/TWiStartups YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/thisweekin * Subscribe to the Founder University Podcast: https://www.founder.university/podcast

This Week in Startups
LK-99 breakthrough with Varda's Delian Asparouhov & Andrew McCalip | E1788

This Week in Startups

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2023 50:02


This Week in Startups is brought to you by… OpenPhone. Create business phone numbers for you and your team that work through an app on your smartphone or desktop. TWiST listeners can get an extra 20% off any plan for your first 6 months at openphone.com/twist Crowdbotics. Great ideas can change the world, and Crowdbotics is the fastest way to turn those ideas into code. Get a free scoping session for your next big app idea at crowdbotics.com/twist Superside. Design and creative are crucial for growth. Tech companies like Shopify, Amazon, and Meta have found the perfect solution: Superside. Get $2000 off with Superside's Startup Accelerator package superside.com/TWIST * Today's show: Varda CEO Delian Asparouhov and R&D head Andrew McCalip join Jason to break down their recent experiment in replicating the LK-99 room-temp superconductor (4:19), the current state of material science (18;52), what the world would look like if this works (26:34), and more. Then, Krepling's Liam Gerada joins Jason for an update on his business! (40:46) * Time stamps: (00:00) Varda CEO Delian Asparouhov and R&D head Andrew McCalip join Jason (1:21) The LK-99 superconductor and how Varda is involved (4:19) Varda's latest achievements in replicating the LK-99 superconductor (8:05) Is this the real deal or just a strong diamagnetic effect (11:00) OpenPhone - Get 20% off your first six months at https://openphone.com/twist (12:30) Securing the material needed to run these experiments (14:06) The increased interest in Varda and feedback from the community (18:52) The culture shift in the tech industry (25:06) Crowdbotics - Get a free scoping session for your next big app idea at crowdbotics.com/twist (26:34) Brute force science: How innovation emerges and receives funding (30:17) How the venture model has continued to evolve (24:28) Superside - Go to https://superside.com/twist to get $2000 off with Superside's Startup Accelerator package (36:00) Questions from the live audience (40:46) Krepling's Liam Gerada joins Jason for an update on his business! * Check out Varda: https://varda.com Follow Delian: https://twitter.com/zebulgar Follow Andrew: https://twitter.com/andrewmccalip * Read LAUNCH Fund 4 Deal Memo: https://www.launch.co/four Apply for Funding: https://www.launch.co/apply Buy ANGEL: https://www.angelthebook.com Great recent interviews: Steve Huffman, Brian Chesky, Aaron Levie, Sophia Amoruso, Reid Hoffman, Frank Slootman, Billy McFarland, PrayingForExits, Jenny Lefcourt Check out Jason's suite of newsletters: https://substack.com/@calacanis * Follow Jason: Twitter: https://twitter.com/jason Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jason LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasoncalacanis * Follow TWiST: Substack: https://twistartups.substack.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/TWiStartups YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/thisweekin * Subscribe to the Founder University Podcast: https://www.founder.university/podcast

This Week in Startups
Ryan Smith on buying the Utah Jazz, evolving Qualtrics, AI's early days, and more | E1782

This Week in Startups

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2023 69:36


This Week in Startups is brought to you by… Fin can't burn its mouth on hot pizza. Or wave at someone who wasn't waving at them. Fin can resolve half of your customer support tickets instantly before they reach your team. Meet Fin. A breakthrough AI bot by Intercom – ready to join your support team today. Visit https://intercom.com/fin Lemon.io - Hire pre-vetted remote developers, get 15% off your first 4 weeks of developer time at https://Lemon.io/twist Superside. Design and creative are crucial for growth. Tech companies like Shopify, Amazon, and Meta have found the perfect solution: Superside. Get $2000 off with Superside's Startup Accelerator package superside.com/TWIST * Today's show: Ryan Smith joins Jason to discuss buying the Utah Jazz while simultaneously prepping for an IPO (3:19), Qualtrics going from IPO prep to acquired to spin out IPO to a take-private in under five years (58:56), his thoughts on AI's impact (49:12), and much more! * Time stamps: (00:00) Qualtics Co-Founder Ryan Smith joins Jason (3:19) Ryan's decision to buy the Utah Jazz NBA team (9:05) The Rudy Gorbet Utah Jazz deal (12:05) Fin - Try Fin, Intercom's new AI customer support chatbot, at https://intercom.com/f (12:46) The process of owning an NBA team while prepping for an IPO (21:09) The impact of the midseason tournament (23:30) Lemon.io - Get 15% off your first 4 weeks of developer time at https://Lemon.io/twist (24:50) Providing a better user experience with free-to-watch games in Utah (26:37) Paradigm shifts in media and building an NBA media giant (36:10) The importance of going direct in media (39:52) Superside - Go to https://superside.com/twist to get $2000 off with Superside's Startup Accelerator package (41:24) Qualtrics' product evolution (49:12) Ryan's thoughts on AI's impact on business (54:49) Job displacement as a result of AI (58:56) Qualtrics going from IPO prep to acquired to spin out IPO to a take-private in under five years (1:03:31) The change in approach to private vs public businesses Check out Qualtrics: https://www.qualtrics.com/ Follow Ryan: https://twitter.com/RyanQualtrics * Read LAUNCH Fund 4 Deal Memo: https://www.launch.co/four Apply for Funding: https://www.launch.co/apply Buy ANGEL: https://www.angelthebook.com Great recent interviews: Steve Huffman, Brian Chesky, Aaron Levie, Sophia Amoruso, Reid Hoffman, Frank Slootman, Billy McFarland, PrayingForExits, Jenny Lefcourt Check out Jason's suite of newsletters: https://substack.com/@calacanis * Follow Jason: Twitter: https://twitter.com/jason Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jason LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasoncalacanis * Follow TWiST: Substack: https://twistartups.substack.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/TWiStartups YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/thisweekin * Subscribe to the Founder University Podcast: https://www.founder.university/podcast

Marketing Today with Alan Hart
376: Differentiation and Design Ops with Amrita Mathur, VP of Marketing at Superside

Marketing Today with Alan Hart

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2023 45:32


When Amrita Mathur joined Superside as their first marketing hire in 2019, there was no product, no platform, and no recurring revenue. She is no stranger to being called in when companies are at a strategic inflection point with their growth strategy, so she did what she spent a career in B2B marketing learning how to do: implement a marketing-led growth strategy that translated into $8 million in subscription revenue in the first year and 400% year-over-year growth since then. Amrita is passionate about community, but she denotes an important difference between community building and a sense of community. For her, it's about a sense of goodwill and feeling like you have someone in your corner. Now as VP of Marketing, with that sense of community top of mind, she and her team are revolutionizing design at scale for ambitious brands like Amazon, Meta, Shopify, and Coinbase.In this episode, Alan and Amrita discuss her journey from developer to Marketing VP, the moves that played a key role in taking Superside from $0 to $55 million in annual recurring revenue in just four years, and the importance of Design and Creative Ops in running an efficient and effective team. Superside is a fully managed design subscription company that serves marketing and creative teams to help them unbottleneck their design challenges and empower them to get creative work done in a fast and efficient manner. Unlike an agency, freelance marketplace, or internal team, Superside acts as a point solution for key problems inside a company. They optimize for efficiency, speed, and scale, which allows them to cater to companies that are pivoting and changing rapidly. Amrita says an understanding of the importance of Design and Creative Ops helps Superside be an extremely efficient and effective partner. When it comes to Superside's rapid and sustained growth, Amrita tells us they did make smart moves, but also attributes some of their good fortune to good timing. One key move was figuring out their differentiation early. With marketing, the problem is well-defined but the solutions are messy, so from the start, Superside dove deep into what their best use cases were and what value they would provide in that space. Another key move was the founder's investment in marketing from day one to intentionally "build an efficient machine" for lean operations.In this episode, you'll learn:What is the Superside use case?How Amrita took Superside from $0 to $55 million in ARR in four yearsThe benefits of a marketing-first mindsetKey Highlights: [02:05] An appreciation for "community"[07:30] Path to becoming CMO of Superside[10:20]  What is Superside?[14:00] ARR increased from $0 to $55 million in four years.[18:30] No convincing is needed when the higher-ups get marketing.[20:00] What are "moon shoots," and what is an example of a win?[28:10] The nexus of design, creativity, and operation[31:50] A crazy (and impressive) designer to design operations ratio[36:00] Being a chameleon isn't such a bad thing.[39:00] Advice for her younger self[40:05] Be aware of dilution in marketing.[42:40] Misconceptions around mass amounts of data Thank you to our sponsor:PartnerHero: to waive set-up fees, go to https://www.partnerhero.com/marketingtoday and mention “Marketing Today” during onboarding! Become a member today and listen ad-free, visit https://plus.acast.com/s/marketingtoday. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

This Week in Startups
Tim Urban on the path to AGI and trends in tech history | E1779

This Week in Startups

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2023 77:35


This Week in Startups is brought to you by… Lemon.io - Hire pre-vetted remote developers, get 15% off your first 4 weeks of developer time at https://Lemon.io/twist MasterClass. Learn from the world's best minds - anytime, anywhere, and at your own pace. Get 15% off an annual membership to MasterClass at https://masterclass.com/startups Superside. Design and creative are crucial for growth. Tech companies like Shopify, Amazon, and Meta have found the perfect solution: Superside. Get $2000 off with Superside's Startup Accelerator package https://www.superside.com/twist * Today's show: Tim Urban joins Jason to break down the road to AGI(15:38), people's trust in organizations(57:31), trends in tech throughout history(25:36), and so much more! * Time stamps: (00:00) The creator of Wait But Why, Tim Urban joins Jason (1:49) Movies and social media creating dopamine addicts (11:16) Lemon.io - Get 15% off your first 4 weeks of developer time at https://Lemon.io/twist (12:36) Tim's “Procrastination” Ted Talk and talks on AI (15:38) Tim's book and his outlook on framing human history (22:16) MasterClass - Get 15% off an annual membership at https://masterclass.com/startups (25:36) Trends in tech history and the road to AGI (33:29) The dark paths of AI (37:31) Superside - Go to https://superside.com/twist to get $2000 off with Superside's Startup Accelerator package (41:16) The exciting potential of AI (42:10) Breaking down the human operating system: What happens when there is no longer work? (46:56) The exponential growth of computing (50:26) Why it is difficult to predict the outcome of AI tech (52:35) Gains in AI and expanding our understanding of the universe (57:31) The history of trust in organizations (01:06:21) How to find the truth and how misinformation is spread * Check out Wait But Why: https://waitbutwhy.com/ Check out Tim's Book: https://waitbutwhy.com/whatsourproblem Follow Tim: https://twitter.com/waitbutwhy * Read LAUNCH Fund 4 Deal Memo: https://www.launch.co/four Apply for Funding: https://www.launch.co/apply Buy ANGEL: https://www.angelthebook.com Great recent interviews: Steve Huffman, Brian Chesky, Aaron Levie, Sophia Amoruso, Reid Hoffman, Frank Slootman, Billy McFarland, PrayingForExits, Jenny Lefcourt Check out Jason's suite of newsletters: https://substack.com/@calacanis * Follow Jason: Twitter: https://twitter.com/jason Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jason LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasoncalacanis * Follow TWiST: Substack: https://twistartups.substack.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/TWiStartups YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/thisweekin * Subscribe to the Founder University Podcast: https://www.founder.university/podcast

Integrate & Ignite Podcast
459: Designing Success with Performance Marketing Strategies with Amrita Mathur of Superside

Integrate & Ignite Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2023 48:37


Adapting to the ever-changing marketing landscape is the topic of this episode of the Integrate & Ignite Marketing Podcast with host Lori Jones and her guest Amrita Mathur, VP of marketing at Superside. Listen in and get some powerful advice about ABM marketing strategies, remote design work, and generational differences.

This Week in Startups
VenturusAI's instant MBA & Samantha Wong on identifying soon-to-explode startup markets | E1778

This Week in Startups

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2023 61:07


This Week in Startups is brought to you by… Embroker. The Embroker Startup Insurance Program helps startups secure the most important types of insurance at a lower cost and with less hassle. Save up to 20% off of traditional insurance today at Embroker.com/twist. While you're there, get an extra 10% off using offer code TWIST. Vanta. Compliance and security shouldn't be a deal-breaker for startups to win new business. Vanta makes it easy for companies to get a SOC 2 report fast. TWiST listeners can get $1,000 off for a limited time at vanta.com/twist Superside. Design and creative are crucial for growth. Tech companies like Shopify, Amazon, and Meta have found the perfect solution: Superside.  Get quality design at scale without breaking the bank for your startup at superside.com/TWIST * Today's show: VenturusAI founder Emanuel Ciciu joins Jason as he dives into the origin story of his new startup before talking about building vertical AI solutions (1:30). Then Blackbird VC's Samantha Wong gives a presentation at Angel Summit about identifying soon-to-explode startup markets (41:53). * Time stamps: (0:00) Emanuel joins Jason (1:30) VenturusAI origin story (5:20) The evolution of prompt engineering (9:09) Embroker - Use code TWIST to get an extra 10% off insurance at https://Embroker.com/twist (10:23) The true cost of building on top of a LLM (12:56) Building vertical AI solutions (18:15) VenturusAI demo (23:36) Vanta - Get $1000 off your SOC 2 at https://vanta.com/twist (24:42) VenturusAI path to 100 customers (29:51) Next steps for VenturusAI (35:40) Jason places a bet (40:28) Superside - Go to https://superside.com/twist to get $2000 off with Superside's Startup Accelerator package (41:53) Blackbird VC's Samantha Wong on identifying soon-to-explode startup markets at Angel Summit * Check Out VenturusAI: https://venturusai.com/ Follow Samantha: https://twitter.com/holasammy * Read LAUNCH Fund 4 Deal Memo: https://www.launch.co/four Apply for Funding: https://www.launch.co/apply Buy ANGEL: https://www.angelthebook.com Great recent interviews: Steve Huffman, Brian Chesky, Aaron Levie, Sophia Amoruso, Reid Hoffman, Frank Slootman, Billy McFarland, PrayingForExits, Jenny Lefcourt Check out Jason's suite of newsletters: https://substack.com/@calacanis Follow Jason: Twitter: https://twitter.com/jason Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jason LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasoncalacanis * Follow TWiST: Substack: https://twistartups.substack.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/TWiStartups YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/thisweekin * Subscribe to the Founder University Podcast: https://www.founder.university/podcast

Grow A Small Business Podcast
From running a venture-funded startup Freelancing platform to providing health insurance for remote teams and digital nomads, now having amazing growth with 150 people and over 20 million top lines. (Sondre Rasch)

Grow A Small Business Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2023 36:27


In this episode, Troy interviews Sondre Rasch, the Co-Founder, and CEO of SafetyWing based in San Francisco, United States of America. Sondre has set up his own business, to provide health insurance for remote teams and digital nomads and remove the role of geographical borders as a barrier to equal opportunities and freedom for everyone. From running a venture-funded startup company that benefits the Freelancers on the platform, now growing a health insurance business for remote teams and digital nomads. SafetyWing was established in 2018 and has been in operation for 5 years. Growing with 22 billion ish and over 150 people. Sondre says starting a health insurance agency that provides benefits for Freelancers in this remote world of work necessitates preparing for the challenges and opportunities that come with it. “People have problems, people have arguments with each other and then you become like mediators slash psychologists and chief and it's just it's not building product”, he says, but having the correct model and understanding of what you're doing, having an ideal solution, and proper worldview, he succeeded. “The benefit is that if you can be relentless, and resourceful across that barrier, you have very few competitors”, he added.  This Cast Covers Offers health insurance for remote teams and digital nomads. Previously running a venture-funded startup called “Superside”- a great Freelancing platform. Shares his history of working for the Norwegian social safety net that helped him create his own online-base business. Starting in 2018 with a couple of hundred thousand dollars to 22 billion ish in revenue and growing with over 150 people. Following the “standard playbook” in venturing solves many problems. Creating a product that people would love. How to secure the best quality customers through “word of mouth” and “mimetic desire”. The 3Fs can be the breakthrough of venture stages. The relevance of influencer marketing these days. Recommendation on how to add people to the team and build a sustainable and kickass culture that helps with the growth. Links:  Sondre's Linkedin Sondre' Twitter Additional Resources:  SafetyWing Hackers & Painters Book by Graham Paul Quotes: “Success is completing the product, and the SafetyWing is to be a success.” —Sondre Rasch “Make a product that people love so much, and then find top influencers and let them write about your product.”—Sondre Rasch “Just follow the standard playbook in venture stages.” —Sondre Rasch “The benefit is that if you can be relentless, and resourceful across that barrier, you have very few competitors.” —Sondre Rasch “Hire people based on their general ability than their particular experience.” —Sondre Rasch

