In today's episode, I talk with Caroline Crawford, owner of Cultiveight Communications. She’s been rocking the marketing world for 13 years and has valuable insights on how to connect with clients and build those natural relationships that make a business thrive. Caroline has some great tips on training your team to communicate just like you, and she breaks down why an integrated marketing approach is the way to go.
We get into some fun stuff, like the story behind the name of her company, and some serious talk about the challenges businesses face with limited resources and rising market pressures. Caroline shares her thoughts on the differences in communication styles across generations in the workplace, and why understanding your audience is key to authentic and effective marketing.
She’s got plenty of advice for solopreneurs trying to keep their voice consistent on social media and for anyone feeling overwhelmed by marketing tasks. I promise you an episode that will enhance your understanding and approach to modern marketing challenges.
You’ll learn about:
You can reach Caroline at: caroline@cultiveightcommunications.com
Website: http://www.cultiveightcommunications.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ccrawford22
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cultiveightcomms/#
Free 3 Step Guide To Cultivate Your Competitive Edge : https://www.cultiveightcommunications.com/competitive-marketing-guide
A little about me:
I began my career as a teacher, was a corporate trainer for many years, and then found my niche training & supporting business owners, entrepreneurs & sales professionals to network at a world-class level. My passion is working with motivated people, who are coachable and who want to build their businesses through relationship marketing and networking (online & offline). I help my clients create retention strategies, grow through referrals, and create loyal customers by staying connected.
In appreciation for being here, I have a couple of items for you:
A LinkedIn Checklist for setting up your fully optimized Profile:
An opportunity to test drive the Follow Up system I recommend by taking the
3 Card Sampler—you won’t regret it.
Connect with me:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/janiceporter/
https://www.facebook.com/janiceporter1
Thanks for listening!
Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page.
Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a note in the comment section below!
Subscribe to the podcast
If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on iTunes or Stitcher. You can also subscribe from the podcast app on your mobile device.
Leave us an iTunes review
Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on iTunes, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on iTunes.
Hello, everyone, and welcome to this week's
episode of relationships rule. My special guest today is
Caroline Crawford. Caroline is a marketer, a marketing and
communications expert. And she's coming to us from sunny Florida,
which I say that it's usually sunny there compared to where I
am. So welcome to the show, Caroline.
Thank you so much for having me, Janice. I'm
excited to be here. My pleasure. So I know
that you've been in this business for about 13 years or
so and basically, didn't think didn't know I'm not sure if you
got there by choice, or by chance you fell into it. But I
think that you love what you do from what I have gleaned in
conversations with you. And I am going to start by asking you a
Caroline is the owner of a company called cultivate
communications.com. And when I just say it, I think the word
cultivate. And when I look at it, I know you spell it
differently. And I'm curious to know why. I mean, I know it's,
it's, and I asked because I started to write it when I first
you know, wanted to know more. And of course, I just stopped
myself and look at what you had said. So was it by design? And
if so, is it a good thing? Or is it turning out to be
frustrating? And I do have to ask because I'm curious.
I appreciate the question. And not many
people, some people ask, and when they ask, they're like, Oh,
that makes so much sense. But no, it was intentional. I knew I
wanted a relatively neutral name for the company. But something
that was also not just like, some random word, I wanted it to
also be have some sort of meaning to it of what we are
really ultimately trying to accomplish. However, I also
wanted to make it personal. And so my initials are CEC. And so I
wanted so when I don't know the word cultivate came up, and I
realized that was something I could kind of manipulate a
little bit to make it unique, make it stand out a little bit
because there's there are other businesses with cultivate in it
and things like that. And so an eight is my favorite number. And
my birth month, so there are some there are some intention.
Yeah, personal little, like nuggets in there or easter eggs
in there as you if you will. But yeah, that's basically where it
came from. So
it wasn't like a marketing ploy, per se. No, no,
I
really wanted to be ever since started my
company, I wanted to be very intentional with it. And it
started with the name. Okay.
