Categories B2B

150+ Best YouTube Channels in Every Category

The great thing about YouTube is that there’s a channel for everyone, whether you’re looking to learn quick science facts or how to use your new gaming controller. 

In this post, we’ve compiled 158 of the best channels on YouTube in their most popular and niche categories. 

Download Now: The 2023 State of Social Media Trends [Free Report]

Best YouTube News Channels

  1. Vice (16.8 Million Subscribers)
  2. IndiaTV (34.8 Million Subscribers)
  3. CNN (15 Million Subscribers)
  4. Vox (11.3 Million Subscribers)
  5. ABS-CBN News (43.5 Million Subscribers)
  6. Inside Edition (11.7 Million Subscribers)
  7. ABC News (14.3 Million Subscribers)
  8. The Young Turks (5.4 Million Subscribers)
  9. BBC News (14.1 Million Subscribers)
  10. AJ+ (1.2 Million Subscribers)

New call-to-action

Categories B2B

The Top Types of AI-Generated Content in Marketing [New Data, Examples & Tips]

Thanks to the advancements in artificial intelligence technology, content generation doesn’t have to be a headache-inducing task. As AI increasingly takes over manual content production tasks, it’s wise for marketers to understand the different types of AI-generated content that exist — and which benefit the most from it.

These tools can help us produce high-quality content appealing to your audience and on-brand. In this blog post, we’ll explore the top types of AI-generated content in marketing. By leveraging these types of content, you can elevate your content strategy and gain a competitive edge in the market.

Free Guide: How to Use AI in Content Marketing [Download Now]

And to help understand, we pulled data from HubSpot’s own State of AI survey data to find out the top types of AI-generated content in marketing for 2023. The following are statistics drawn from 1350+ U.S. marketers — specifically those already leveraging artificial intelligence in their roles.

1. Social Media Posts (58%)

The most popular use for marketers leveraging AI for content is for social media posts, and with good reason.

Social media marketers have to make content they hope their audience will enjoy, and using a content assistant makes managing a social media calendar much easier. Marketers can use AI for social media posts:

  • Content Creation: AI tools can help generate content ideas, suggest topics, and even write headlines for social media posts. In fact, 35% of surveyed marketers use AI to get ideas or inspiration.
  • Scheduling and Posting: AI-powered social media scheduling tools can help you automatically post your content at the most effective times, and even optimize your content for specific social media platforms.
  • Audience Analytics: AI can help you better understand your audience through data analysis. This information can then be used to craft more effective and relevant social media posts.

2. Product Descriptions (50%)

50% of marketers who use generative AI found that the technology is helpful for product descriptions.

It can be challenging to find the words to describe new products, especially when you’re selling to an audience that doesn’t know the terminology as well as your team. Marketers can use artificial intelligence not only accurately to explain a product’s functionality and features but also in a way that’s accessible and clear to the general public.

3. Emails (43%)

43% of marketers that regularly use AI find it helpful for email marketing. Catching your customer’s attention through email subject lines is a challenge in itself, and even trickier to get them to click open. With the help of AI, marketers can improve their strategy through:

  • Timing Optimization: AI tools can suggest the best time of the day and day of the week to send a particular email based on when the recipient is most likely to engage with the email. This can improve open rates, click-through rates (CTR), and conversions.
  • Subject Line Generation: AI can generate effective and catchy subject lines by analyzing past email campaigns, and the subject line’s performance. If these tools can create grabby subjects, it could increase open rates.
  • A/B Testing: AI can be used to conduct A/B testing, where two different versions of the same email are sent to a random portion of the audience, and performance is measured. Based on the results of this testing, the best-performing email variant can then be sent to the rest of the audience, to maximize desired metrics.

4. Images (36%)

Marketers have much to gain from using AI for images as 36% of marketers find it helpful for image creation. Regarding search engine optimization, images can improve your rank in the search engine, and add a more attention-grabbing element to your blog, social media posts, or even product staging.

5. Blog Posts (35%)

Over one-third of marketing professionals found artificial intelligence tools helpful for making blog posts. As a writer myself, one of the first thoughts I had when introduced to AI was how it could improve my writing process.

Some of the best uses for AI writing generators in blog posts are:

  • Efficiency: Marketers can save time and resources by automating various aspects of blog post creation, such as topic generation, research, and even drafting. This technology can also reduce the time spent on menial tasks like formatting, proofreading, and optimizing content for SEO.
  • Personalization: AI can analyze customer behavior, preferences, and browsing history to help target blog content to specific audiences. Personalizing blog posts can make the content more relevant to the audience, potentially increasing engagement and conversion rates.

For those looking to improve their blog content creation, look no further than HubSpot’s content assistant. This platform feature is a suite of free, AI-powered features that help you ideate, create, and share remarkable content — in a flash.