The Master Marketer Show
Ep. 41 Amrita Mathur - Giving Creative a Seat at the Strategy Table

The Master Marketer Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2023 80:58


The value of creativity only gets stronger as the industry adapts to consumer needs. However, do advances in technology necessarily require more and more complexity? In many cases, it doesn't! Even commercials on TV and streaming services are utilizing more and more vertical-style videos from the consumer's POV. As marketers adapt to trends, so must their creative content. What are marketing teams doing? In this episode, we speak with Amrita Mathur, the VP of Marketing at Superside, on her team's approach to creativity, and what it means for their partners. Her mindset on creative marketing didn't come quickly; in fact, it wasn't something she considered strongly before joining the Superside team. Still, her shift in mindset and her approach to marketing with Superside has landed them tremendous partnerships with big tech companies, including Meta. How does creative get a proper seat at the table?Let's get started!MINDSETS: Zooming Out on Buyer Journeys - Despite recognizing the power of creative content, there still appears to be mental blocks between creative ideas and executions in marketing sectors. Taking a step beyond “safe” measures and realizing that creative marketing isn't a lever for specific actions, but rather for the larger scope of a brand, is important for overall growth that ensures users will advocate for your brand.  Leave Room for Delight- It's okay to have a formula if it works for your register stream, but how much of your marketing efforts are dedicated to a genuine attempt to surprise your customers? Be it merchandise, swag, or surprising Easter Eggs for your brand, a level of whimsy relevant to your brand should be considered in the marketing process. Memory and Resonance - You LOVE those Big Game commercials, but do you remember what the products are for? Think about it — there are PLENTY of commercials that don't feel relevant to the product. They may be aware of your brand name after the commercial ends, but no affinity was built, and let's be real, you can't buy affinity. SKILLSETS: Evaluating Good Creative - The idea of ‘good' creative checks all the boxes of speed, quality, and price — but beyond that, what is truly ‘good?' Can it be replicated? Most importantly, can it be done at scale? In many cases… it depends on your company's needs. If you're seeking cheaper creative, it could come at a sacrifice of time and effort.  Framing the Problem Correctly - Problems require proper solutions — thus, they should have guardrails when it comes to approaching the solution. However, you also want workflows to be open-ended to allow for innovation. Balancing the two allows creative teams to fill in the blanks to solve problem-solving while providing parameters for them to stay on-task. Communicating Needs - Are requests to clients or team members structured in a way that leaves them open to interpretation? If addressed too exactly, it could squander creative or innovative thought. Consider how you ask for content, and what that might be doing to the creative process – creatives very much appreciate open lines of communication. Incorporating AI - It is very possible that how creative is made won't matter in 5 years — as long as the creative is being made. So, understanding, learning, and embracing AI when you can is an excellent timesaver for companies. Over time, marketers and brands will have to try harder to get attention, and AI can't be discounted.  TOOLSETS: Blogging Webinars Artificial Intelligence Design-Ops Company Rituals Slack YouTube RESULTS:At Superside, Amrita has been pleased to offer positive results to clients, including a reduced cost of customer acquisition, virality, product launches, and reduced cost of assets. For Amrita's team, costs due to efficiency have been reduced dramatically, allowing room for more opportunities and innovation. One of those innovations came by chance; turning attention to the incorporation of blogging and video, Amrita's team recognizes that the hybrid (that is, including links to their videos within their blogs) was improving their ranking on Google — something that allowed them to expand on their strategy with new hires. A bit more about Amrita:Amrita Mathur is the VP of Marketing at Superside, a leading “Creative as a Service” company. As the first member of their marketing team, Amrita focuses much of her effort on Business Strategy, Go-To-Market Strategy, and building Superside's organization for success. She is also the host of the Gather & Grow Series, Superside's interactive series covering topics on the intersection of design and marketing growth. Amrita and her team revolutionize design at scale for ambitious brands like Amazon, Meta, Shopify, and Coinbase.Connect with Amrita: https://www.linkedin.com/in/amritamathur/ https://www.superside.com/blog/author/amrita-mathur https://www.youtube.com/@SupersideHQ Connect with Mike & Gaby @ Proofpoint Marketing: Mike's LinkedIn Profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikegrinberg/ Gaby's LinkedIn Profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gabriellaisrael/ LinkedIn Company Profile: https://www.linkedin.com/company/proofpoint-marketing-llc Proofpoint YouTube Channel: http://bit.ly/ProofpointonYouTube Proofpoint Marketing Website: www.proofpoint.marketing

The Master Marketer Show
Ep. 41 Amrita Mathur - Giving Creative a Seat at the Strategy Table

The Master Marketer Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2023 80:58


The value of creativity only gets stronger as the industry adapts to consumer needs. However, do advances in technology necessarily require more and more complexity? In many cases, it doesn't! Even commercials on TV and streaming services are utilizing more and more vertical-style videos from the consumer's POV. As marketers adapt to trends, so must their creative content. What are marketing teams doing? In this episode, we speak with Amrita Mathur, the VP of Marketing at Superside, on her team's approach to creativity, and what it means for their partners. Her mindset on creative marketing didn't come quickly; in fact, it wasn't something she considered strongly before joining the Superside team. Still, her shift in mindset and her approach to marketing with Superside has landed them tremendous partnerships with big tech companies, including Meta. How does creative get a proper seat at the table?Let's get started!MINDSETS: Zooming Out on Buyer Journeys - Despite recognizing the power of creative content, there still appears to be mental blocks between creative ideas and executions in marketing sectors. Taking a step beyond “safe” measures and realizing that creative marketing isn't a lever for specific actions, but rather for the larger scope of a brand, is important for overall growth that ensures users will advocate for your brand.  Leave Room for Delight- It's okay to have a formula if it works for your register stream, but how much of your marketing efforts are dedicated to a genuine attempt to surprise your customers? Be it merchandise, swag, or surprising Easter Eggs for your brand, a level of whimsy relevant to your brand should be considered in the marketing process. Memory and Resonance - You LOVE those Big Game commercials, but do you remember what the products are for? Think about it — there are PLENTY of commercials that don't feel relevant to the product. They may be aware of your brand name after the commercial ends, but no affinity was built, and let's be real, you can't buy affinity. SKILLSETS: Evaluating Good Creative - The idea of ‘good' creative checks all the boxes of speed, quality, and price — but beyond that, what is truly ‘good?' Can it be replicated? Most importantly, can it be done at scale? In many cases… it depends on your company's needs. If you're seeking cheaper creative, it could come at a sacrifice of time and effort.  Framing the Problem Correctly - Problems require proper solutions — thus, they should have guardrails when it comes to approaching the solution. However, you also want workflows to be open-ended to allow for innovation. Balancing the two allows creative teams to fill in the blanks to solve problem-solving while providing parameters for them to stay on-task. Communicating Needs - Are requests to clients or team members structured in a way that leaves them open to interpretation? If addressed too exactly, it could squander creative or innovative thought. Consider how you ask for content, and what that might be doing to the creative process – creatives very much appreciate open lines of communication. Incorporating AI - It is very possible that how creative is made won't matter in 5 years — as long as the creative is being made. So, understanding, learning, and embracing AI when you can is an excellent timesaver for companies. Over time, marketers and brands will have to try harder to get attention, and AI can't be discounted.  TOOLSETS: Blogging Webinars Artificial Intelligence Design-Ops Company Rituals Slack YouTube RESULTS:At Superside, Amrita has been pleased to offer positive results to clients, including a reduced cost of customer acquisition, virality, product launches, and reduced cost of assets. For Amrita's team, costs due to efficiency have been reduced dramatically, allowing room for more opportunities and innovation. One of those innovations came by chance; turning attention to the incorporation of blogging and video, Amrita's team recognizes that the hybrid (that is, including links to their videos within their blogs) was improving their ranking on Google — something that allowed them to expand on their strategy with new hires. A bit more about Amrita:Amrita Mathur is the VP of Marketing at Superside, a leading “Creative as a Service” company. As the first member of their marketing team, Amrita focuses much of her effort on Business Strategy, Go-To-Market Strategy, and building Superside's organization for success. She is also the host of the Gather & Grow Series, Superside's interactive series covering topics on the intersection of design and marketing growth. Amrita and her team revolutionize design at scale for ambitious brands like Amazon, Meta, Shopify, and Coinbase.Connect with Amrita: https://www.linkedin.com/in/amritamathur/ https://www.superside.com/blog/author/amrita-mathur https://www.youtube.com/@SupersideHQ Connect with Mike & Gaby @ Proofpoint Marketing: Mike's LinkedIn Profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikegrinberg/ Gaby's LinkedIn Profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gabriellaisrael/ LinkedIn Company Profile: https://www.linkedin.com/company/proofpoint-marketing-llc Proofpoint YouTube Channel: http://bit.ly/ProofpointonYouTube Proofpoint Marketing Website: www.proofpoint.marketing

Modern Day Marketer
What's the ROI of Our Content Marketing Program?

Modern Day Marketer

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2023 58:23


Brett revisits a digital event he hosted called “What's the ROI of our Content Marketing Program.” Joining him are content marketing leaders including: Sangram Vajre of GTM Partners, Nate Turner of Ten Speed, Thomas Peham with Storyblok, and Amrita with Superside. They have a lively conversation about the evolution of content marketing, content technology, conversion, and gated content.2:35 Introductions7:00 Amrita on content marketing and conversion19:12 Thomas on culture of content26:50 Thomas on content Technology30:00 Nate on content distribution39:54 Sangram on content and LinkedIn48:50 Forms/un-gated content53:20 What content should we focus on57:38 OutroModern Day Marketer The Newsletter (subscribe)Follow The Juice:| Website | Blog | Twitter | LinkedInFollow Brett:| Twitter | LinkedIn 

Everyone Hates Marketers | No-Fluff, Actionable Marketing Podcast
From Burnout to $30M Success: Lessons in B2B Marketing That Work

Everyone Hates Marketers | No-Fluff, Actionable Marketing Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2023 60:43


Everyone Hates Marketers is back after 798 days (!) of radio silence — without a new interview published.In the first episode of Season 3, I chat with Amrita Mathur from Superside. We discuss how investing in mass marketing early can make (or break) a company. Amrita shares how she burnt out at a previous job before joining a creative-as-a-service company, how Superside grew from 450 customers to $30 million in revenue (four times each year), and why marketing is often overlooked in the B2B industry.Topics mentioned:[00:02:10] Marketing-led growth in B2B.[00:03:46] Mass marketing and rapid learning.[00:08:30] Working for a European company.[00:10:57] Fast execution-oriented design service.[00:14:23] Subscription-based business model.[00:17:16] Biopersonas and Designer Dan.[00:21:35] Uncovering customer pains.[00:25:08] Buyer personas development.[00:27:16] Investment in design by companies.[00:30:40] Unlimited design services.[00:35:53] Selling convenience and time-saving.[00:37:45] Instagram Advertising Insights.[00:43:26] Enterprise customer retention.[00:45:23] Inbound marketing and sales.[00:48:20] Planning for hyper-growth.[00:52:03] Marketing and confidence in leadership.[00:55:59] Learning from podcasts.Resources mentioned:Brendan Hufford's newsletterAmanda NatividadMasters of Scale podcast***→ Join 14,000+ weirdos who learn to stand the f*ck out with my daily (Mon-Fri) emails: everyonehatesmarketers.com→ See my pretty face on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/louisgrenier/→ Leave a review on Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3p4wL4r→ Leave a review on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7iEF1qovZZiaP1iRtxGARoFinally...If you're curious about putting your brand in front of my 14,000+ daily newsletter subscribers and/or podcast listeners, email me: louis@everyonehatesmarketers.com

Innovation and Leadership
Growing a $400+ Million Design Business

Innovation and Leadership

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2023 54:30


Get inspired by Fredrik Thomassen, the revolutionary leader behind the online design industry and CEO of Superside. Join Jess Larsen on Innovation and Leadership for an in-depth interview with Fredrik on how he is using innovation to create 1 million job opportunities and promote equality and opportunity in the workplace. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Ground Up
137: Driving Growth w/ Short & Long-Term Planning (w/ Amrita Mathur, Superside)

Ground Up

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2023 53:38


Click here to try Databox free, or learn more.Learn how Amrita Mathur (VP Marketing) has helped Superside grow to $45m in 4 years, using a combination of short and long-term planning.

Ahead of the Game
Driving SaaS Growth with B2B Marketing

Ahead of the Game

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2023 54:43


Want to hear a first-hand account of running marketing from very early stage? Meet Amrita Mathur, VP of marketing at Superside, a B2B-focussed design services platform. She tells Will Francis how it worked out to join as marketing director before there was even a full product to sell, from essentially the beta stage. A ⁠⁠⁠transcript of this episode⁠⁠⁠ is available on our website, where you'll also find all our other episodes on our extensive digital marketing library of ebooks, toolkits, podcasts, webinars, blogs, and more! ⁠⁠⁠Join for free today.⁠⁠⁠ The Ahead of the Game podcast is brought to you by the Digital Marketing Institute and is available on ⁠⁠⁠our website⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠Apple Podcasts⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠Spotify⁠⁠⁠, and ⁠⁠⁠YouTube⁠⁠⁠. And if you enjoyed this episode please leave a review so others can find us! If you have other feedback for or would like to be a guest on the show, drop us a line at ⁠⁠⁠podcast@digitalmarketinginstitute.com⁠⁠⁠.

Employer Branding: The Inside Podcast
Employer Branding T.I.P S07Ep.06 | “Employer branding in the context of learning and development”, with Aki Friedrich, Director of Learning Experience @Superside

Employer Branding: The Inside Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2023 28:52


Overview We're back with episode 6 of #Employer Branding: The Inside Podcast! In today's episode, Aki Friedrich, Director of Learning Experience at Superside, shares valuable #insights on implementing L&D strategies that contribute to business success. Also, we talked about the #purpose of learning and development, and how it can integrate or influence employer branding. What you'll learn by listeningWhat is learning and development in an organizationHow growth happens when L&D initiatives are put into practice Understanding the purpose of L&D for an organization How L&D is a sustainable function when it contributes to business success L&D on a budget: how can smaller organizations implement an L&D strategy Basic tips managers can use to implement L&D strategies in their organizationsChallenges associated with creating clear career pathsHow does Learning and Development integrate or influence Employer BrandingAbout SupersideSuperside is the leading Creative-as-a-Service (CaaS) company that helps over 450 ambitious brands get great design and creative done at scale. With our design subscription service, marketing and creative teams can unbottleneck design, move faster and drive more reliable creative performance. We help the world's leading companies like Google, Meta, Amazon, Salesforce, Red Bull and Boston Consulting Group with advertising creative, brand design, video production and more. No longer chained to over-taxed in-house creative teams, our customers reduce costs and move quickly with infinite scale.

Revenue Champions
92: The importance of marketing to out-of-market buyers (with Amrita Marthur, VP of marketing at Superside)

Revenue Champions

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2023 41:03


Cognism's VP of marketing, Liam Bartholomew speaks to VP of marketing at Superside, Amrita Marthur about the changing nature of B2B buying behaviour. In this era where buying journeys start way before a buyer speaks to sales, how can and why should marketers influence buyer behaviour before they're ready to buy?