All right. Well, that's, that's good to know. And
I'm glad. And Carolyn has a podcast as well called the edge
effect. And I kind of liked that as well. But yeah, so just just
my curiosity. Okay, the other thing I was say comes out of
your, your bio, which I want to ask you, Caroline is on a
mission of supporting more business leaders to secure an
integrated marketing approach that goes beyond typical
marketing gimmicks. Alright, so. And I and the one thing I wanted
to say first, and didn't, you also let you want to address
challenges faced by businesses, such as limited resources, and
market pressures. So those things you you care about? And
you look for ways to help clients that are on a limited
budget? But what do you mean by an integrated marketing approach
that goes beyond the typical marketing gimmicks? Let's talk
about what you do and what was special about what you do?
Yeah, I, when I'm talking about an integrated
marketing approach, it is. I think when you look at the
industry and for anyone who's hired outside, particularly
outside marketing resources, obviously, because once they're
in house, they're way more integrated, of course, right.
But with outside marketing resources, there is a disconnect
that happens, understandably, so justifiably. So right, is
because it's a totally separate company, they have margins to
make, they have to apply what they do in a very structured
way. However, when you are working with a company that
potentially has limited in house marketing resources, even if
they have some, if it's not, if they don't have a dedicated
resource, for instance, and they're putting all their eggs
in, in this one agency basket, or even if they've got a couple,
it doesn't really matter at that point. But what starts to happen
is that there's a huge reliance on the internal team, to have
the agency truly support them in the way that they need to
because I think when when some when an agreement kind of first
comes into place. You know what you need, right? Like, that's
how you start the conversation with an agency, they're able to
tap into what you need. But when it comes to marketing, and I can
really only speak to marketing, of course, but I'm sure, maybe
it applies into some other bleeds into some other areas.
But marketing in particular is an area within a business where
you can have kind of cut and dry tasks, but the implementation of
them, there's so much behind the scenes that happens, you know,
you have one social media post, like three social media posts a
week, but what you're not seeing behind is how are those social
media posts getting created, there's research involved,
there's creative involved, there's rounds, feedback,
rounds, all these things. It's just an example, right? And so
when you're working with an outside resource, they have to
stick to what's in that retainer, right. And there's not
that much wiggle room outside of those specific deliverables,
because they have to guarantee something. But so what starts to
happen is, as the company grows or just evolves, their
priorities shift their leaves a little room to truly expand the
scope in a way that works and is flexible enough, that doesn't
essentially have to have another conversation about revising the
complete agreement, things like that. Again, not there's ways to
do it, there's, you know, not to agencies have found a way. But
what starts to happen, in particular, when when talking
about an integrated marketing approach is that there it is,
siloed off. And so their job is focused on whatever you've hired
them for. But because they aren't in the aware of all the
happenings in between, unless you are communicating with them
specifically about these things, they can actually support you to
the best of their ability in the way that you actually need to be
supported. Because you don't know what they don't know it's
not second, it's not second nature to share with them all
the happenings going on because you don't know you don't want to
bombard them with things. So our approach is a little bit
different. And that we actually embed ourselves into as though
we're almost like an in house team. And so that's how we are,
that's how we integrate and basically create this integrated
marketing approach to where we treat us like as you would as
though you just hired an in house marketer. Because that
way, we at least our team thrives better, when we are more
aware of what's going on, even if we don't have to act on it,
right? Even if we know that if we know something's in the
pipeline, or we know the mindset, or we know how you're
working, even if just this is how that people communicate
amongst themselves. This is how you, you're communicating to the
client, as much visibility as we have to how they naturally
operate, the more we have the ability to cater our strategies
and the services that they need to truly deliver them in the way
that works for them without adding an extra layer of
responsibility to them. And I think that's what happens a lot
of time with more traditional marketing agencies or structures
is that it requires someone dedicated to manage that agency
and to truly be, exactly and to truly have that kind of
collaborative, dynamic. So
even you know, when I think because I'm just,
you know, a solopreneur, but when I think of times when, when
I have thought about having someone do social media posts
for me, I can't let go because it's, if I'm not going to do it,
and someone's going to do it for me, they're not me. And so it
takes the time to make them understand my voice for them to
do it, I might as well just do it myself. And so on a bigger
scale, I kind of see what you're saying in the sense that you
really have to understand the client and you have to be the
client really, to speak their, their words to to be that
company. Right. And yeah, and
I think to what again, why it's like, it's
a little bit different is because traditional agency
dynamic is they are siloed off, they have to focus on one the,
the areas that you hire them to so PR as an example, right,
they're focused on that thing, however, to for them to be able
to do their job better and even like beyond, you know, to really
have it be so, so effective in a way that especially when you're
working with company that has limited resources, they have to
really have more of an understanding of what's going on
the moment that there's kind of a disconnect with what's
happening in the company, to what they're doing. You start to
see this like fracture in the dynamic and it doesn't and
things start to be a little bit less proactive. It's a lot more
reactive because they all they can really do at the end of the
day is risk font to whatever you're delivering to them and
saying, so with an integrated approach, and I appreciate the
example you use with social media, it's like, yes, you have
to kind of train people to know how you operate to know what you
like. And they can kind of shape it and mold it as you go.