Get started with HubSpot’s AI tools

6. Landing Pages (19%)

Almost one-fifth of marketing professionals using AI find it helpful for landing pages. Many businesses underestimate the power of good or bad UX, and artificial intelligence can help to monitor and improve how customers navigate your page through the following means:

  • A/B Testing: AI and machine learning algorithms can be used to analyze user behaviors and identify the most effective landing page elements. This allows marketers to create variations of the landing pages and run A/B testing to determine the most effective page layout and design, ultimately leading to higher conversion rates.
  • Optimization: AI-aided analytics helps analyze website bounce times, load times, and other important data. These insights allow marketers to optimize the landing pages and improve the customer experience for better website engagement.

7. Ebooks (17%)

According to our survey, the second to last helpful type of content to make with AI are ebooks. While AI can help marketers streamline certain aspects of ebook creation, there may be better options. Here are some reasons why:

  • Tone and style: Well-written ebooks require an understanding of the target audience and language used. AI language generation is good, but needs to catch up when identifying complex language nuances and preferences. In some cases, the tone can be misaligned with the target audience, hurting engagement and leading to readers rejecting the ebook’s content.
  • Authenticity: Human readers expect an ebook to be authentic, insightful, and provide original thoughts. AI is missing the critical thinking and research that offer authentic perspectives.
  • Legal Concerns: If marketers use artificial intelligence heavily for a published ebook, they could find themselves in hot water. AI tech companies can catch authors falsely claiming original work as their own, as there have been a rising number of lawsuits related to the popularization of the tools.

8. Whitepapers (12%)

The type of content that would benefit the least from artificial intelligence is whitepapers, according to survey data.

Whitepapers should provide unique insights and industry analysis on different subjects. While AI is good at pattern recognition and data analysis, it may not have the creativity and understanding of complex issues necessary to craft a high-quality whitepaper — so it probably can’t benefit marketers as much as the other content types.

Use AI Wisely for Your Marketing Content

AI-generated content is changing the game for marketers by revolutionizing the content creation process. From social media posts to landing pages, your team can enjoy a more efficient, personalized, and practical approach to content creation. Adapt and leverage the technology wisely in your content marketing strategies to stay ahead of the curve.

New Call-to-action

Categories B2B

The Future of Social Media [Research]: What Marketers Need to Know

Social media has changed considerably since the MySpace days, and it’s part of a marketer’s job to stay on top of its advancements.

You’re probably wondering what the social future of social media could look like and how marketers will need to adapt.

To answer your question, here are our guesses based on research, data, and current advancements in social media.

What is the Future of Social Media?

Search on Social Media Instead of Engines

More Reliance on Influencers Over Celebrities

More Chatbots as Consumers Slide into DMs for Customer Service

Download Now: The 2023 State of Social Media Trends [Free Report]

What is the Future of Social Media?

Through our multiple surveys, research, and additional data, here’s what we predict for the future of social media:

  • Consumers will search for information on social media or via AI instead of traditional search engines.
  • Brands will rely on influencers, especially micro-influencers, rather than celebrities
  • Consumers will enjoy a seamless shopping experience on social media
  • Brands Will Leverage Chatbots as Consumers Slide into DMs for Customer Service

Now, let’s dive deeper into each of these trends.

Search on Social Media Instead of Engines

It’s becoming more common for consumers to search for products, recommendations, or reviews on social media rather than search engines.

According to our 2023 Consumer Trends Report, 24% of consumers between the ages of 18-54 search for brands using social media instead of a search engine. This number jumps to 36% among Gen Z consumers.

Graph showing how generations of consumers use social media instead of search engines; The Future of Social Media

In a TechCrunch article, a Google exec suggested apps like TikTok and Instagram are threatening two staple Google discovery apps: Google Maps and Google Search.

“In our studies, something like almost 40% of young people, when they’re looking for a place for lunch, they don’t go to Google Maps or Search,” said Senior Vice President Prabhakar Raghavan, who runs Google’s Knowledge & Information sector. “They go to TikTok or Instagram.”

Why is this happening? Raghavan believes it’s because young adults prefer visual-forward content when it comes to discovery.

With more people using TikTok as a search engine, it makes sense the app added more search features to keep users engaged.

In August 2022, TikTok tested a feature in which keywords from video comments are highlighted and linked to search results. This serves as an additional way for users to discover new content as they’re scrolling on the platform.

Now, when you’re watching a video on TikTok you’ll notice a small search bar at the bottom of the screen with a keyword or topic associated with it. When you click on that search bar, the app will take you to more videos associated with the keyword.

Screenshot of a TikTok video about journaling. At the bottom of the video is a search bar with a keywords associated with the topic of the video.

If traditional search engines fail to keep up with consumer needs, TikTok and other social platforms may take the lead in product and content discovery as they prioritize visual content.

Another rival for search engines is AI chatbots like ChatGPT. Users can ask ChatGPT questions in the form of prompts and the bot will generate answers to their queries.

Though data is limited in regards to how often people use ChatGPT in place of search engines, ChatGPT currently receives about 1 billion monthly website visitors and has an estimated 100 million active users.

More Reliance on Influencers Over Celebrities

80% of influencer marketers work with creators/influencers with under 100K followers while only 16% work with celebrities who have over a million followers, according to our 2023 Social Media Marketing Report.

Working with smaller influencers is more cost-effective for brands than working with celebrities. More importantly, consumers trust influencers and creators.