Rebrand Podcast: Marketing Campaigns Explained by the Brand & Agency
Pioneering Brand Designs for Google, Amazon, Epic Games, Salesforce -- Amrita Mathur // Superside

Rebrand Podcast: Marketing Campaigns Explained by the Brand & Agency

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2023 19:01


As AI continues to gain popularity and use, can brands rely on them for the creative side of their rebranding or brand refresh? And if you have to create designs at scale, are you better hiring in-house, using an agency, or a creative-as-a-service? Listen to Amrita Mathur, VP of marketing at Superside, as she discusses the role of AI in total rebranding or a brand refresh and deciding what is suitable for you. Show NotesConnect With: Amrita Mathur: Website // LinkedIn // TwitterThe Rebrand Podcast: Email // LinkedIn // TwitterI Hear Everything: IHearEverything.com // LinkedIn See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Rebrand Podcast: Marketing Campaigns Explained by the Brand & Agency
Total Rebrand or Brand Refresh? -- Amrita Mathur // Superside

Rebrand Podcast: Marketing Campaigns Explained by the Brand & Agency

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2023 20:50


At what point does a brand require a refresh or total rebrand? Only consider a rebrand if there is a need for the company to change its image in a big way. For instance, if there's a barrier to more consumers not coming on board, it's provable. What about a refresh? Listen to Amrita Mathur, VP of marketing at Superside, discussing when to do a total rebrand or brand refresh. Show NotesConnect With: Amrita Mathur: Website // LinkedIn // TwitterThe Rebrand Podcast: Email // LinkedIn // TwitterI Hear Everything: IHearEverything.com // LinkedIn See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Marketing Millennials
154 - The Secret to Scaling Your Creative Team, with Amrita Mathur (VP of Marketing, Superside)

The Marketing Millennials

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2023 30:02


How much time do creatives actually spend creating? Amrita Mathur, VP of Marketing at the Creative-as-a-Service agency, Superside, is in the studio to talk about why creatives spend so little time actually creating and how a great DesignOps team can increase workflow and efficiency among creatives. She and Daniel also discuss the advantages of centralized vs. decentralized marketing, the best way to scale a marketing department, and how creative team success should be measured. Plus, what's the advantage of hiring freelancers over full-time employees? Tune in to find out! 0:00 Intro2:08 Lessons from Computer Science3:10 Scaling a team5:45 Alignment is Key in Marketing12:00 Do You Tie Outcome Results to a Creative Team?14:03 Design Ops22:08 A Marketing Hill to Die On25:40 Words of Advice29:44 Contact Us Follow Amrita: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/amritamathur/?originalSubdomain=ca Keep up to date with the latest news from The Marketing Millennials: Follow Daniel on Twitter: twitter.com/Dmurr68LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/daniel-murray-marketing Sign up to The Marketing Millennials newsletter: workweek.com/brand/the-marketing-millennialsDaniel is a Workweek friend, working to produce amazing podcasts. Find out more, visit: www.workweek.com

The People Factor
#11 - Aki Friedrich | Director Learning Experience Superside

The People Factor

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2023 53:58


About the guest Aki is a talent development expert who is passionate about creating learning cultures within modern, busy work environments. He believes in confronting hard truths such as disengagement and overconfidence while embracing the potential of workplace learning to develop and retain talent. Aki strives to drive initiatives prioritizing impact over glamour and creating a culture of psychological safety combined with high ambitions. Shownotes 00:00 - Intro 00:55 - Aki, music & Apple 13:10 - Meditation, impulsive control, first-time manager 22:45 - Maintaining culture during growth stages, career development 35:05 - Individual & group learning, learning ROI, measuring success 41:22 - Effectiveness of leaders 47:40 - Remote-only learning & development, Superside Book recommendation: https://www.amazon.com/Bird-Some-Instructions-Writing-Life/dp/0385480016 Profiles: Thomas: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thomas-kohler-pplwise/ pplwise: https://pplwise.com/ Aki: https://www.linkedin.com/in/akifriedrich/

On Brand with Nick Westergaard
Revolutionizing Marketing Design with Amrita Mathur

On Brand with Nick Westergaard

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2023 33:42


Amrita Muthur is the VP of Marketing at Superside, a new platform revolutionizing the design of marketing creative in our fast-paced world. She went from being the first marketing hire to overseeing a 400% year-over-year growth strategy. We discussed all of this and more this week on the On Brand podcast. About Michele Arnese When Amrita Mathur joined Superside as their first marketing hire in 2019 there was no product, no platform, and no recurring revenue. No stranger to being called in when companies are at a strategic inflection point with their growth strategy, she did what she's spent a career in B2B marketing learning how to do: implemented a marketing-led growth strategy that translated into $8 million in subscription revenue in the first year and 400% year-over-year growth since then. Now as VP of Marketing, her team is revolutionizing design at scale for ambitious brands like Amazon, Meta, Shopify, and Coinbase. Episode Highlights No product? No platform? No recurring revenue? That sounds like a story! “Before Superside, I had never worked for an early-stage startup.” But Amrita hit the ground running. During this time, her boss stressed, “I don't care about revenue. I care about your velocity of learning.” What did she tackle first? “First, I started with that question of what do we want to be when we grow up?” From there, she conducted over 50 qualitative interviews to get at their buyer personas, influencer personas, and the personas of those not likely to buy from the brand. More media means more creative. Amrita and I talked a lot about the “volume and velocity” of marketing creative today. “It's a tough market. You don't just need good creative. You need great creative. Especially in the B2B space.” So, what is Superside? Charting new territory in the space between open design marketplaces like Fiverr, freelancers, and traditional agencies, Amrita arrived at a unique phrase for their positioning, “CAAS—Creative As a Service. Even if someone doesn't get it, it provides permission to explain.” What brand has made Amrita smile recently? As a proud Canadian, she shared the innovative underwear brand Knix for their standout creative. To learn more, connect with Amrita on LinkedIn and Twitter. And, of course, check out Superside! As We Wrap … Listen and subscribe at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon/Audible, Google Play, Stitcher, TuneIn, iHeart, YouTube, and RSS. Rate and review the show—If you like what you're hearing, be sure to head over to Apple Podcasts and click the 5-star button to rate the show. And, if you have a few extra seconds, write a couple of sentences and submit a review to help others find the show. Did you hear something you liked on this episode or another? Do you have a question you'd like our guests to answer? Let me know on Twitter using the hashtag #OnBrandPodcast and you may just hear your thoughts here on the show. On Brand is a part of the Marketing Podcast Network. Until next week, I'll see you on the Internet! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Loop
The importance of marketing to out-of-market buyers with Amrita Marthur, VP of Marketing at Superside

The Loop

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2023 41:17


Cognism's VP of marketing, Liam Bartholomew speaks to VP of marketing at Superside, Amrita Marthur about the changing nature of B2B buying behaviour. In this era where buying journeys start way before a buyer speaks to sales, how can and why should marketers influence buyer behaviour before they're ready to buy?

MarTech Podcast // Marketing + Technology = Business Growth
Unlocking Design for Performance Marketers -- Amrita Mathur // Superside

MarTech Podcast // Marketing + Technology = Business Growth

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2023 19:28


Amrita Mathur, VP of Marketing at Superside, talks about how to build a bulletproof marketing-led growth strategy. Even after prospects have spoken to your sales team and seen a demo, they might still be wondering how you differ from your competitors. However, good creative can help prospects quickly understand how your brand compares to a competitor and drive them through your buying cycle more efficiently. Today, Amrita discusses unlocking design for performance marketing. Show NotesConnect With: Amrita Mathur: Website // LinkedInThe MarTech Podcast: Email // LinkedIn // TwitterBenjamin Shapiro: Website // LinkedIn // TwitterSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Revenue Generator Podcast: Sales + Marketing + Product + Customer Success = Revenue Growth
Unlocking Design for Performance Marketers -- Amrita Mathur // Superside

Revenue Generator Podcast: Sales + Marketing + Product + Customer Success = Revenue Growth

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2023 19:28


Amrita Mathur, VP of Marketing at Superside, talks about how to build a bulletproof marketing-led growth strategy. Even after prospects have spoken to your sales team and seen a demo, they might still be wondering how you differ from your competitors. However, good creative can help prospects quickly understand how your brand compares to a competitor and drive them through your buying cycle more efficiently. Today, Amrita discusses unlocking design for performance marketing. Show NotesConnect With: Amrita Mathur: Website // LinkedInThe MarTech Podcast: Email // LinkedIn // TwitterBenjamin Shapiro: Website // LinkedIn // TwitterSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

MarTech Podcast // Marketing + Technology = Business Growth
Marketing Led Growth Playbook -- Amrita Mathur // Superside

MarTech Podcast // Marketing + Technology = Business Growth

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2023 16:18


Amrita Mathur, VP of Marketing at Superside, talks about how to build a bulletproof marketing-led growth strategy. In the B2B tech and SaaS world, it is uncommon for marketing to have a seat in the decision-making process from day one. Superside challenged the status quo and prioritized marketing from their startup days which resulted in hyper-growth for the company. Today, Amrita discusses marketing's growth-led playbook. Show NotesConnect With: Amrita Mathur: Website // LinkedInThe MarTech Podcast: Email // LinkedIn // TwitterBenjamin Shapiro: Website // LinkedIn // TwitterSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Revenue Generator Podcast: Sales + Marketing + Product + Customer Success = Revenue Growth
Marketing Led Growth Playbook -- Amrita Mathur // Superside

Revenue Generator Podcast: Sales + Marketing + Product + Customer Success = Revenue Growth

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2023 16:18


Amrita Mathur, VP of Marketing at Superside, talks about how to build a bulletproof marketing-led growth strategy. In the B2B tech and SaaS world, it is uncommon for marketing to have a seat in the decision-making process from day one. Superside challenged the status quo and prioritized marketing from their startup days which resulted in hyper-growth for the company. Today, Amrita discusses marketing's growth-led playbook. Show NotesConnect With: Amrita Mathur: Website // LinkedInThe MarTech Podcast: Email // LinkedIn // TwitterBenjamin Shapiro: Website // LinkedIn // TwitterSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

DGMG Radio
#56: Amrita Mathur (VP Marketing, Superside) - $0 to $30M ARR in three years, marketing team structure, when to exploit vs explore