Sometimes it may just simply evolve. But when you are
integrated with marketing, especially with limited
resources, you can be so much more strategic in how things are
done, and also more realistic about adoption, too. So adoption
with marketing for certain processes, is really critical,
right, like so you can have a process with someone who's doing
your social media posts, where you set up a process where you
feel comfortable with the tone that they're extracting from you
the knowledge that they're extracting from you, but they're
still doing some of that legwork. There is a process that
can be set up. But if there's a certain part of the process that
you're like, well, this doesn't work for me, because you prefer
to handwrite notes versus writing it in like a project
management system. This is a simple example. Right? But that
also needs to be taken into account, because you can it
doesn't matter, the scope of process you deliver, it doesn't
matter, the strategy doesn't matter anything. If you can't
actually, if you if no one's willing to adopt this process to
execute it. It won't get done. And so how do you essentially
build strategies that are easily adopt a bowl? And how do you
build strategies that don't feel like you have to completely
shift your mindset, which again, make it harder to adopt that
change?
Right. Okay, that makes sense. So you? How would
you say that sometimes you want to cut your marketing your
marketing efforts in half. And that can actually lead to
increased engagement and new leads. And it's funny, because I
think you're talking about some, I don't know if it's just social
media that you're talking about. But I just saw something
recently, because you know that I'm, I'm a LinkedIn trainer. So
I talked to people specifically about LinkedIn, not about the
other. I have nothing. I've no expertise in the other social
media platforms. But what I do understand is that on LinkedIn,
I find newbies will come over and they'll post post, post post
post, and it's ridiculous. But they haven't got their profile
up to snuff, and so on. But they think that more is better. And
it isn't necessarily, and I think this is maybe what you're
talking about, but maybe not so can you
Yeah, yeah. Yeah, absolutely. And it's along
the it's definitely along those lines. So what happens and
that's a great example, that's just in the realm of social
media. But what happens often, and social media is a perfect
example of this. But just speaking generally. So often,
when people are trying to go be aggressive with their marketing,
they just put themselves everywhere, they take advantage
of every single channel. So a lot, that's why like, often
you'll see companies with like, all the different social media
buttons at the end of their emails, or websites or whatever,
right? And then you go and you see you're like, Oh, that's
interesting. Or maybe their Twitter is lacking or their
LinkedIn, you know, it's just not, they're just copying and
pasting the things or not actually paying attention to the
actual platform. Again, just using that example on on
LinkedIn. Right? This happens a lot like and so I had this I
have one example where I had a client where she came to me, she
was so burnt out with marketing, she had no idea she was just so
frustrated. She was like, nothing's working, I'm doing
everything I'm doing all the things and she took all the
advice from all these other marketers and she just did
exactly that. And so what we started to do was really peel
back to the core of what is right for her business
obviously, set aside set aside the what's right for your
client, what is right for her business, what is and that means
what is right for her, she was solopreneur so in this sense, we
really scaled back about okay, well, these channels are not
performing well. However, let's just say okay, Twitter was not
performing well, but Facebook was doing okay, an email you
know, email is unnecessary channel but it wasn't performing
well. She was doing YouTube videos she was doing a blog or