DGMG Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2023 53:01


Amrita Mathur is VP Marketing at Superside. Superside is a B2B SaaS company that provides a design subscription service for marketing and creative teams. We talk about how Superside went from $0 to $30M ARR in three years, marketing strategy, when to exploit vs. when to explore, marketing team structure, where to find efficiencies in marketing, how constraints can act as foundations for your entire go-to-market effort, the cost of missing out, making smarter marketing bets and more.Send guest pitches and ideas to hello@exitfive.comExit Five on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/exitfive/Exit Five on Twitter: https://twitter.com/exitfiveco***Thanks to our 2023 presenting sponsors Demandwell, Jasper, and Zapier.This episode is brought to you by Jasper. Jasper is the AI Content Generator that helps you and your team break through creative blocks to create amazing, original content 10X faster. Learn more + start using AI to create content for free at jasper.aiThanks to my friends at hatch.fm for producing this episode and handling all of the Exit Five podcast production. They give you unlimited podcast editing and strategy for your B2B podcast. Get unlimited podcast editing and on-demand strategy for one low monthly cost. Just upload your episode, and they take care of the rest. Visit hatch.fm to learn more 00:00.58dgmgAh, will you tell me your name and tell me what you had for breakfast today.00:04.48AmritaOh my gosh. This is how you start on your podcast I had a little bit of Chi and that's it. That's I'm not a breakfast person to be honest.00:16.73dgmgI go back and forth sometimes I am and then sometimes I think it is nice to kind of let it ride until 11 or or 12 I don't but but then sometimes I wake up and I'm like hungry and I gotta eat right now.00:27.85AmritaYeah, no I get it the whole intermittent fasting thing. You know people are talking about it these days like a lot and I'm just like but I've literally been doing that my whole life like I just don't eat until like noon or one that's just how.00:41.35dgmgYeah, it's it's funny how that happens like a trend happens and then people are like wait. This is a trend I've just been doing this thing my my whole life I did I I did it more just like out of convenience like ah like ah I just found when I was living in Boston and like going into the office and.00:46.54AmritaYes.00:58.10dgmgProcess of just like having to get breakfast every morning and I think a lot of there's a lot of like health nutritional advice that' like you got to eat breakfast. You got to eat breakfast. But I think you can get the same amount of meals and just later in the day and then you don't have it. It is a little bit freeing and I have your whole schedule be structured around like I got to eat or I'm going to pass out right now.01:13.36AmritaYeah, yeah, and then and the newest is that not only do you got to eat breakfast but you have to get thirty grams of protein just just sizable. That's like a burger patty kind of right I think thirty grams and it's like I don't think I can eat that you know if I can have half a banana that's pretty good.01:21.41dgmgUm, right? yeah.01:31.60dgmgYeah, right, We're not all ah like Hollywood celebrities with with private chefs. You know it's like you got to have you got to have convenience. Okay, so see no what happens is when you ask somebody that then you you start in a normal conversation and it's.01:36.62AmritaUm, I think we doubt yeah.01:43.76AmritaYeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.01:46.56dgmgI Know you'd be a good guess anyway though because I've heard you I've heard you talk before. So um, let's just start with just tell people your name and background so they can get context for your for your voice and maybe describe what you what you do at superside and and and what superside is.01:59.56AmritaYeah, for sure. So my name is am Rita Mather I work for a company called superside which is very cool like innovative and disruptive in some ways you know we're tackling an age-old problem which is how the heck do you get good creative done good design done and. The answer is that there's many many different ways and there's many different models and constructs for for doing that and our approach has been to say hey you could be an Amazon you could be a meta you could be a ubs or a Morgan Stanley or whatever and maybe you have this huge gigantic, super powerful internal team.02:24.64dgmgSo.02:38.56AmritaThat can crank out this amazing stuff. Maybe you use a bit of AiEtc but there's still going to be times where you need added capacity and maybe that is a permanent state that you live in because your marketing team and your go-to-market teams are actually always ahead of the curve. And they're always pushing the boundaries. So it's kind of impossible for the creative team to like fully catch up so you're always going to be in this like state of flux where you're just like holy shit I need more and I need better and I need faster right? and it's like think about how we even do like Facebook ads these days like you need like 57 versions of the same thing to properly test it and. You need that in two days and then by the way the experiment data just came back and now you need to change your whole approach and that whole cycle the the test and learn cycle. That's so part. A big part of marketing now is complicated and design and creative teams just need to find a way to like catch up. So that's that's ultimately the.03:22.64dgmgEarth.03:30.90dgmgYeah, well, it's interesting. It's it's like um, you you run this for a while in my job at drift I I ran the creative team and that was like I had no idea what I was doing and ah while I was good at the creative part like.03:31.91AmritaOf.03:36.58AmritaThanks.03:44.41AmritaUm.03:44.74dgmgIt was fun to come up with the ideas and come up with campaigns but you know I I noticed really quickly that you kind of keep bumping into the same problem which is like the answer is always yes we can do that. But that means we got to take this other thing off, it's such a game of.. It's very similar to like engineering and like prioritizing different things and it's hard and I ended up building so much empathy for the creatives at drift For example, on that on that team because you know they don't often know the needs of the business or like who which internal you know.04:02.90AmritaYeah.04:19.95dgmgRelationship between this vp and that vp is like why you need to actually prioritize this page There's just so much nuance and like what's going on and they're like look I just want to create stuff so but but I can't because there's a limited number of hours in the day and so you always it always you bump up against a resource thing and always comes down to do we hire somebody. Internally do we hire somebody externally pros and cons to each approach right? because sometimes you just like I need this I need we need this support now. We need this magically now. It's like I need this work now and in either case to find a good freelancer or to hire someone you got to train them onboard and there just there's a lot that it takes and so I think um.04:39.43AmritaYeah, yeah.04:46.33AmritaYeah, yeah, yeah.04:58.76dgmgYou know, separate from even like the product right? and you working there I Just think as a marketing org challenge. This is something that a lot of people that listen to this podcast like are probably nodding their heads to and struggle with.05:07.57AmritaYeah, hundred percent and you know what there's so much more nuance right? like it's I think it's so easy for everybody to dumb everything down to like lack of process. You know like if you if you normally bring up stuff like this no matter what the team is what the department is. Like oh yeah, yeah, yeah, you just need a good process and like then you can do it and it's like really some things can't be solved by a good process sometimes you actually need multiple machines working together. Um in in unison and like different machines actually tackle different parts of it I actually have a really good example. Someone gave me insight into how Amazon operates. I mean they're just a case study for so many amazing things. But this in particular. So what they've done is in subsubsidiaries. They've split up the creative team into 3 buckets and there's like 1 team that's purely experimental like all they do is run experiments like that's it they don't do anything else. They don't do anything else.05:50.17dgmgUm.06:03.58AmritaThen there's like a core team and then there's a swat team. The swat team is basically like akin to the core team but they jump on urgent items. So all they do is like tackle like urgent like it's like really no credence to like what's actually strategic and important. But it's just like just tackling the urgent shit and it's always like somewhat execution focused.06:20.69dgmgYeah.06:22.80AmritaAnd I love that model I love that they know that there's these 3 different problem spaces and they're going to have 3 different capacities almost figured out to tackle that because like 1 team can't possibly think about all of those things.06:34.19dgmgI thought I thought that the the team that only handles urgent shit is just called the marketing team startup. Oh my gosh. Yeah, like everything is urgent. But yeah, no I think I think that's great I think even just what you like that Amazon.06:42.12AmritaUm, in startup land. Yeah you and me were there were yeah right? That's that's ah.06:53.87dgmgAh, kind of team structure makes me think of also just interesting ways to structure marketing orgs like it. It is so hard you have this traditional structure of like you have demand gen and product marketing and then content. But then you're trying to do things on a campaign basis and I've always. 1 of my frustrations like that I learned over time inside of a company was how many people need to be involved and and so one of the reasons that I went and worked on the creative team was like between like myself a video person and a designer just the 3 of us like we could get some big shit done really quickly. And it was just always It's always like man if you just have small teams of people that are aligned around like a specific problem. It. It gets really hard for like 1 kind of centralized body like take in all of the work inside of a marketing team and then spit it out where I love this concept of just like having smaller specialized teams for different.07:35.00AmritaWell.07:45.52dgmgParts of the funnel are different parts of the business. what what is um so so you run marketing over there your Vp marketing um take us into just you. You told us a little bit about like what the company does can you talk a little bit more about like what is your org what is your org look like and then how do you drive.07:45.87AmritaYeah, yeah, absolutely yeah.08:03.69dgmgYou know what's the Go-to-market strategy for superside.08:06.52AmritaYeah, um, I'll get into how the org looks in a second because there's so much context to provide. Um I'd say so I was marketer number one I joined when we were super early stage like we had no subscription revenue. We didn't even really have a product and we kind of had like. Half a product but like it wasn't really like set up for scale and it wasn't really oriented towards this like subscription model. Um, so we had we had nothing and we weren't even called to preside. We recall the parent company concept which no one could spell and we knew we had to Rebrand so literally.08:36.18dgmgAnd did you did you join? did you join ads like Vp of marketing like you. It looks like you were you were kind of a proven marketing exec before this did they hire you with the premise of like you're going to do this and build the early team.08:47.70AmritaYeah, exactly exactly which is actually strangely uncommon in our world right? like you've you've seen this like a lot of I think founders and ceos they kind of don't fully understand how to leverage marketing so they end up hiring a lot of you know, sometimes early young in their career Junior marketers. Nothing wrong with that right? like you need that as well. But then that no one has that strategic oversight. So I think in some ways I mean maybe this is just because it's relevant to me but it seemed like the right approach for this kind of business I would more people would consider that. Ah.09:09.72dgmgYeah.09:19.75dgmgYeah, let's let's talk about that for a second actually just as a side note one of the most common questions that I get from startup founders that I work with is like hey or 1 off random things is like ah hey what? what should I look for in that first marketing hire and i.09:32.98AmritaThere.09:35.69dgmgAgree with you that there's usually I usually tell them like there's kind of camp a or camp b and I think there's pros and cons to to each which is like camp a is you hire the junior person you have a specific idea of what you want marketing to do right now and you as the Ceo have to sign up for being personally responsible for marketing and so like. The example that I have there is like at drift when I got hired at drift I wasn't vp of marketing Dave I was marketing manager Dave and David was the Ceo and he was like we want to start doing content and building our audience for drift I'm going to hire someone that can do content and I became vp over the years because like I rose through content I took on more and that was one path.10:06.84AmritaYeah. Um, nice Oh wow.10:14.48dgmgAnd while I was there. There was actually 3 vps that were hired over me right? and so and so it's like you could. There's multiple different paths. That's why I always tell people also like if you get hired over. It's not. It's not over for you and then you have this other scenario which is like maybe the company idea is a little bit more fleshed out and the founders like we want to go for.10:23.61AmritaYeah, Jeff.10:33.14dgmgYou know we want to go for umri like she she's been. She's already done this before but she's scrappy enough where like she can come in and build something and hire I think where companies fail at that stage is when the vp who they're bringing in like doesn't even know how to like log in to Hubspot or.10:46.76AmritaYeah.10:49.14dgmgCan't create a landing page on your own I think you have to be willing to roll up your sleeves and do some of the stuff.10:51.35AmritaHundred percent it's not for everybody. You know it's it's definitely not for everybody to get that job and then do the work I mean I think by the time I made my first hire it had been six months so I was doing everything from a to z for six months listen I I think. Think it's important for founders to look at generalists some founder like in your case, it sounds like David Cancelll had a very good idea of where to begin right? He said content marketing is where we're going to invest so I need a great content market or dough like that makes total sense. He had a very clear idea many founders and Ceos. Don't necessarily know that and frankly like it's hard to know that unless you've done this a few times like you the answer really is you need to experiment you just need to throw a bunch of shit at the wall and see what sticks and see where it's where it's more sufficient right? so.11:37.14dgmgWell, you need to do you need to learn by hiring you lean to learn by what you said you need by you'll learn by having no strategy and then hiring the junior people to do it is. That's when it just blows up where's like.. It's okay to have no strategy but you need to be like I'm hiring this person to do it and like we talked to her during the interview process and she already told us what marketing here is going to be here here. You go lady take the key take the keys.11:59.48AmritaYeah, yeah, when fact I mean I'll I'll just give this anecdote when they interviewed me there was like a step where like I had to do like a proper case like an assignment and basically the assignment was what would your marketing strategy be knowing what you know about the company which was like not that much right. And I said listen I don't know shit like I don't know anything. We don't even have a name. We don't have a.com domain. We don't have a website. We have nothing I have no idea so here's how I'm going to run these experiments I've been in b two b tech for a long time I think we emulate that model apply it here here are the 3 parts I would invest in this is the order in which I would do it. Would get money in the bank first first I would invest in performance marketing then I would go to content which is like long-term blah blah blah laid out on my thinking. This is the order in which I would do it like there's no right answer things would change. We're not going to stick to that. We're not going to be like this is the plan and this is all we're going to do like constantly looking at the data constantly doing customer interviews trying to figure that out. Ah, but I had a general plan and and I always like to this this is like an abstract model so it might be hard for people to fully understand but I always like to think of like exploit versus explore there are times in a company's life where you have to exploit the opportunity in front of you. And there's times in a company's life where you have to explore because you just really don't know and that's what a startup is like you don't have anything so you have to be in this full discovery exploration mode. You know you're like a you know Captain of a yacht going out, you're like Columbus trying to like find like where to go and what that looks like you have no idea.13:17.28dgmgM.13:34.34AmritaBut then when you find land. It's like okay now how do I exploit this opportunity. Oh great, let me establish your trade route. Let me bring more people here. Let me have like lots of mini boats. Whatever that's that's that's really how superside grew all we knew in the beginning was. Hey there's a need for this. We had done enough discovery information that we were like oh there's a need for this. We had a hypothesis for what the buyer Personas would look like but we didn't really know for sure. Um, are in our case, the beauty was that in some ways I was selling to myself so I could get there a lot quicker like one of our buyer personas is someone like myself. So there's just like a shortcut right? like that that was easy and then the third thing we did is yeah we just experimented like crazy and wherever we found the efficiency we invested there which is sometimes I think again that people get caught up in this trap of like. Oh we need to be folk. We need like all these like scalable systems and all and then yeah, there's time for that. But first you need a little bit of money in the bank to prove your hypothesis. Um, so so that we did with pay.14:32.40dgmgSo now this is great I think this will actually give us a way to get to the go-to-market so you did a bunch of things. 1 thing that you shared with me before is that since you all have grown from essentially 0 to 30000000 in revenue in 3 years which is fantastic. Good good work I know how hard that is ah and congratulations now you just have to double that and triple that um, let's let's maybe try to unpack that if if we were to just kind of bucket. You know some of the big levers and going from 0 to 30000000? What what would you say there and it could be.14:54.18AmritaYeah, exactly just.15:08.84dgmgHey we went all in on this go-to-market strategy and we did this approach or it could be some tool or platform that that you're using like what are what are some specifics in the how how superside went from 0 to 3000000015:16.34AmritaYeah, so at the at the foundational layer I'd say there's 2 things that we wanted to really dive in on one is this slightly more like product led approach versus a more classic sales led approach and by sales lead I don't mean that sales is going out in prospecting I Mean. Marketing still doing that and and lobbying really hot. You know, high intent leads that have actually booked a demo over the fence. You know we agreed that marketing would do all of that work and sales should really just focus on closing but that whole approach is like a classic sales led approach right? So we said? Okay, we have product Led We have classic sales lead. Let's do both in parallel and see what makes more sense and.15:56.30dgmgAnd so just just to pause on that and go in there for a second. So that meant that you could go to your website and sign up like if I had a design need I could go and get and fulfill. It self-service.16:09.29AmritaYep yep, exactly.16:09.87dgmgUp to a certain price point or if it was over a certain price point or need it would go to the In-house a field team sales team.16:12.87AmritaExactly yeah like a really Matt yeah and usually that never happened usually people wanted to try us out. Do like a couple of projects as we called it and then that would turn into subscription. It.16:21.33dgmgAnd what would the project be is it you your product goes and finds a freelancer for them.16:28.35AmritaNo, so our model is that we have employees so we have a bunch of creatives different talents different talent stack entirely. So we have animators you know motion designers illustrators people that are just like super specialized on landing pages and ui and that type of stuff all these different specialists. So. Usually what would happen in the plg model is people would come in and say hey I need urgent help to do this landing page for my you know, whatever launching vitamin water in Brazil right? like I need a landing page for that all our billboards and advertisings going to point to it get yada so we would be like cool and so that would go to like a ui person that was specialized in landing pages. But it was very I think the the challenge with that model is like you don't have a chance to understand that person's business like totally out of left field right? So for the creative you're trying to process that without that much time and it's like usually tends to be like fast turnaround type stuff.17:10.64dgmgRight.17:23.18AmritaBut we said you know what? let's let's just see how that turns out and some of those things did turn into subscriptions right? So that was great. We did that for I think almost a year and our data showed that only three percent of people that started single or multiple projects with us actually turned into a subscription.17:40.43dgmgYeah, so most of those people were probably people that have better been better served going to fiverr or something and finding a 1 ne-off quick project and that was the literal burning need like found you on Google and like I just need this done.17:42.48AmritaThey were. Um, yeah.17:53.50AmritaYeah, exactly exactly it was like I have a keynote at so ands so conference south by southwest and I just need like someone to help me spruce it up or whatever right? like there was like a lot of those instances where it wasn't an ongoing need so very quickly. Within the first year we realized. Okay, we only need to service those people and teams frankly that have like this like sort of conveyor belt of stuff that's coming down the Pike Kate again using that vitamin water example maybe you're launching vitamin water in Brazil but there's this whole campaign designed around it. And now you need like 57 different artifacts to produce to actually make that campaign come to life. That's where superside shines right? So then we were just like that's the first qualifying question we need to find out is like is this part of something larger and if the answer is no then sorry but like you're not for us. Oops sorry Dave your voice is cut out.18:46.65dgmgI Oh sorry I just was on mute. Um, so so then so basically but you would still take them if they had a burning need but the burning need would be like the hook to get them in and then it would only be a good fit longer term if they were like burning need has me in oh shit they did a good job I'm gonna.19:01.61AmritaExactly exactly exactly.19:02.20dgmgUpgrade now and hire them to do you know some recurring thing. Okay, and and where were of the people that were fine like how are people how did people know that superside existed where were they how were they finding out about you and signing up.19:12.47AmritaYeah, so it was mostly I'd say like the plg funnel was primarily powered by search both paid search and organic search which kind of makes sense because it's a high intent kind of value prop right? like you kind of.19:27.93dgmgUm, it was organic hard for you to crack because like the company's not that old I would figure that there's a ton of competition in with the companies that are in this space. How did you crack some of the Seo stuff.19:37.88AmritaYeah, and know it was very It was very difficult. It was definitely hard to crack thankfully by the time I'd come in. Um well I I don't know if I should be thankful because it was definitely It was like a lot of traffic but not the best quality traffic. But we had a bunch of blog posts that had been written by the Ceo and with the help of a bunch of freelancers in the past and they were all very designed capability focused so one would be about powerpoint Dax one would be about pitch decks. The other one would be about landing page design like so various and and we had kind of. Sufficient traffic like thirty forty thousand visitors a month kind of thing to those 4 block both? Yeah yeah, exactly they had been written about a year or nine months to twelve months20:11.20dgmgUm, and did he did they just they just wrote those posts and they started to rank at some point.20:23.50AmritaBefore I had joined and so they had had a chance to rank and they were very very comprehensive with templates and downloadable stuff and all of that stuff the right way to do it right? Like really solid pillar post but still not the kind of customer we were eventually looking for. So even today they're still active. We update them all the time. Bring in a lot of traffic but shit leads right? So that's that's the thing with search is that you don't have control over the targeting. It's it's really based on intent and the volume and it's a lot of it's a little bit out of your control.20:42.36dgmgRight.20:54.94dgmgRight? Well, you'd have control over the targeting if it was from a longer tail. It has longer tail. It's a much longer tail keyword but the volume is probably not going to be sufficient.21:07.31AmritaExactly? Yeah, so so I did have something to start off with right? So it was like organic search paid search mainly Lg funnel and ah.21:11.64dgmgKind of as a gift in the curse though. They're like here's all this traffic and then you got to be the one to tell them like well these people aren't going to buy.21:21.48AmritaYeah, yeah, exactly. But we didn't know what we were even selling right in the early days I was I was like that just give me everything um, but then in parallel like I said we said okay, we're gonna set up a more traditional funnel which is you know we we warm you up? Ah, however, we bring you to this. Landing page but eventually we'll bring you to this lighting page of um, hey do you do you want to explore this a bit more. Do you want to book a demo with sales just to explore this right now 15 minute we'd experimented with 15 minute call calling it talk to sales calling it request to demo I think I saw a post about that today on your Linkedin. Asking like what is the right call to action. We've experimented so much with that positioning and and found that requested demos the best combo of high intent and high quality. Um, but also bringing in sufficient number of people. You don't want to sacrifice volume and have the highest quality in the world. It's rather It's better that you capture them and then you see what you can do with that.22:17.12dgmgHave you experimented with anything like it seems like you have a cool a cool so you could have a cool sales process because like people are coming to you with actual specific projects in mind and so you're not just like well let me. Let's talk about it. You could have ah you could have a cool model and maybe you've tried this and failed but I'm just thinking out loud like where somebody actually gets to sign up for that specific thing and you could position what I'm trying to say is this is a good example in B Two B Sas where you can position the sales call as an actual good thing right? because you're like.22:48.64AmritaYes.22:51.66dgmgHey we can like let one of our experts like talk through your landing page and we can give you a recommendation of what we can do in the time frame as opposed to like just asking a bunch of qualifying questions and taking a bunch of like sales process nonsense. It seems like you can kind of get right to it.23:07.15AmritaYes, exactly the experience that we've curated is that you don't There's no qualification. You don't talk to some Junior Bdr and then they're qualified in or out or whatever it always goes straight to a sales rep the sales rep has been um. You know I wouldn't say that they're creatives themselves but they're so close to the creative process that they can in a very educated way tell you very quickly can we help you or do you actually need a different solution and that's that's usually a pretty positive thing and even though we don't close the sale.23:30.98dgmgNice.23:38.32AmritaAh, we find like a lot of those people do come back eventually for some other type of need which has been great. We've won actually a couple of our big accounts like that. That's ah, that's a various observation and one of the things we're trying to do now is like finding a way to like make that very term key and visual for people. Um, today. It isn't it's not maybe as visual as we would like it to be but it would be nice if it was almost like let's just do a Teardown right now like like let me bring in this expert and like let's just do it right now and that could be really really cool.24:10.70AmritaUm, but yeah, coming back to your original question so we had these 2 motions going in parallel and one of them was primarily driven by search the other one I'd say was primarily driven by ah paid social we we actually were able to crack Instagram in the first three months which was really amazing and we were just able to turn that into a total flight will and machine. Um, and so like a ton of ourites just came in through that and then it was just about figuring out. Okay, what is the talk track. Um, who do we focus on in terms of like where is the wind rate actually good. Where does the water flow more easily. et cetera et cetera as we discovered that we we just narrowed down.24:45.48dgmgUm, who who are you targeting? Um, ah, interesting to hear that Instagram works. So I think it makes sense given like the design component of this but like um, who are you targeting that this works so well on.24:58.56AmritaOh gosh I'd say in the early days we were targeting anybody that looked like a marketer or a creative or a underserved um business leader. So like you could be like you know sometimes banks have like. Vp of strategy. No idea what they do but like you own some some component and maybe it's like a combination of marketing and sales and some other operational stuff right? But there's a ton of in the enterprise world like there's a ton of these like sort of more I'd say like less defined roles.25:15.39dgmgSure.25:33.00AmritaAnd they all have a need for creative. But they're a little bit perhaps practical.25:35.65dgmgRight? I was actually just thinking like this is a fun marketing job. Um, well maybe it's not off the record I'm just kidding I don't know I don't know that no it seems like a fun because um, the