article right all of the thing that's a lot. I like that's a
mouthful, right? And nothing was doing it and I and so I kept
asking her and drilling in like, what do you like doing? The only
thing she liked doing was writing those articles. So I
said stop everything. And basically, we essentially She
took the articles that she the one thing she likes doing,
that's where she puts the most time and energy into. And she
enjoys it. So it doesn't feel like a heavy lift, right. And I
taught her how to repurpose what she's doing and spread it into
intentional channels. So scale back the number of platforms she
was on, she wasn't even really on Twitter, she never logged
into it, she just had an automated service kind of
reposting links that were not necessary. So you're not
actually taking advantage of the platform itself, and being
social on social media. And that shows. And so it is along those
lines of if you are not paying attention to what you are
actually doing, if you're just doing it for the sake of doing
it, stop doing it, like there's no point you're not going to
less you put energy into it, you're not going to make it
perform better. So what she did was she readjusted her emails,
she adjust, she's scaled back on whatever social media platform
she just worked, did not feel natural to her. And we're not
overly aligned for the business that she was in. She focused on
the blogs and use that as sort of this driver to dictate, okay,
where should the blogs go? Right. And she did that within a
month, she cut her marketing efforts at an at least by 50%.
And she said she started to see more results. So that's an
incredible transformation. And she's happier about doing it,
of course. And there's so much actually in that
that example. So the first thing, and I didn't hear you ask
this question, but it has to be it was suddenly in there. So
first of all, you asked her what she liked to do best. And that's
so important. And and, you know, where do you feel most
comfortable is what I asked my clients? Or, you know, a great
question, where do you feel most comfortable? But the second
question, I think that's that's really important is because it
might mean a shift is where are your clients, your or your
prospects? Right? There's no point hanging out on Twitter, if
your clients are on are on Tik Tok. I mean, it doesn't make
sense to me. However, I think, you know, we all have a range of
clients and types of clients. But if we aren't comfortable on
that platform, there's no point that's the first thing. And so I
think that was the smartest thing to say to her. Then the
other thing that you said, I love that you then taught her
how to repurpose the blog posts and use snippets of them in
different ways that say, and that makes a lot of sense. And
then the third piece, it just rings true to me and actually
goes back to what you were talking about earlier, and I
wanted to ask you about is when but I'll start with here, where
she was doing. She was starting to get more traction, but she
said to you, none of it's working. I'm not you know, this
platform isn't working, the platform doesn't do anything,
you have to do the work. And so it's the work of posting, but
it's also and more importantly, the world of engaging right now
are you you're like you, you did mention putting up the things
and then nobody looks at them to engage to see she was obviously
looking originally because she wasn't getting any engagement.
But you it's very important that you in my estimation, whatever
you're doing that you pay attention, right, so that if
somebody doesn't engage, you start and continue that
conversation. That's how business happens through
building relationships, which is what I'm all about. Right? But
when you know, Jose gonna say, oh, when when you have a team
that goes to somebody as business and starts to do their
marketing and learn who they are and and build out the content
for them, let's say? Do you take the responsibility of teaching
them how to respond? How to engage? Or do you just assume
that they'll take that part over?