you're selling something that is.25:53.42dgmgYou're not trying to prove that this is a need right? Every marketing team on the planet and creative team on the planet like it is a fact that they are doing. They're burnt out. They can't take on more work and if a marketer needs something in a pinch you you can't get it from your team internally so like as opposed to. Different companies trying to like create demand for a product doesn't seem like ah what you have to do is create demand. It's more about like how do you get into those conversations and just as I as I was asking a lot I like well what I would just thinking like I wonder was it like some ridiculous ad copy or offer or creative on Instagram and that kind of like actually no, this is like. You're fishing. You're fishing with great bait you're like we can fix we know you have this problem we can fix this problem let's talk and I just wanted to call that out for this podcast because I think so often we we beat our heads against like the tools and the tactics and the optimization where it's like it really is this. This is why the story is the strategy and the.26:33.60AmritaNow. Yeah yeah.26:49.20AmritaYet.26:51.60dgmgThe product piece of this matters so much and then the rest of the marketing becomes easier when you have the right fit.26:55.85AmritaYeah, no that That's ah, absolutely great point like we're not necessarily creating the Demand. We don't have the pressure to do that and these buyer Personas are very clear that the and the problem exists I think the thing with us though and this is why it might that the part of the. Job That's not super fun and easy I would say well I should say it's not super easy but parts of it are fun is that for us. We actually need to reframe that right. Everybody comes in with this like very standard frame of reference. It's like yup I have this need? Oh you're going to solve this like an agency or you're going to solve this like a freelancer marketplace. Right? Um, and and we're like no no, no, we're this like different model and here's where it makes sense and here's where it doesn't make sense and like that whole reframing is actually not that easy. Um there. There are customers that are good fits for us and there's absolutely customers that are going to be horrible fits and sometimes we still sell them and that's maybe not a good thing.27:30.66dgmgYep.27:50.53AmritaUm, so that that's where the marketing magic lies. It's not so much the bring in the horse to water. It's like getting.27:55.20dgmgYeah, ah, that's interesting. Yeah, it makes a ton of sense because like the need. It's a very um, impulsive needs- drivenven like thing like I need this right now. Yes I can pay 5 grand to get this website page done by with two weeks from now. But i. if if I'm the buyer I'm kind of only thinking about that I'm not I'm not coming to that conversation like prepared to talk about my next six months of creative needs.28:16.70AmritaExactly exactly you have no roadmap you just want to solve that need the other problem it creates for us is that our our marketing machine in the beginning was just tapping like just picking off the low-hanging fruit right? like as it should be like you just want to like get traction. You just want to get money in the bank. So we picked off a lot of the low hangging fruit and then there did come a time I'd say like maybe especially about a year ago where we were like okay wait a second I think we have picked up a lot picked off a lot of the low-hanging fruit and now we need to go to the people that don't have a. Ah, super clear understanding of their own second order pain points like maybe they're first order pain points. But if we actually want to start selling people beyond just their immediate need which by the way like you know ebbs and flows and might come come up sometimes and might not other times we can't be um. We can't be waiting around for people to recognize that need we need to go to them and show them why there's a better way and so to do that we have used some of the same you know frameworks and tropes that you and others like April Dunford have talked about but we've kind of tried to coin a term.29:13.77dgmgThis.29:26.39dgmgAh.29:26.88AmritaThat allows people to change their frame of reference. We've coined a term called cas creative as a service that is clearly different from an agency and clearly different from a Fiverr and so that allows people that allows us to be like people are like oh what What is this cast thing. What and why should i. You know, take note and and then then we can get into the story of why which is just an opportunity. We're hungry for.29:44.78dgmgYeah, so all god so this all stem from my initial question which is about asking about go- to market tell me this is wrong or right I feel like and by the way up the when I do these interviews I'm kind of like a'm just like ran writing random shit down trying to come back to different things. But. So my guess would be that from an ah acquisition and interest standpoint that stuff is easier for for you. You can you know between Seo and paid and I'm I'm sure you're doing events and content and traffic. But you have no problem like getting people to be interested in in this thing. It seems like a lot of the marketing.30:14.25AmritaYes.30:23.20dgmgDay-to-day challenge that you have is going to be around you know product product marketing muscle and bottom of the funnel types of activities is that right.30:28.72AmritaYeah, hundred percent yeah top of funnel acquisition not hard at all. It's it's really like changing people's minds and. Forcing people to be like wait a second the solution I have right now is is not great I need to think about something different that actually makes me more resilient and sets me up for scale which crazily a ton of marketers. Don't think about because they think of creative as someone else's problem.30:42.40dgmgUm, yeah, yeah.30:52.50dgmgRight? Alright,, let's talk about Let's talk about some of the things as a marketer and you that you and your team are doing to try to crack this problem because a lot of people listening actually would be thrilled to be in this position which is like I got a bucket full of people who are interested and we got to do a better job at getting them to buy So What. What are your kind of big rocks or initiatives in in marketing as much as you can share to to go after that. How? how are you approaching that.31:14.57AmritaYeah, so we talked about this like positioning thing that we're trying which is you know, really going to be like a campaign- led almost pseudocategory creation I Hate to use that word because it's a big word. We're not necessarily trying to create a category. But. Very clear positioning that this you know makes us distinct from the incumbent solutions that are out there and showcases I think like the the winning part of what we do? Well, that's one that's like a huge body of work and that.31:42.65dgmgBy the way category or not I think what you're doing is great which is like you're you're naming it like I think category or not is a separate discussion but you're like oh what does superside do instead of like well it's not you know, creative as a service. It's like everyone's going to understand that or at least to the point where they might.31:47.18AmritaUm, or it mean? yeah.31:58.28AmritaUm, yeah, exactly.32:02.11dgmgThey might say interesting tell me more. They don't have to understand all of it but they're just going to catch them I think it's a great hook. Yeah.32:04.35AmritaHundred percent and most people are like okay tell me more. That's exactly what we're looking for is like just give me the permission to tell you more right? I need to illustrat unpack this for you. So that's one huge body of work and everything that surrounds that the second thing is like we've really pivoted this year the team the32:10.87dgmgYeah, oh.32:22.10AmritaPretty sizable content marketing team that we have that focuses on everything from content creation to social to Community. We're pivoting that entire team to very much focus on middle and bottom of funnel but almost entirely on bottom of Funnel. So conversion-oriented content mind. Bending mind changing content like stuff that will actually make you be like wait a second like we want that we want people to like do the nodding and like going along and like you know to the end of it. They're like okay, cool I get it but we actually want people to stop dead in their tracks and be like wait a second. What? what are they talking about? Why do I need. I Need to pay attention to this I need to understand this better. Um, and we're gonna yeah ah.33:01.51dgmgSo what does that look like I love that so they're focusing their efforts on mind-bending bottom of the funnel content. So is that like an article and you just need an article. You just need a ah 2500 word killer.33:15.62AmritaI I wish which yeah though I wish I wish that was the antidote I mean it'd listen. It could be for some people I think a lot of a lot of people. You know that there's different ways to do this What we're trying to do is you know as an example.33:16.20dgmgWell-researched well-written objection smashing article like what is it.33:34.58Amrita1 of the programs we're standing up is you know customer led storytelling which sounds so obvious. But I think I think how we've gone about it in the past hasn't been the greatest. We've kind of unpacked like what the customer used us for and like what they got out of it. You know the classic like.33:38.94dgmgYeah.33:51.68AmritaChallenge solution. Whatever it was. You know result. But I think our approach now is going to be hey maybe it's a video. Maybe it's ah it's a webinar It's very bite sized. It's going to be like 10 minutes max and we're going to get the customer to actually elevated to like a higher level business problem. So it could be. Hey I'm ah I'm the director of performance marketing at so-and-so so big financial services company. Our Cac has been through the roof you know we we over the pandemic it kind of shot up and we were never able to bring it down now. It's like what the hell do I do right? It's like okay, there's all these like 5 different things we can do. But we realized very quickly that creative is at the at the center of all of this and so we have to just do like a lot more rapid testing blah blah blah blah and then you distill that problem down into like how you actually did that and superside is a player in that whole ecosystem I don't think we need to say oh my god you solved your big problem of reducing cac by using superside right? like that's ridiculous. Think that type of storytelling where our future customer can see themselves in the same shoes can be like oh my god I have that cac problem I need to be thinking about this formula this playbook this framework. Oh and by the way superside can help me with that. That's the kind of thing that we want to bring across so.35:04.44dgmgNice.35:06.28AmritaThat could come in many forms I'm just giving 1 example here, but that's that's an example of something.35:08.98dgmgI like this that you wrote you you wrote this on Linkedin about a month or so you set up writing a long-ass memo to the marketing team about 2023 content strategy and I can't wait to share it with the world by narrowing our focus and by narrowing our focus and favoring depth instead of breadth.35:14.87AmritaUm, oh yeah.35:26.28dgmgBreath will weather this capital scarcity environment and aiinuced content tsunami. Can you can you explain that? What do you mean by? ah for the for the people listen What do you mean by focusing on depth instead of breath I mean I think you you kind of just talk you talk through it. But do you have an example of maybe something that's in the works that you can.35:31.32AmritaYeah, fusa. Yeah, yeah.35:44.60dgmgCan share.35:44.95AmritaYeah, um, yeah, the du thing we kind of talked about I think it's also like I want to address that it also means saying no to things. So for example on the blog. We've been very search focused so we write content. To match up with what people are searching for obviously in correlation with the things that we care about that Venn diagram right? But we've but we're actually actively now going to move away from that this year and and really kind of go to like the areas that require. I'd say like significant um, it's it's the kind of thing that teases out like the wheel at the core selfish desires and and problems that our buyers face an example of that is so a very a very simple one I mean there's a bunch.36:31.30dgmgUm.36:34.65AmritaBut but a very simple one is a lot of the creative directors. We chat with and our customers, especially when they talk about their selfish desires. It's often something like this. It's often. My team is demoralized I need to help them not be demoralized. You know. Um, and and that's different than saying I need to optimize my team or I need to do more I need to crank out more creative like it's not really about that. Those are all the rational needs and stuff right? But it's like ultimately where they're hurting is like their team is demoralized. So How do we tell the stories.37:02.42dgmgYeah, yeah.37:09.70AmritaThat allow us to position superside along that selfish desire and that selfish pain.37:13.82dgmgUm, well, it's interesting you you you also can I think this this is another kind of meta lesson in this which is like you're also positioning is very much a moving target and at this time in business right now and in the world that you sell to something that. Most companies care about is like they're getting crushed from a budget standpoint right? They're they're cutting budgets they're having to do layoffs and then to your point about team morale and this and that and so I think it's smart to like okay, well let's use those factors. We. I do see many companies that don't ever change their positioning because it's it's got to be relevant and that could change next quarter right? It's like six months from now everything you know comes back and then it's going to be a different a different conversation that you could spin your story that way and so I think it's it's just cool to hear you do that and I I think that's an underrated ingredient of positioning that it. Don't be afraid to change it I think we don't like to change it because it takes so many meetings and people involved which is like make the case for not having to do that who leads that effort this creative as a service thing. Can you talk about how that came to light inside of the company.38:06.75AmritaYeah.38:18.30AmritaYeah I would say like we didn't really have anybody actively thinking about it. Um, the only thing that the Ceo and I guess agreed on is that. We were tired of people referring to us as an agency or sometimes they would call us agency 2.0 which was even worse because I was like two point zero I was like we're well beyond tu anyway, ah so so we experimented with um, giving our platform that powers our service. A name we thought that if we brought the platform to the forefront and really talked about the tech and how it's purpose built and but but but but but that that would work so we experimented with that we called it. A design ops platform for various reasons which actually part of it actually worked out really well because it entrenched us with a lot of design ops professionals which is a new.39:05.34dgmgUm.39:06.71AmritaThat you know a lot of big creative teams invest in um, you know Airbnb has an entire department called the design opbs team which is separate than the design team. So that experiment failed because I think. I think it's still only talked about a portion of what we did and not the entire model and the movement that we were trying to create around it. Um, so we we knew that that wasn't quite working the way we imagined. And we knew we that we needed to ah you know come up with a new term. But then we also weren't sure like if it goes into category creation territory and there was one day where I think we were just battering around stuff on the marketing leadership team and. And I and I think I I just said like it would be nice to kind of like hitch a ride on this like Sas bandwagon I was like no if if we were like creative but for Sas but like or like creative like for Sas and I think it just like we just like spitballed it like it just came out. You know we were just we were just trying to like be.40:05.78dgmgYeah.40:08.28AmritaYou know, synonymous with something that people understood that was the insight that it had to be synonymous with something that our audience which is highly concentrated in tech internet and gaming that they understood and and Sas just kept coming to mind and I think we just came up with it and I think we just. Pitched it around inside the company people didn't hate it and yeah people didn't hate it and actually there was like a very fortuitous event. We were chatting with um Jason Calacanis about I can't remember what the call was about it was me.40:29.90dgmgThat's how it always starts I didn't hate it.40:42.80AmritaHead of performance marketing and Jason and like you know he's he's a big deal. He's been around the block he he knows everything about saas businesses startups who name it and he said and Rita tell me what superside is and like I and I had like we think we had like 5 minutes with him so it was like very crunch time right? and I was just like but but I think it was.41:00.20dgmgUm, what was the call for.41:02.44AmritaFor um I think we were trying to advertise on his podcast I think yeah and I I think sometimes he joins those calls if it's interesting for him I don't think normally he leaves it up to like dominions but he just he just showed up and we were like oh wait a second so because we had just talked about this cast.41:05.69dgmgGot it? okay.41:11.94dgmgYeah.41:20.17AmritaI ended up like blurting it out saying like you know superside is like creative as a service like we're like creative sa for you know, Baba and and he just loved that so much and he said listen when I do oh yeah, that's right, it was for his podcast advertising. He said when I when I do these plugs for companies. He's like I like to record it in my own voice I don't like to follow a script so you tell me what this company is and I'll just do it and then when he finally did record it and we saw the output of it. He had just positioned cast and used it so beautifully in a sentence I was like oh my god this is it.41:50.70dgmgUm, isn't that that's I love that I mean that's that's why that's a perfect example of why like a make a decision pick a name and go start to tell people what you are because eventually like the market tells it back to you and a lot of the positioning work is like.41:52.83AmritaAh, key did our marketing for us.42:07.55dgmgIt's really hard when you're just sitting there either in a room with a team or you have the open Google doc and you're just like trying to write it. It has to be ah has to come organically and so like boom you got a name for it. You put it in some creative. They actually tell it back to you differently I mean I've seen this multiple times it could be ah the way a customer. The way a customer responds to an email and they're like hey I've always thought of you as this and that email gets screenshotted and sent around or like your Ceo meets with a customer and the customer says it this and the Ceo texts you and's like listen how she described us and you're like ah that's it and I think you have to move fast to open yourself. You have to like make a commitment to then move.42:26.39AmritaX Pocket. Yes.42:43.35dgmgThen you can you know, get get some data on that really quickly Now you're like Boom This guy said it a he liked it and he said it better than us I bet if I looked over your superside copy copy somewhere. You got you've now taken that and turned it into copy that you're going to use at some point.42:57.17AmritaYeah, yeah, 100%. So like now we're using it everywhere but that was just like an early proof point right? that was like okay someone else outside our company. Got it right away within like 30 seconds and like set it back to us in a better way and let's just like float it and try to use it and I think what the Ceo also heard. Um, how Jason said it like I think it kind of sunk in better with him as well and you know already people didn't hate it and now we were just like okay, there's something here and then we just started slowly testing it. We hired our first product marketing hire. Um. In the fall of last year and he just talked to a bunch of customers in his first three months on the job and just like use that term nonstop with every customer and good response right? Like that was just like okay check like customers aren't hating it. They get it. Most people are like okay, interesting tell me more. And granted these are people that know us and have already purchased but those are the best people to talk to to see if it's like actually like jiving with their impression of us.43:58.16dgmgI love that and I like that the big lesson is not some tool or some channel. It's this overall story of getting the company aligned around creative. Um, as a service. Okay, what's what's changed with where are you placing bets in marketing and in 2023 and how is that. Different than maybe it was last year or the year before what's what's some new stuff that you're doing.44:15.72AmritaYeah, yeah, so the 2 things we already talked about this cast thing and then pivoting all of content marketing and then I guess the third thing is like we're heavily leaning into expansion of existing accounts I think this is like a known thing like if you sell to enterprise. At some point all of your big bucks are actually going to start coming from existing customers because why not they already know you you have a champion inside so we're just turning that into playbook that's a huge focus of the company this year so marketing sales or tag teaming it. We're figuring that out. Yeah, so.44:44.93dgmgWhat what role do you think marketing will play in that.44:50.65AmritaInterestingly I think we have a lot to do with accounts selection. Um I mean I could say on this podcast that I think our first the first time at this rodeo was not fruitful and I think it started at just like not knowing who our best fit customers are and how to expand within them you you even though it's expansion. You you can't go about it. Willy -nilly you still have to kind of go with customers that fit your ideal buy our profile etc. The 1 thing that we look at very carefully for example, in case, this is a clue to other people is what what is the level of respect. And accountability that our buyer personas have inside the company if you're a company that does not respect design or the creative team for example, chances are they don't have a lot of leeway and chances are they don't make their own decisions so to go there and just try to sell to them to the creative director there or the head of design there. Pointless so we try to think about that like you could call it whatever right? but like importance or respect or or amount of clout.45:53.78dgmgHow do you? How do you get to? that is is like a judgment call by the by the sales rep or something. How do you know that.46:00.46AmritaYeah, no, we we look at it industry by industry and we've split um Industries we've actually said hey generally you know tech companies grow and understand marketing and creative to a large extent. Not every company out there but generally right.46:11.40dgmgUm, what's the industry that doesn't bank banking.46:16.64AmritaI would say well in financial services I would say there's like a whole smattering of stuff so crypto and fintech obviously huge on the list right? Like they they love it. They get it I would say then it starts to taper off strangely in insurance. And um, in insurance in particular and lending also to some degree they understand marketing and creative particularly from an advertising lens not maybe holistic marketing. But I'd say like from an advertising lens for sure. Banks actually have so much regulatory stuff and they have so many hoops to jump through that even if they get it. They can't really do that much about it. So Actually that's not an audience for us so we split financial services for example into these like subcategories where we think we can win.46:59.56dgmgSo.47:06.75AmritaAnd we only go after those categories similar in media and entertainment like you'd be surprised like of course netflix Walt Disney you know master class. All these guys get it. They're super into it. But then there's traditional media that just isn't there and then you you just you know you just have to go around them so that's. The account selection part is like really important. Um, but really after that the main role that marketing can play in. It is like really figuring out sort sort of more like customized messaging and creative. You know it's it's roughly all the same story but there's like a level of personalization that needs to happen. Um, so we try to do that and and and more recently this year this is a new bet. We're actually going to be doing custom things like brand new content like it could be an ebook or a guide or it could be a webinar that we specifically run for that account around a stop in a one-off way topic that.47:55.20dgmgAs a and and a 1 ne-off way wow so marketing might write a dedicated piece of content to close 1 customer. That's awesome.48:00.99AmritaAbout.48:04.62AmritaYeah, exactly. But it could be like for us the ltv on an enterprise customer is gigantic. So let's say we spend even $5000 on that dedicated piece of content that's going to yield like to 400000 right so that's48:15.81dgmgRight? And it is that how you think of your revenue plan is it from a target account standpoint now.48:22.33AmritaYeah, so on expansion. Yeah, it's like basically we go through it account by count figure out hey what are the tier one accounts and then what here are the accounts that we're going to put a shit ton of effort into like from a marketing lens. And here are the ones that will still like do expansion playbook stuff with them. We have like an army of bdrs Now that's going to like outreach all the subsidiaries and all of that stuff. But they're We're not going to do like the custom things that we've talked about for the tier One accounts. So That's a huge that's a huge investment and a totally different playbook than what superside has done in the past.48:47.34dgmgSo cut.48:55.15AmritaWe've been very obsessed with payback period and efficiency in general in the past and I think for the first time this year ironically in a resection we have gitchched that for the first time to try to invest in these high cost activities.49:07.85dgmgUm, and do you have the freedom to do that because things are going well or is this just a bet that you're making.49:21.66AmritaUm, her I mean it is bad in terms of like how it comes about I would say I'm just thinking out loud that this is a very good question I think we just have so much. Alignment and the company around expansion that anything we can do to move the needle on expansion in particular, we kind of you know what this that I'm thinking out out loud in real time. But maybe I'm I'm obsessed with like modeling everything. Even if it's like back of the napkin like just like what is what is this. Potentially going to yield what is this potentially going to cost and we didn't actually do that for this particular Playbook. So now I'm thinking maybe I should go back to the drawing little bit.50:00.67dgmgWell I was wondering if maybe you know it's also possible that like because it's very specific and that and you and the focus is large revenue you have to take more kind of creative. It's not such a channel that needs to be under the roi microscope because. The acv is going to be hopefully so much more than even if you were yeah sure we don't need to measure the exact roi on this $5000 guide that we wrote because we're trying to close a half million dollar customer and it's part of that campaign. Maybe I don't know I'm not at your well the reason I was but the reason I was asking was um.50:31.21AmritaRight? Yeah, no, that's that's a good.50:37.91dgmgJust interesting to hear somebody say that we're in in a world where a lot of vp marketing are under a tighter microscope to no to no payback period. You've done it historically historically and here's a new channel and you you don't have to do it.50:51.51AmritaYeah I mean no one's asked for it and everyone knows what the plan is and everyone's like gungho and go for it. So I guess we just never did it? Um, but yeah like I think the realization across the whole company is that if we want to move upstream.50:54.28dgmgUm, yeah.51:04.87AmritaAlmost exclusively sell to enterprise that that requires a different go to slightly slightly different. Go-to Markete and it probably means more upfront cost. That's that's what I've realized from talking to people that I've just nailed Enterprise. So yeah, well.51:16.10dgmgYeah, that makes sense.51:19.96AmritaWe'll we'll never shed our efficiency roots like we'll always be obsessed with the ltvcac ratio and looking at payback period and all of that stuff. But you know I think certain risks are totally appropriate. I would also say like the risk appetite or a company is definitely higher than most other companies I've I've worked for a lot of b two b saas companies and yeah, things just get things get approved a lot more easily here and sometimes you don't even have to go get the approval because. You know our Ceo encourages local decision making.51:51.24dgmgThat's great I mean that that makes a huge difference when you can just sure let's go. Let's go test it and let's go try it as supposed to like we have to make this huge business case just to do this.51:58.53AmritaYeah, yeah, and you know what? sometimes it's the Ceo that's coming up coming to us without his ideas like he's the best. He's like a mark. He's like a half economist half marketer at heart which is like the perfect combo because he's prudent but at the same time like he's like crazy and like has all these lack of ideas which is great. You.52:12.54dgmgYeah, yeah I meant that that that's that's fun I mean that that's that to me is like the ideal marketing job is when you have creative you know visionary type ideas coming to you and sometimes your job is to actually filter that you know you got to figure out. Okay, well.52:18.11AmritaAh, this is my.52:31.66dgmgJust said this now this is the complete opposite but which one which one should we do you know there's there's a lot of guessing at the same time. Um, okay I Rita this was great I I feel like I could have talk to you I could talk to you for 3 hours but I have to we got wrap up. Um I'd love to have you back on in the future for for a followup I think you're.52:34.43AmritaYeah, yes.52:43.45AmritaWith method.52:49.36dgmgAh, great to talk to a great interviewer a great person to have on this. You've interviewed me, you're great at that and it was fun to have you on this end. So I'd love to have you back at some point because there's a bunch of questions that I didn't get to but people can check you out on Linkedin we will put your Linkedin there they can go and check out superside superside dot com.52:54.93AmritaI Think it's a might.53:07.51dgmgAh, and if you liked this episode send amrita dm on Linkedin and be like hey I heard you on exit 5 and you're great and I hope more people find out about you and the company because it's been a pleasure to talk to you all right? I'll see you later I'll talk to you soon bye bye.53:18.98AmritaLikewise Thank you so much for having me talk to you soon.