I think it is definitely dependent on the
client and the dynamic. The reason being is because you may
if let's just say you're engaging with someone who is a
social media community engagement expert, you want to
hear their advice, right? You may not know the best way,
right? So I think in that instance, it depends. However,
most importantly, it has to feel like you and kind of going back
to what you mentioned before of like, in sort of reiterating of
like there has to be this intention behind the things that
you do and that's with everything with marketing,
however, and that's why I asked what do you like doing because
you can make the argument that you could kind of justify
anything that the quote unquote clients will want, right? It's
like, oh, well, the clients are on Twitter. Yeah, okay. You're
gonna get some clients Who are on Twitter? Because that's just
the way the world works masters, right? So there is definitely
this balance. But when it comes to like actually engaging, you
have to think about what's actually realistic for you. And
again, it kind of goes back. So it does matter. How are your
clients engaging in the platform, for instance? So in
the case of LinkedIn, how do you how does your ideal client
engage on LinkedIn? Are they engaging on LinkedIn, because
that's also telling, but also, like, there are some CEOs, right
that don't even touch LinkedIn, they're on it, but they don't
touch it. They it's like a ghost town. So I know I can't, my
content isn't really going to reach them on LinkedIn, I have
to find for what, right? So I think when it comes to actually
hiring someone and getting someone on board and saying, how
do you engage, you still have to train them to say, this is how I
naturally operate, they should be looking at, and you should be
sending them emails about how you communicate with clients, I
actually always ask my clients send me sample emails, when
you're talking to clients, I want to know your tone, I want
to know how you're signing off, I want to know if there's, you
know, if there is always any improvement to be made to
certain communications, but I don't, at a certain point, you
don't want to mess with the natural flow, it's not going to,
you're not going to be able to adopt that. And so when it comes
to sort of, again, scaling back and and when you do hire, if you
do hire a team, it no matter what you're doing, you still
have to pay attention to what feels most natural to me. And
how do I interact with the clients, because if there's a
disconnect, that's going to be shown in the sales process, and
that could potentially rescue the sale or rescue a client who
signed on if there is a disconnect. So you want to keep
it and that's what develops a brand, right? People know me,
and they know that, who I am online, who I am on podcast, who
I am with in my client meetings, my family, all the things, it
actually does not change. Obviously, there's tone, there's
professional, you know, professionalism, but it doesn't
change. And so that's why I like keeping that consistency is so
important. And the more you can train someone else who's doing
it on your behalf, to learn you to know you to also believe in
you. And I think that's why that the agency or outsourced
relationship is just so important to nurture, and
develop that rapport. And the only way I know how to do it is
to like, like I said, just be all up in their business. And
that's really good. And it makes me think of
something though, because Okay, so the give me like three
examples, if you can of companies that you work with
just an example, it doesn't have to be the name of the company,
but like a solopreneur that does this or, you know, a company
that's, you know, that sells candles or like, just give me
three different examples. I just curious about something I'm
always curious
of, of how they
know, just just the three different types of
companies that are your best clients.
Gotcha. Okay. So we work with companies, we're
actually not, we don't, the verticals don't totally matter.
However, we are our like bread and butter service base, or
software as a service, essentially, anything that
really like relationships are have a heavy part of the
process. versus, you know, direct to consumer product, we
that's not necessarily our specialty, but when it comes to
who we serve, or types of companies that this is really
what the structure look like, looks like they either our need
to invest in marketing, but have no idea where to start, like the
questions are always around marketing, and they're either
lack of awareness, potentially, or just analysis paralysis. When
it comes to marketing we work
with why don't we do that? Get my products or to
get my exactly, so
they don't do anything? Yeah, exactly. So and
then it's companies that need more visibility on marketing or
are working with marketing, but it's just not working the way
that they want. And so that's why the actual industry or
specialty doesn't really matter. We really are focused on that
developing and optimizing that marketing function. Okay,
so would you say that the people that you work
with range in age like from, you know, millennials to Baby
Boomers or, you know, like, are they do they run the gamut?