FINITE: Marketing in B2B Technology Podcast
#119 - To Attribute, or Not to Attribute with Amrita Mathur, VP Marketing at Superside

FINITE: Marketing in B2B Technology Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2023 26:09


In this episode of the FINITE Podcast we hear from Amrita Mathur, VP Marketing at Superside. Amrita shares her perspectives on a topic all B2B marketers love to talk about - attribution! And it's fair to say that Amrita's perspective may offer a different and potentially refreshing change from the norm. Maybe investing so much time and energy in attribution isn't worth it after all...! The FINITE Podcast is made possible by:- Clarity: the fast growing, global marketing communications agency working with leading technology brands.- And 93x, the leading digital marketing agency for B2B technology, software & SaaS businesses delivering SEO & PPC strategy that drives leads, pipeline & revenue growth.Support the show

The Agile World with Greg Kihlstrom
#321: Successful design processes with Amrita Mathur, VP of Marketing at Superside

The Agile World with Greg Kihlstrom

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2023 34:20


Today we're going to talk about successful design and the process used to get great design results. To help me discuss this topic, I'd like to welcome Amrita Mathur, VP of Marketing at Superside. RESOURCES The Agile Brand podcast website: https://www.gregkihlstrom.com/theagilebrandpodcast Sign up for The Agile Brand newsletter here: https://www.gregkihlstrom.com Get the latest news and updates on LinkedIn here: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-agile-brand/ For consulting on marketing technology, customer experience, and more visit GK5A: https://www.gk5a.com The Agile Brand podcast is brought to you by TEKsystems. Learn more here: https://www.teksystems.com/versionnextnow The Agile Brand is produced by Missing Link—a Latina-owned strategy-driven, creatively fueled production co-op. From ideation to creation, they craft human connections through intelligent, engaging and informative content. https://www.missinglink.company If you are struggling with projects, sign up for Basecamp. Their pricing is simple and they give you ALL their features in a single plan. No upsells. No upgrades. Go to basecamp.com/agile and try Basecamp for free. No credit card required and cancel anytime. Thank you, Basecamp for sponsoring this episode!

The Agile Brand with Greg Kihlstrom
#321: Successful design processes with Amrita Mathur, VP of Marketing at Superside

The Agile Brand with Greg Kihlstrom

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2023 34:20


Today we're going to talk about successful design and the process used to get great design results. To help me discuss this topic, I'd like to welcome Amrita Mathur, VP of Marketing at Superside. RESOURCES The Agile Brand podcast website: https://www.gregkihlstrom.com/theagilebrandpodcast Sign up for The Agile Brand newsletter here: https://www.gregkihlstrom.com Get the latest news and updates on LinkedIn here: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-agile-brand/ For consulting on marketing technology, customer experience, and more visit GK5A: https://www.gk5a.com The Agile Brand podcast is brought to you by TEKsystems. Learn more here: https://www.teksystems.com/versionnextnow The Agile Brand is produced by Missing Link—a Latina-owned strategy-driven, creatively fueled production co-op. From ideation to creation, they craft human connections through intelligent, engaging and informative content. https://www.missinglink.company If you are struggling with projects, sign up for Basecamp. Their pricing is simple and they give you ALL their features in a single plan. No upsells. No upgrades. Go to basecamp.com/agile and try Basecamp for free. No credit card required and cancel anytime. Thank you, Basecamp for sponsoring this episode!

Modern Day Marketer
To Attribute, or Not to Attribute? with Amrita Mathur of Superside

Modern Day Marketer

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2022 33:21


To attribute or not to attribute? That is the question. Amrita Mathur is the Vice President of Marketing at Superside, a subscription design service for enterprises and scale-ups. Superside has seen tremendous growth and is on track to double their earnings this year. She says that having a startup mentality, being open to experimenting, and not obsessing over attribution has led to their success.0:00 Intro1:30 Conversation7:10 Customer calls9:14 Design-ops11:05 Who gets credit19:00 Building community22:48 Startup mentality25:15 Attribution30:00 Advice32:48 OutroJoin The JuiceFollow The Juice:| Website | Blog | Twitter | LinkedInFollow Amrita: | LinkedIn | Twitter | SupersideFollow Brett:| Twitter | LinkedIn 

This Anthro Life
Designing the Future of Global, Remote Work with Fredrik Thomassen

This Anthro Life

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2022 47:37


Show NotesBuilding a New Labor Market for Global Design Talent with Fredrik ThomassenMore and more businesses are switching to remote work amid the COVID-19 pandemic. But one startup was ahead of the curve, having been 100% remote since its inception in 2016.That startup is Superside, a fully distributed design operations platform that seeks to support a global remote workforce. By introducing a remote work policy, Superside gives designers around the world better income opportunities, regardless of their gender, race, or location.In this episode, host Adam Gamwell speaks with Superside CEO and Founder Fredrik Thomassen about remote work and how the pandemic accelerated its adoption worldwide, the promise and challenge of fully online organizations, the inclusion of minorities in the workforce as a global business imperative, and more.Show Highlights:[04:10] How Fredrik Thomassen started Superside[07:37] On the power of remote work and the opportunities it opens up[14:23] How remote work can improve workforce diversity[20:07] Issues with traditional hiring practices[24:50] On the importance of taking candidates' values into account in the hiring process [29:19] How Superside keeps its employees happy and fulfilled[35:44] Why management is not as complicated as it is made out to be[37:55] Why Superside as an organization values truth-seeking[45:54] Closing statementsLinks and Resources:Check out SupersideSubscribe to This Anthro Life's newsletterConnect with Adam via emailConnect with Adam via the This Anthro Life website

Sales and Marketing Built Freedom
Ex-Journalist Founds $40 Million SaaS Company in just 7 years - Speaking with CEO and founder of Superside Fredrik Thomassen

Sales and Marketing Built Freedom

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2022 27:32


Superside is a tech-enabled design company that is revolutionising design at scale for brands such as Amazon, Meta, Spotify and Coinbase! The founder and CEO, Fredrik Thomassen joins Ryan in this episode to share the steps behind creating a $40 million SaaS company in just 7 years. KEY TAKEAWAYS Superside primarily uses inbound content marketing as their go-to strategy, following up on the leads with SDRs or direct calls. Design teams can frequently slow down marketing. Superside is a solution that allows a company to get direct access to a dedicated team of top-rated creatives from all over the world. Fredrik and his team were struggling to get funding for Superside but once they were fully transparent, they managed to get investors on board. Fredrik believes it's important to engage the investors with simple presentations and be fully truthful in how you represent the company. Realising that their company was heavily about engaging people, Fredrik knew he would need to find the very best designers and creatives in the world to be on his team. An experienced marketing and sales team is one of the main reasons Superside was able to grow and scale to where they are now. A key strategy for Superside is to get the best product-market fit with their clients, doing more for those who fit the best with what they do. BEST MOMENTS  “We use a pretty traditional b2b SaaS sales model” “Doing more for less people, for less companies, has been our winning formula” “It's a bottom-up plan and expand strategy which is very different [to usual agencies]” Do You Want The Closing Secrets That Helped Close Over $125 Million in New Business for Free?"  Grab them HERE: https://www.whalesellingsystem.com/closingsecrets Ryan Staley Founder and CEO Whale Boss 312-848-7443 ryan@whalesellingsystem.com www.ryanstaley.io  EPISODE RESOURCES https://www.linkedin.com/in/fredrikthomassen/?originalSubdomain=no ABOUT THE SHOW How do you grow like a VC-backed company without taking on investors? Do you want to create a lifestyle business, a performance business or an empire? How do you scale to an exit without losing your freedom?Join the host Ryan Staley every Monday and Wednesday for conversations with the brightest and best Founders, CEO and Entrepreneurs to crack the code on repeatable revenue growth, leadership, lifestyle freedom and mindset.This show has featured Startup and Billion Dollar Founders, Best Selling Authors, and the World's Top Sales and Marketing Experts like Terry Jones (Founder of Travelocity and Chairman of Kayak), Andrew Gazdecki (Founder of Micro Acquire), Harpal Sambhi (Founder of Magical with a previous exit to Linkedin) and many more. This is where Scaling and Sales are made simple in 25 minutes or less.    Saas, Saas growth, Scale, Business Growth, B2b Saas, Saas Sales, Enterprise Saas, Business growth strategy, founder, ceo: https://www.whalesellingsystem.com/closingsecretsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Collaboration Superpowers Podcast
310 - The Future Of Work Is Flexible And Happy

The Collaboration Superpowers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2022 43:13


FREDRIK THOMASSEN is the CEO and Founder of Superside, a fully remote creative service company. Fredrik founded Superside to create more equal economic opportunities globally with the world's creative talent. He scaled his company of 750+ people in 80 countries - with a focus on cultivating an organization of kindness and truth seeking. In this interview, we discuss why the future of work is not freelance marketplaces or gig economy platfroms, but rather, solid jobs that are flexible, remote, and happy.   For more stories of remote teams doing great things visit https://www.collaborationsuperpowers.com

The Collaboration Superpowers Podcast
310 - The Future Of Work Is Flexible And Happy

The Collaboration Superpowers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2022 41:14


FREDRIK THOMASSEN is the CEO and Founder of Superside, a fully remote creative service company. Fredrik founded Superside to create more equal economic opportunities globally with the world's creative talent. He scaled his company of 750+ people in 80 countries - with a focus on cultivating an organization of kindness and truth seeking. In this interview, we discuss why the future of work is not freelance marketplaces or gig economy platfroms, but rather, solid jobs that are flexible, remote, and happy.   For more stories of remote teams doing great things visit https://www.collaborationsuperpowers.com

Brand Builders Lab
237. Taking a subscription business from $0 - $8m in 12 months with Amrita Mathur VP of Marketing, Superside

Brand Builders Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2022 57:16


Today I'm chatting with VP of Marketing, Amrita Mathur about how she grew Superside by $8m in the first year.   When Amrita Mathur joined Superside as their first marketing hire in 2019 there was no product, no platform and no recurring revenue. No stranger to being called in when companies are at a strategic inflection point with their growth strategy, she did what she's spent a career in B2B marketing learning how to do: implemented a marketing-led growth strategy that translated into $8 million in subscription revenue in the first year and 400% year-over-year growth since then. Now as VP of Marketing, her team is revolutionizing design at scale for ambitious brands like Amazon, Meta, Shopify and Coinbase.   In this episode we talk about: What a marketing lead growth strategy looks like When you're starting from zero where do you start? When she looks back at growing superside to $8m in subscription revenue - what do you think were the most effective strategies? (paid V organic) For subscription-based businesses what has changed and what do they need to be aware of?   Connect with Amrita: www.superside.com https://twitter.com/SupersideHQ https://twitter.com/AmritaMathur   www.suzchadwick.com/pod237   To find out more head to: www.suzchadwick.com http://www.suzchadwick.com/bba  http://www.suzchadwick.com/amplify 

Early Days with Tyler Norwood
Fredrik Thomassen—Superside

Early Days with Tyler Norwood

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2022 51:01


Fredrik Thomassen is the founder and CEO of Superside, a fully distributed and remote design operations platform. Fredrik explains how he and his co-founder got Superside off the ground by manually hacking together an MVP without any tech or teammates who knew how to code. We also hear Fredrik's insights on prioritizing his scope of product offerings, fundraising, and running a truly global company.Follow Fredrik on Twitter.Book recommendations from Fredrik: Hunger by Knut HamsunTo learn more about Antler and how you can start your next company with us please come see us at antler.co

Chief Executive Connector
Ep 189 | How He Built a Multi-City Community From Scratch w/ Francisco Arizmendi

Chief Executive Connector

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2022 70:30


By now, you probably understand that some sort of combination of live events and content can build a powerful community, and you know who you want to help, but how do you plan it, execute it, and grow it from scratch?That's exactly what Francisco Arizmendi did for Freshbooks, and it completely changed his career.As he starts a new role to build ANOTHER great community for Superside, he's here to share how he hit his first home run and how he's going to do it again!He shared:- how he got started from zero with a small budget- why he was able to scale it across North America through live event- what mistakes he made early on that has changed his playbook - and much more!From the moment I met Francisco in 2019, I was in awe of what he was doing, and have been DYING to have him on the show to talk about it.  It's finally happened!  Francisco Arizmendi is a community builder, podcaster, content creative, and event producer. His passion lies in connecting humans and companies in authentic and meaningful ways. He is the co-creator of FreshBooks' global event series #imakealiving and the I Make a Living Podcast (Apple and Stitcher's top 10 Business Podcast). He has produced content, video, webinars, etc. for FreshBooks and Tribe. Recently, Francisco joined the team at Superside, where he will launch a brand new community space for marketers, designers, and creatives in 2022.Come be a part of the show!https://tinyurl.com/B2BCBSeason5Connect with Francisco!On his LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/franciscoarizmendi/ Connect with ME!In person at:FINCON in Orlando 9/07-10CMX Summit Thrive in the San Fracisco area 9/13-15Bad Ass Business Summit in Dallas/Ft Worth 9/22-24Jesse Lane Conference in Jacksonville 10/22-23Online at:LinkedIn or Instagram.Learn to produce internet talk shows and build your own Relationship Flywheel. Find out more about the Bootcamp HERE.Or shoot me an email at youshould@connectwithpablo.com with the "Heard B2B's Francisco Arizmendi" in subject.This that's a genius email address?  Me too, but I didn't come up with it.  It was the idea of my good friend, and super talented web designer, Nathan Ruff.If you want your website redone, updated, and managed with unlimited updates for just $250/month (CRAZY GOOD DEAL RIGHT??), go to Manage My Website and hookup with one of the smartest, most talented guys I've ever met- THE Nathan Ruff.WE HAVE SHOW NOTES NOW THANKS TO OUR COMMUNITY MEMBER, DEB SCHELL!How He Built a Multi-City Community From Scratch w/ Francisco ArizmendiHow his community journey started: Customer outreach to build relationships and found that they wanted a space to intentionally connect and continue the conversations after meetings The first event was to bring entrepreneurs into space, called “I make a living”  Check out the rest HERESupport the show

Marketing Over Coffee Marketing Podcast

In this Marketing Over Coffee: In this episode learn about Gladwell on Virtual Work, Multimodal AI, Yacht Rock, and more! Direct Link to File Brought to you by our sponsors: LinkedIn and Superside! Chris at MAICON Multi-Modal – Type in text, get a photo. SEC in on Rally, crackdown on digital currencies might be illegal […] The post More than Meets the Eye appeared first on Marketing Over Coffee Marketing Podcast.

Marketing Over Coffee Marketing Podcast
Now with More Accessibility and Less Like The Gas Guys

Marketing Over Coffee Marketing Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2022


In this Marketing Over Coffee: In this episode learn about Accessibility, Disinformation, Skimpflation and more! Direct Link to File Brought to you by our sponsors: Superside and LinkedIn Now in streaming video! Accessibility – Search Console, W3C, A11y, IBM’s Able 7:20 You need a video or design ad for your next campaign, and you need […] The post Now with More Accessibility and Less Like The Gas Guys appeared first on Marketing Over Coffee Marketing Podcast.

Marketing Over Coffee Marketing Podcast
Now with More Escape Rooms and Jonathan Murrell!

Marketing Over Coffee Marketing Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2022


In this Marketing Over Coffee: In this episode learn about Escape Games, Virtual Events, and more from Jonathan Murrell, co-founder and CMO of The Escape Game! Direct Link to File Brought to you by our sponsors: Superside and Wix! Learn more at: TheEscapeGame.com and TeamBuildingHub.com Transitioning Escape Rooms to Virtual for Disney, Amazon, the San Francisco […] The post Now with More Escape Rooms and Jonathan Murrell! appeared first on Marketing Over Coffee Marketing Podcast.

Marketing Over Coffee Marketing Podcast

In this Marketing Over Coffee: In this episode learn about CoTweets, Missing Search Console Terms, Gear and more! Direct Link to File Brought to you by our sponsors: Superside and Trust Insights Twitter deal not happening? Twitter testing CoTweets Gen Z vs. Millenials 8:06 You need a video or design ad for your next campaign, […] The post Now with More Rodecaster appeared first on Marketing Over Coffee Marketing Podcast.

Marketing Over Coffee Marketing Podcast
Seth Godin on The Carbon Almanac

Marketing Over Coffee Marketing Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2022


In this Marketing Over Coffee: In this episode learn about Seth’s Collaborative Project on Climate Change Direct Link to File Brought to you by our sponsors: Superside and Zapier Get the Carbon Almanac here More than 300 people from 40 countries to create a 97,000 word compendium Stop arguing with the people in the back […] The post Seth Godin on The Carbon Almanac appeared first on Marketing Over Coffee Marketing Podcast.

On Brand with Nick Westergaard
The Power of Specificity with Greg Monaco

On Brand with Nick Westergaard

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022 33:16


Greg Monaco is a brand and story coach who strategizes with authors, entrepreneurs, executives, and artists to build compelling brands. In a career that's included agency work with Fortune 500 brands and founding a global brand consultancy, Greg understands how specificity is critical in helping brands tell standout stories. We discussed all of this and more this week on the On Brand Podcast. About Greg Monaco As a Brand and Story Coach, Greg Monaco strategizes with authors, entrepreneurs, executives, and artists to refine their voice, build their presence, and attract dream opportunities. Greg's online network, Fearless Brands, is helping people in their pursuit of getting paid to do the work they love. Previously, Greg was a Founding Partner of Monaco Lange, an independent global brand consultancy, and was a Senior Copywriter at Ogilvy helping tell stories for clients like Girl Scouts of the USA, American Express, AT&T Wireless, and IBM to name a few. Beyond branding, Greg has enjoyed many pursuits as an architectural photographer, professional soccer player, and filmmaker. He lives in Connecticut with his wife, Jill, and their three children Aidan, Cameron, and Kylie.   On Brand Is Sponsored by Superside Superside is your one-stop shop for good design. Scale up your brand's design output the smart way with Superside's subscription service combining top-tier design talent and a streamlined platform for sharing and collaborating. Plus, you can get $3,000 worth of value just for listening to OnBrand! Sign up for an annual subscription and get one month FREE. Learn more now.   Episode Highlights From professional soccer to professional brand builder? “I started out pretty aimless after college,” Greg notes. While his varied career included a stint as a professional soccer player, he was always drawn to the creative arts—which led him to brand building. And in the agency world, creative work starts with a brief. The difference between a good brief and a bad brief. I liken briefs to the baton in a relay. At Ogilvy, Greg learned the difference between a good brief and a poor brief. I asked him to share and he answered with one word: “Specificity.” How to avoid generic brand storytelling. “You know you have a problem when you read the brief and it has a primary audience, a secondary audience, and a tertiary audience. When you try to do all of that your storytelling gets more generic.” You can't be everything to everyone all the time. That's why Greg prefers going beyond the idea of a target audience and straight to the bullseye. What brand has made Greg smile recently? As the parent of two kids heading to college, Greg shared how he was fascinated by the branding in higher ed. Specifically, how his kids connected with the brands that the various colleges and universities projected. To learn more, go to letsgomonaco.com.   As We Wrap … Listen and subscribe at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon/Audible, Google Play, Stitcher, TuneIn, iHeart, YouTube, and RSS. Rate and review the show—If you like what you're hearing, be sure to head over to Apple Podcasts and click the 5-star button to rate the show. And, if you have a few extra seconds, write a couple of sentences and submit a review to help others find the show. Did you hear something you liked on this episode or another? Do you have a question you'd like our guests to answer? Let me know on Twitter using the hashtag #OnBrandPodcast and you may just hear your thoughts here on the show. On Brand is a part of the Marketing Podcast Network. Until next week, I'll see you on the Internet! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

PNR: This Old Marketing | Content Marketing with Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose
Social Audio, SPACs and Mamby Pamby Land (327)

PNR: This Old Marketing | Content Marketing with Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2022 74:42


As the boys dive head first into Mamby Pamby Land, they discuss whether Elon is hot or cold for Twitter. Is social audio dead? And how about SPACs for that matter? A new creator-friendly search engine is born, and yet another social-token player enters the field. Rants and raves include creating during a recession, privacy and Meta does something good for a change. Special thanks to our sponsor Superside, hassle-free design at scale. TOM listeners get a $3,000 credit by signing up at this link. This week's links: Are SPACs Dead? Clubhouse Losing Talent Is Social Audio Dead? Yep - A New Search Engine Calaxy and Social Tokens Recession Not Bad for Creators Meta Developing Basic Ads Apple and Privacy --------- Liked this show? SUBSCRIBE to this podcast on Spotify, Apple, Google and more. Catch past episodes and show notes at ThisOldMarketing.site. Subscribe for the best in content creation at TheTilt.com.