They say they do, I think we look at marketing
readiness, right? So if someone's not ready to actually
invest, there's, when you first start a business, this is
particularly the case of service based businesses, you do have to
do a lot of the legwork yourself in the sense of building those
relationships and I know you can speak deeply on this right. And
with your episode coming out a little bit coming out soon you
will you everyone here can hear it. But that said you do so
there is this kind of balance and I think that is oh Is the
balanced SERPs based businesses. However, eventually you want
your marketing to start working for you. And that's where you
need to start thinking about how do I want to invest in it? How
do I really want to, like be guided? And so when it comes to
the age range, I don't, it doesn't really matter, the ages
in particular, the specific age of the individuals, but moreso,
the age of their marketing. Okay, I've worked with companies
that have been around for 1530 years, and have never really
gone all in on their marketing, you know, okay,
well, I'm leading up to something here. So what
I'm looking at is, you're young, I know, you're you say you're
older than you look, because you look really young. But you know,
I'm gonna great skincare. It's all good. It's all good. But you
probably have some younger employees as well. Yes. Okay.
Yes. So I guess I've been into watching something lately that's
been doing the divide between the Gen Z then the, what is
next? What comes with?
I've lost track? Yeah. Baby Boomers.
Gen Y, I think millennials. There's, and then
Gen Z.
And then I think I thought Gen Y was there.
I don't know.
So my question, though, is, when you get someone
that that works for you, who's young? And even, like, you know,
totally brought up on on social media. Sure. And don't have
necessarily the same social skills. The older people have.
Yeah, I'm saying everybody that's older has social skills.
Don't get me wrong. But you're in the you're in the field of
marketing, you're sending a team of people into learn about
someone's business. So you got to find the right people. Am I
right? That can Oh, yeah, that can brought draw them out. And
so I would imagine, there's training involved in younger
people being able to do this, because it's not a natural
thing. I don't know, I just feel that like, I trained a young man
the other day on LinkedIn, who is a videographer, and he's just
come out of university, and he's starting his business. And a
friend asked me if I would help them. And you know, I have a
soft spot for students. And so I did. But I feel as though it's
difficult for that young person to talk to somebody who's
experienced, but not in video. Sure, he's got the video thing,
but it's just the conversation. It's the relationship again. So
it's just something that came to me. And I just wonder if you can
speak to that, if you know what I'm talking about.
That is to such a fabulous point. And no
one has ever asked that. And I And actually, I was just talking
about it today with a mentor who, essentially, when it comes
just to answer the first part of your question, but if you don't
mind, I have some more speak on it. The when it comes to
training the team, I've I'm very particular with how I
communicate. Because I, obviously my bread and butter is
communications, which is fair, but I, there is a level of
communication that I cater to, because that's how I built my
reputation while I was in house, and I let that bleed into my
business because I felt that it allowed it built a lot of trust
in the relationships I have with my clients and the people I
worked with, so that I had to train my team, you have to be
responsive. Obviously, this is we're all human, right? We're we
all have life, things to do. There is reason here. But you
have to be responsive, you have to be extremely respectful. And
you also even in my job descriptions, I put you have to
be compassionate and empathetic. Because people you don't know
what people are going through the clients that have come to
you I know when my client is basically taking out her stress
on us. And or, you know, it could be with any clients. And I
think because I dealt with that, while I was in house, I was able
to see, I was dealing with a lot of different personalities. So I
had to kind of adapt. And I think that's something that I
do, I've just always kind of been able to do just for my
life. But I think I've had to, I've had to take those who are
younger in their careers and say, and kind of teach them
essentially basic human principles in my mind, and at
least the way that I naturally operate. And then, you know, and
I did this at the beginning, and I do think it helped because I
never had to do it again is I'd see a response to something and
I'd say this is how we can take it to the next level in terms of
how we cater to our clients and really elevating that customer
experience. So how we just communicate in general. So I
think there was a lot, there definitely was a certain level
of training. I wasn't like so nitpicky, but I was like pay
attention, like when how I learned was I paid attention to
everyone who was communicating around me. And especially those
the bosses I had, and how did they communicate? How did you
know? Some were better than others? And things like that,
right? So I just absorbed and I also had to find my own way to
speak to because because there is that level of, you know, yes,
you want people to be individuals. But if especially
with a team, you have to have some sort of cohesive, dynamic,
right. And so there's a little bit of a balance there. But I
think that's incredibly important. And I think for
people, especially if you're reaching out to external just to
speak a little bit broadly, not just team related, related to
the team, but within this applies to client to audience