On Brand with Nick Westergaard
Being an Inclusion-First Brand with Lauren Tucker

On Brand with Nick Westergaard

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2022 40:18


Dr. Lauren Tucker is the founder and CEO of Do What Matters, an inclusion management consultancy designed to help marketing services agencies turn inclusion, equity, and diversity intent into impact. We discussed talent (it's not a pipeline problem), creativity (diversity helps), Walmart's Juneteenth ice cream blunder, and more this week on the On Brand podcast. About Lauren Tucker Dr. Lauren Tucker is the founder and CEO of Do What Matters, an inclusion management consultancy that challenges the cultural homogeneity in the advertising and marketing communications industry by designing inclusion solutions that foster greater creativity, innovation, and growth. Frustrated with the lack of progress on diversity, equity, and inclusion in the advertising and marcom industries, Tucker left her position as the Chief Strategy Officer at Merge, one of the nation's largest independent agencies, to promote a different approach to increasing diversity in an industry that is still more than 80 percent white. On Brand Is Sponsored by Superside Superside is your one-stop-shop for good design. Scale up your brand's design output the smart way with Superside's subscription service combining top-tier design talent and a streamlined platform for sharing and collaborating. Plus, you can get $3,000 worth of value just for listening to OnBrand! Sign up for an annual subscription and get one month FREE. Learn more now.   Episode Highlights The work of changing an industry. After years in the agency business, Lauren realized that to bring about real change she had to step outside of the business itself. “You can't be a prophet in your own land.” “Advertising of all creative industries is the most conservative,” notes Lauren. “That's because it's most directly tied to business. The power exists with the clients.” Badvertising! I have a new favorite term! “There's a lot of badvertising out there today,” Lauren warns, shaking her head at transactional diversity efforts. Speaking of which ... Walmart's Juneteenth ice cream. Lauren walked us through this recent example of “diversity theatre.” While Walmart's ice cream (which they've since removed and apologized for) is transactional diversity—“diversity before inclusion”—Lauren also highlighted Target's transformational work elevating local business owners of color and helping them connect with their sales channels. What brand has made Lauren smile recently? While Lauren's breakdown of Walmart and Target's Juneteenth activities prompted both bad and good smiles respectively, she also noted the work that Alta has done in the beauty industry in raising the voices of female entrepreneurs. To learn more, check out the Do What Matters website, specifically their continually updated Resources.   As We Wrap … Listen and subscribe at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon/Audible, Google Play, Stitcher, TuneIn, iHeart, YouTube, and RSS. Rate and review the show—If you like what you're hearing, be sure to head over to Apple Podcasts and click the 5-star button to rate the show. And, if you have a few extra seconds, write a couple of sentences and submit a review to help others find the show. Did you hear something you liked on this episode or another? Do you have a question you'd like our guests to answer? Let me know on Twitter using the hashtag #OnBrandPodcast and you may just hear your thoughts here on the show. On Brand is a part of the Marketing Podcast Network. Until next week, I'll see you on the Internet! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Demand Gen Chat
How DG Should Work with Design, ‘COMO', and Superside's Top Ad Creative | Amrita Mathur @ Superside

Demand Gen Chat

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2022 33:22 Transcription Available


In the newest episode of Demand Gen Chat, I caught up with Amrita Mathur, VP Marketing at Superside. Superside has gone through amazing growth since Amrita joined as the first marketer in May 2019. We cover a wide-range of topics from the history of Superside's marketing team, to how demand gen marketers can work better with design teams, to what ‘COMO' is and how marketers can take advantage of it to stay ahead of the crowd in SaaS.  Show Notes: Follow Tara: https://www.linkedin.com/in/taraarobertson https://twitter.com/taraarobertson Follow Amrita: https://www.linkedin.com/in/amritamathur/ https://twitter.com/amritamathur Check out Katelyn Bourgoin's newsletter: https://customercamp.co/whywebuy/  About Demand Gen Chat Demand Gen Chat is a Chili Piper podcast hosted by Tara Robertson. Join us as we sit down with B2B marketing leaders to hear about the latest tactics and campaigns that are driving pipeline and revenue. If you're looking for tactical ways to improve your marketing, this podcast is for you!

On Brand with Nick Westergaard
Building a Sonic Identity System with Joe Belliotti

On Brand with Nick Westergaard

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2022 30:51


Music industry veteran Joe Belliotti is an expert in sonic branding. While most marketers focus on visuals, brand builders today need to think about the impressions that can be made and emotions that can be evoked through music and sound. Joe and I discussed all of this and more this week on the On Brand podcast. About Joe Belliotti Joe Belliotti is CEO of MassiveMusic North America, leading both the New York and the Los Angeles offices. He focuses on amplifying brand content and experiences through bespoke music and building equity through sonic branding and voice design. With more than 20 years of experience in the music and marketing industries, he has helped brands drive business value and shape culture. As Head of Global Music at The Coca-Cola Company, he created global and scalable platforms, partnerships, and strategies working on global campaigns including the FIFA World Cup, The Olympic Games, Share a Coke and a Song, Product (RED), and the American Music Awards. Joe also founded the Music Division and, earlier in his career, worked in talent development at the music publishing arm of Maverick (a Madonna/Warner Bros. joint venture). Throughout his career, he has worked with hundreds of artists, from emerging talent to the most iconic artists such as Queen, Drake, and Janelle Monae. On Brand Is Sponsored by Superside Superside is your one-stop-shop for good design. Scale up your brand's design output the smart way with Superside's subscription service combining top-tier design talent and a streamlined platform for sharing and collaborating. Plus, you can get $3,000 worth of value just for listening to OnBrand! Sign up for an annual subscription and get one month FREE. Learn more now.   Episode Highlights What is sonic branding? “Every single brand is making an impression with music and sound.” However, unlike visual communication, most marketers lack the vocabulary to talk about it. What should a sonic identity system include? While there are many definitions and lists, Joe cited the importance of: Sonic logo Product UX/UI Music, curated music Beyond Intel ... I noted that the sonic logo example that most of us think of is the Intel Inside tag, however, Joe noted that this is a great example as it helps build what's ultimately an invisible ingredient brand. Other examples of sonic branding? Joe cited Mcdonald's “I'm Lovin' It” and Mastercard's recent work, which reminded me of my sonic branding conversation with their CMO Raja Rajamannar. What brand has made Joe smile recently? Joe kept it sonic with a mention of the recent Infiniti ad featuring the Cat Stephens song "Wild World." To learn more, check out the MassiveMusic website.   As We Wrap … Listen and subscribe at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon/Audible, Google Play, Stitcher, TuneIn, iHeart, YouTube, and RSS. Rate and review the show—If you like what you're hearing, be sure to head over to Apple Podcasts and click the 5-star button to rate the show. And, if you have a few extra seconds, write a couple of sentences and submit a review to help others find the show. Did you hear something you liked on this episode or another? Do you have a question you'd like our guests to answer? Let me know on Twitter using the hashtag #OnBrandPodcast and you may just hear your thoughts here on the show. On Brand is a part of the Marketing Podcast Network. Until next week, I'll see you on the Internet! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

PNR: This Old Marketing | Content Marketing with Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose

Is Seth Green's missing BAYC NFT an actual thing, or is it part of a larger marketing conspiracy. Conan sells Team Coco to SiriusXM for $150 million. Will we see more? Absolutely. Politicians gang up against Google and Facebook over antitrust concerns. Probably nothing. In rants and raves, Joe comments on a16z's State of Crypto Report and the latest creator economy report. Robert rants about Google as a common carrier. Special thanks to our sponsor Superside, hassle-free design at scale. TOM listeners get a $3,000 credit by signing up at this link. This week's links: Seth Green's NFT Problem Conan Sells Out Antitrust Violations for Google/Facebook 2022 State of Crypto Report 2022 Creator Economy Report Google as Carrier --------- Liked this show? SUBSCRIBE to this podcast on Spotify, Apple, Google and more. Catch past episodes and show notes at ThisOldMarketing.site. Subscribe for the best in content creation at TheTilt.com.

On Brand with Nick Westergaard
Connecting Personal Brands to Corporate Brands with Scott Bartnick

On Brand with Nick Westergaard

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2022 28:41


Scott Bartnick is an internationally renowned eCommerce and media expert and co-founder of OtterPR. Through their innovative strategies, OtterPR helps clients—both business leaders and brands—get meaningful media coverage. We discussed all of this and more this week on the On Brand podcast. About Scott Bartnick Scott Bartnick is the co-founder of OtterPR. He is an internationally renowned eCommerce and media expert who has been recognized worldwide for his business acumen. Bartnick owns several successful eCommerce companies and has been recognized for his innovative lifestyle. Bartnick is the bestselling author of the Five-Day Startup and has been featured in Forbes, Entrepreneur, IBTimes, Yahoo, and more for his success in business. On Brand Is Sponsored by Superside Superside is your one-stop-shop for good design. Scale up your brand's design output the smart way with Superside's subscription service combining top-tier design talent and a streamlined platform for sharing and collaborating. Plus, you can get $3,000 worth of value just for listening to OnBrand! Sign up for an annual subscription and get one month FREE. Learn more now. Episode Highlights An innovative lifestyle yields many questions. Scott shared his own story inspired by Tim Ferriss's Four Hour Workweek. This adventure and approach led to Scott's book The Five-Day Startup.  “To build a business you have to build a brand.” Scott noted that you don't need tools like a website or a sales team to start a business. But this isn't scalable. To grow a business, you need to build a brand that resonates with people. Startup brands and founder brands. When these two play nicely with each other, it can lead to a big impact. However, when a founder's brand gets in the way of a startup brand's growth, it can spell disaster. OtterPR helps clients and brands optimize this relationship. What brand has made Scott smile recently? Scott actually shared a smile from one of OtterPR's clients—Law by Mike. To learn more, check out the OtterPR website.   As We Wrap … Listen and subscribe at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon/Audible, Google Play, Stitcher, TuneIn, iHeart, YouTube, and RSS. Rate and review the show—If you like what you're hearing, be sure to head over to Apple Podcasts and click the 5-star button to rate the show. And, if you have a few extra seconds, write a couple of sentences and submit a review to help others find the show. Did you hear something you liked on this episode or another? Do you have a question you'd like our guests to answer? Let me know on Twitter using the hashtag #OnBrandPodcast and you may just hear your thoughts here on the show. On Brand is a part of the Marketing Podcast Network. Until next week, I'll see you on the Internet! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

PNR: This Old Marketing | Content Marketing with Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose

This episode could be our ticket to Webby fame. You'll just have to listen to be sure. We, of course, go through the latest Twitter disaster that is Elon Musk, and then detail the new THE Spotify NFT integration. All that, and Netflix is getting into live streaming. Who knew? Rants and raves include a TED Talk from the Instagram CEO and more Star Trek. Special thanks to our sponsor Superside, hassle-free design at scale. TOM listeners get a $3,000 credit by signing up at this link. This week's links: Elon Musk Can't Stop Tweeting 20 Percent Spam Accounts on Twitter Spotify Goes NFT Netflix & Livestreaming Instagram TED Talk --------- Liked this show? SUBSCRIBE to this podcast on Spotify, Apple, Google and more. Catch past episodes and show notes at ThisOldMarketing.site.

On Brand with Nick Westergaard
The Market Disruptor's Dilemma with Olivia Mariani

On Brand with Nick Westergaard

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2022 35:44


As VP of Marketing at Curbio, Olivia Mariani leads is responsible for everything from brand to demand for the “fix first, pay later” PropTech leader. This week on the On Brand podcast, Olivia joined us to discuss the disruptor's dilemma—creating and communicating the market for innovative new products—as well as storytelling and immersive content. About Olivia Mariani Olivia Mariani is a marketing executive with a proven track record of driving bottom-line business results for companies of all sizes, with an emphasis on serving the Software as a Service industry. Olivia brings a breadth of marketing experience to the table, including demand generation, brand management, marketing operations, product marketing, digital, partner, and customer advocacy. Olivia's approach combines art (creative strategies) science (actionable data), collaborative planning (leadership style), and storytelling (incredible content) to create authentic brand experiences that drive revenue. Her marketing motto is to create a brand that taps into both the hearts and minds of its audience. Currently, she is the head of Marketing at Curbio, a venture-backed PropTech company experiencing rapid growth and quickly becoming the nation's leading home improvement solution for real estate agents and their clients. On Brand Is Sponsored by Superside Superside is your one-stop-shop for good design. Scale up your brand's design output the smart way with Superside's subscription service combining top-tier design talent and a streamlined platform for sharing and collaborating. Plus, you can get $3,000 worth of value just for listening to OnBrand! Sign up for an annual subscription and get one month FREE. Learn more now.   Episode Highlights The market disruptor's dilemma. So, you've got an innovative new product ... That's great! However, often you have the unique challenge of having to communicate a new idea that customers aren't aware of yet. Sometimes it's a new type of business or even a new industry. Olivia shared how she's worked to do just that with Curbio. “Home improvement sucks right now.” That's why there's Curbio! That said, even when customers learn what it is (the nation's leading fix-it-first, pay-when-you-sell home improvement solution for those selling homes), they still don't believe it. “People are always saying it's too good to be true.” Storytelling and the voice of the customer. Olivia's work focuses heavily on storytelling and the voice of the customer. All of this came together on Curbio's recent “Do we have to?” campaign. What brand has made Olivia smile recently? Olivia shared her amazing experiences with Outdoor Voices, an Austin-based athleisure brand. To learn more, check out the Curibo website.   As We Wrap … Listen and subscribe at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon/Audible, Google Play, Stitcher, TuneIn, iHeart, YouTube, and RSS. Rate and review the show—If you like what you're hearing, be sure to head over to Apple Podcasts and click the 5-star button to rate the show. And, if you have a few extra seconds, write a couple of sentences and submit a review to help others find the show. Did you hear something you liked on this episode or another? Do you have a question you'd like our guests to answer? Let me know on Twitter using the hashtag #OnBrandPodcast and you may just hear your thoughts here on the show. On Brand is a part of the Marketing Podcast Network. Until next week, I'll see you on the Internet! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

This Week in Startups
Cana CEO Matt Mahar on launching a "Replicator for beverages," turning a product into a platform, working with The Production Board and more | E1399

This Week in Startups

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2022 65:46


Cana is back on the podcast, previously David Friedberg teased the "molecular beverage printer" on E1365. This time, we speak and to CEO Matt Mahar about pricing, their go-to-market plans, their cartridge subscription process, Cana's potential climate impact, current flavors and more! Molly was the first outsider to tour their facility and she tried a whole bunch of beverages from the Cana One. (0:00) Jason and Molly tee up today's topics: a deep dive on the just-launched Cana product! (1:30) Molly and Jason break down Molly's site visit to the Cana facility and the taste tests (8:36) Bubble (9:57) Cana's starting price point, cartridges, cost per drink, and more (19:34) Masterworks (21:06) Molly's intros Cana CEO Matt Mahar, and they talk about the origins of the product, impact of the bottling industry, how the product works mechanically (31:39) Superside (32:53) Understanding non-obvious climate solutions, Cana product breakdown and pricing (40:03) Cana as a creator platform, big picture vision of what is possible (54:09) Cana's economic impact on the bottling industry, Matt's background, working with TPB Check out Cana: https://www.cana.com FOLLOW Jason: https://linktr.ee/calacanis FOLLOW Molly: https://twitter.com/mollywood

B2B Growth
Setting Yourself Up To Do Your Best Work with Amrita Mathur

B2B Growth

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2021 36:03 Transcription Available


In this episode, Olivia Hurley talks to Amrita Mathur, VP of Marketing at Superside. Amrita breaks down the rituals and habits you and your team can employ to ensure prolonged success. Connect with Amrita:  Email  LinkedIn 

The Offbeat Life - become location independent
Ep. 238: How the founder of SafetyWing is changing digital nomad's lives by giving them a safety net with Sondre Rasch

The Offbeat Life - become location independent

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2021 32:36


In this episode, I speak with our sponsor, Sondre who is the co-founder and CEO of SafetyWing. Which is A travel and medical incident insurance that is made specifically for digital nomads. Born in Bergen, Norway, Sondre was a policy advisor for the government of Norway advising on social policies.  After getting frustrated with the slow pace of government change, Sondre first founded SuperSide, a platform for freelance designers.  It was here where he discovered the lack of a safety net for online remote workers.  Then SafetyWing was born in 2018 and has since raised over 8 million dollars and is serving 60k+ happy clients as of today and still growing. --------------- Hey Offbeat Family, I really appreciate you listening to this episode. I would love to hear more from you and what you think of the podcast. Contact me: hello@theoffbeatlife.com Show credits: Audio Engineer: Ben Smith - Ben@howtocreateapodcast.com Listen on to find out how Sondre and SafetyWing are giving digital nomads and remote workers the same benefits as 9-5'ers!

Gründerpraten
Fredrik Thomassen fra Arendal gjør suksess i USA og har kunder som Amazon og Facebook på kundelisten

Gründerpraten

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2021 38:37


Tidligere McKinsey-konsulent Fredrik Thomassen fra Arendal gjør det sylskarpt i USA og har kunder som Facebook og Amazon på kundelisten. Norsk næringsliv får derimot sitt pass påskrevet. I år regner han med at gründerbabyen hans Superside, som nå har over 130 ansatte i 48 land, vil omsette for minst 200 millioner kroner. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

BLWA: BLACK-LATINO-WHITE-ASIAN PERSPECTIVES
SPECIAL SUPERSIDE EPISODE!!

BLWA: BLACK-LATINO-WHITE-ASIAN PERSPECTIVES

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2020 106:52


Positive vibes are welcome! 90s movies, tvshows, movies! Let's check it out! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

TechCrunch Startups – Spoken Edition
Newly renamed Superside raises $3.5M for its outsourced design platform

TechCrunch Startups – Spoken Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2019 3:39


Superside, a startup aiming to create a premium alternative to the existing crowdsourced design platforms, is announcing that it has raised $3.5 million in new funding. It's also adding new features like the ability to work on user interfaces, interaction design and motion graphics. Co-founder and CEO Fredrik Thomassen said this allows the company to offer “a full-service design solution.” You may have heard about Superside under its old name Konsus .