segmentation, essentially, you have to speak in the language
that people understand. So how I speak to marketers it, or
solopreneurs, for instance, who are younger, and their business
is very different than how I'm going to speak to the 30 plus
year old business see, right? If they and I look at how are what
are they going through? What's kind of Top of Mind what's sort
of their purview? So solopreneurs don't have as much
knowledge, and they're not thinking and it's diff in a
certain way that, for instance, that 30 plus year old business
CEO would think that's not to say either one is better than
the other. Excuse me, it's just different. So just to put it in
a concrete example, talking to someone who's in corporate, you
have to think what did they love the most, they love data, they
love logical explanations, you can't think in a, it's the
person, not the personal stuff, the emotional stuff is taken out
of it. Whereas when I'm speaking to a solopreneur, I'm a lot more
empathetic, I'm a lot more speaking to their person, like,
what they may be going through personally, I'm still infusing
that data and that logic, and vice versa, I still apply my
empathy to that other CEO that has, you know, has been in
business for 30 plus years. But I just apply it differently. And
so how I approach them is different, it's a little bit
more formal or sophisticated, or maybe it's a little bit more of
it that is totally dependent on the specific person. But I think
I hope that answers your question in the sense of there
is this, it doesn't matter the age you are now it matters who
you're speaking to. And it's always about that sort of client
first mindset of yes, it won. Can I speak to that person at
that level? There are some that like, they're like, I don't I
know, people who are like, I want nothing to do with
corporate. And they want, they don't talk that way. And that's
totally okay. And they don't also offer services for that.
Right. So I think it's just finding that balance and, and
seeing how can I infuse my personality and still
communicate authentically, but in a way that they do understand
in a way that they they can I can find that sort of common
ground with them. And again, I think, to what you do, right,
you your focus is helping people see how they can find common
ground with others. And I think that's so so incredible.
Yeah. And, you know, I think the reason that I
that I was drawn to you off the bat, Caroline, when we first
spoke is that you that you're you do come across as a really
good communicator, you're a good listener, you listen, and then
you explain Are you you know, you reiterate what someone has
said, and I think that as a leader, as a boss, for the
people on your team, that's a really good trait. And I think
that I'm just concerned that when I talk to a young person
who's grown up in this world of looking at their phone, they
don't look at anyone in the eye, and they don't really know how
to communicate, and I'm generalizing, I get that, but I
just thought that, that it was something do you as a, as a
boss, look at those traits and whether they'll work for you to
for that to send them out as your, you know, your
representative of a good communicator, right, because
they have to finance so I love that. Thank you so much. Okay,
last question about your business. If you could change
one thing about the marketing industry, what would it be and
why? Ooh,
that's a great question. I think more
people need to say no to clients, I think and that's a
hard one because obviously they want the money. I I've, I've
been caught in this, this is not I'm like, I'm throwing myself in
the fire with them. Right? It's so every business owner, I think
can relate to that sort of sentiment. But the thing that I
have realized is that marketing, the businesses don't know what
they don't know. And so they lean on the marketers, and the
marketers are really good at marketing. And so they may be
able to accomplish what the business thinks that they need.
But what happens so often is that when they need it something
or like their needs evolve, or the second you start doing it,
some other things on earth, and that's, that's the natural
evolution. But what starts to happen is you end up becoming in
this kind of rigid, dynamic, and like I said, if there's a
disconnect between the company and the agency, a riff starts to
happen. And so but and I think a lot of the times, it happens
because the company was not ready for what the agency can
provide. And so because it mark, a lot of people look at
marketing, so siloed off, which, again, is why I take that
integrated approach, because we look at marketing from an entire
systemic level, we're looking at everything, we're teetering on
the lines of operations at that point, right. And so, but what
happens is that you hire an agency that, again, is siloed
off, they can handle several different services and call
themselves for full service, there are still gaps in what
they provide, because they're not looking at it from a sales
standpoint, they're not looking at it from an operations
standpoint, how it's impacting the internal team. And I think
they don't, they don't know, they don't know until they know,
and neither does the agency sometimes, right? Like they all
they can do is respond to potential need that they are
qualified to serve. Respect. Like, again, not, this is the
situation, but there is a gap in the way support, marketing
support is delivered. But there's also a gap in the way
businesses view marketing, they see it siloed off, they see it
as the bottom of the barrel source for the allocation for
budget, they have a mistrust in marketing. They just they just
don't see the value of it, or they don't also see the
challenge behind
it's like a bottomless pit for some people,
right. Yes, yes.
And so you get and that's what starts to
happen, right? They, they I think you get ad agencies who,
again, they want the revenue, that person saying, Okay, I'm
comfortable spending 8k on ads. There's not one sale that came
from those ads, because that company was not ready. But the
agency was not saying no to that company. Right.
Right. And I'm appalled at how much it costs
for, like, online ads and things like that these days. Yes. Yeah.
And on that no two ads are now becoming more
accessible. However, you still have to manage the ads. So
therefore, you have to pay someone to actually do the
strategy, manage the ads, update the budgets, all of things. But
then again, what happens is that marketing is very expensive,
because there's so much that goes into it so many resources.
You it's very hard to find generalists who can kind of do a
bunch of different things and mold things together and have it
be you know, and have it all be connected, which is why it's so
siloed off. But that is the problem in the industry. And
that's not what you do. You like to read
everything and take everything into Yes. Love it. Well, okay,
so just a couple of quick questions before so one is if
today, what's your favorite way to get information? Do you
listen to podcasts? Do you read real books? Do you listen to
audiobooks? Do you watch videos? What do you do?
Oh my gosh, I absorb it all I am. I am someone
that I'm a big self development junkie. So I'll read self
develop development books and kind of any of that type of
stuff. I listened I do listen to podcasts, some of which are more
entertaining than others. Each and then yeah, right but your
favorite right now I'm I'm really into the here to help pod
it's it's more of a parody podcast for free advice, but I
also love smartlace and armchair experts. Those are my favorites.
So smartlace and one that you may not be ready
for but my other favorite is wiser than me with Julia Louis
Dreyfus.
Oh, no. Okay. Yes, they do know. Yes, of
course. She
interviews women who are wiser than her and older
than her. Okay, so there's two seasons she's in second season
the first season she starts with Jane Fonda. It's like brilliant.
Oh,
amazing. Oh my gosh. Okay. Yeah, I'll
definitely check that out. So yeah, I love all those podcasts,
some of which I liked some more entertaining ones which is the
word of help once it's not a very serious either way, but I
do absorb when I'm on social media I'm I follow accounts that
I can learn from. I also am very observed and just try to absorb
all the things around me. So I, a lot of the times when I'm
creating strategies for clients and even for myself, I look for
inspiration at actually, for companies that are not at all in
the industry that the client is in but I look to see how I can
apply it you know, some principles that they do you or
just kind of study that and stuff like that. So I'm,
honestly the world is basically how I learn things. And I'm also
a chronic signer upper a free trial. So I always like to like,
see what what's happening. What tools can be syndrome
a little bit like me a little bit of the squirrel
syndrome, right?
Yes, exactly.
Because there's so much out there to learn and
know so much out there. You just don't know. You just have
sometimes have to stop. That's all. But anyway, so this has
been a delight. Thank you so much for the edge effect is
Caroline's podcast, you can find it on everywhere you guys. Yep.
And cultivate communications. It will be in the show notes. So
pay attention to how it's spelled. And go and visit her on
her website. Anything else you want to add last words?
I just want to say thank you so much for
having me if anyone is like I said, struggling with their
marketing and just has no idea where to start. Come to us. We
know exactly how to kind of get you out of that. Overwhelmed,
stuck feeling. So
sounds good. Thank you so much, Caroline. And
to my listeners. Thank you again for being here and remember to
stay connected and be remembered.
Thank you Janice.
You're welcome.
Here are some great episodes to start with.