In our latest consumer trends report, we surveyed more than 600 consumers. We found 31% of social media users prefer to discover new products on social media through an influencer they follow over any other social format or channel.

The number shoots up to 43% for Gen Z social media users. Moreover, 21% of social media users 18-54 have made a purchase based on an influencer’s recommendation in the past 3 months. The number rises to 32% among Gen Z.

Graph showing the percentage of each generation who bought a product based on an influencer's recommendation in the past 3 months; Future of Social Media

This is likely because, with influencers who specialize in an area, their opinion is more valuable than a family member’s.

Say, I’m looking for hiking gear. A hiking influencer who hikes all year long and has a history of reviewing hiking products will probably offer more insight than a friend who went hiking once.

As a result, influencers – although strangers – can be deemed more valuable than loved ones. In the future, that trend will likely continue, as content creators are popping up every day.

Our survey revealed that 30% of 18-24-year-olds and 40% of 25-34-year-olds call themselves content creators. While not every creator is an influencer, those roles often intersect.

Seamless Shopping Experience on Most Socials

Instagram was one of the first social platforms to offer a seamless shopping experience and integration. However, they likely won’t be the last.

Let’s set the scene: In a couple of years, Gen Z will have fully joined the working class and will have tremendous spending power.

Our consumer trends report found that most Gen-Zers prefer to discover new products on social media — specifically short-form videos.

This means that to remain competitive, social platforms will have to offer integrated shopping experiences to keep consumers on the platform.

Instagram has already seen great success in this arena, it’s only a matter of time until other platforms follow suit.

More Chatbots as Consumers Slide into DMs for Customer Service

Our 2023 Social Media Trends Report shows 1 in 5 Gen Z, Millennials, and Gen X social media users have contacted a brand through DMs for customer service in the past three months.

Going further, 76% of social media marketers say their company already offers customer service on social media.

At the same time, the use of AI chatbots in customer service is on the rise. By 2027, chatbots are expected to become the primary customer service channel for a quarter of businesses.

A recent study also found that 62% of respondents would rather interact with a customer service chatbot than wait for an agent to respond. Ch

So, we wouldn’t be surprised if more brands leveraged chatbots in their customer service tactics in the future, including using chatbots to answer DMs from consumers.

Social media moves incredibly quickly, so we can’t say with certainty what the future will look like. But given recent data, we can say it’s likely headed in this direction.

New call-to-action

 

Categories B2B

What Businesses Get Wrong About Content Marketing in 2023 [Expert Tips]

The promise of inbound marketing is a lure that attracts businesses of all kinds, but few understand the efforts it takes to be successful. After a few blog posts, they flame out and grumble “We tried content marketing, but it didn’t really work for us.” I hear this from prospective clients all the time.

And I get it. Business owners are skeptical of making an investment that might not pan out, so they get cautious and are ready to pull the plug at the first sign that they’re wasting money.

Honestly, they probably are wasting money. There’s an epidemic of half-hearted content marketing out there that’s giving the whole inbound philosophy a bad name.

So when I hear potential clients say that they tried content marketing but didn’t see results, this is how I respond.

Download Now: 150+ Content Creation Templates [Free Kit]

Why Your Content Marketing Efforts Might Be Missing the Mark

Content marketing is not new. The ideas have been around for decades. At this point, no business professional is unfamiliar with a blog, search engine traffic, or social media.

The problem, it seems to me, is that too many people have misunderstood the true purpose of content marketing — and so have missed the mark on their past efforts.

Go to most companies’ blogs and you’ll find fluffy, self-serving content: Pictures from their clean-up day at the local park, press release-style articles about promotions and employee-of-the-month winners.

Or, it’s filled with content that feels derivative and identical to a thousand other articles on the internet.

It is no surprise to me that this kind of content has failed to bring in customers.

Unremarkable Effort, Unremarkable Results

With most things in life, your results match your efforts. As the saying goes, “You get out of it what you put into it.” Same thing here.

When companies tell me about their forays into content marketing in the past, I’m not surprised it didn’t work for them.

“We tried content marketing…”

If you’re one of those businesses that “tried” content marketing, only to see sub-par results — I’ll bet you got out of it what you put into it.

This happens for a few all too common reasons, and I’ve seen dozens of companies fail because of these same few mistakes.

1. There was no clear owner of your content marketing. If content marketing is something that gets tacked onto other responsibilities, it’s going to fall by the wayside. You can’t ask someone who already has a full-time job to also produce and implement a full content marketing strategy. That in itself is a full-time job. Heck, it might be more than a full-time job.

2. You played it safe. To me, content marketing is about educating your customer. It’s about building trust and being transparent so that your potential buyers can access the information they need to become customers. This means you need to address thorny subjects. This means you have to offer honesty instead of a sales pitch. When we tell businesses they need to tell their buyers the specific drawbacks and shortcomings of their products, some blink and decide to play it safe, undercutting the whole effort.

3. You had no framework. If you don’t have a plan, you’re not going to get very far. A framework gives you structure and benchmarks. Without it, you’ve got guesswork and inconsistency — which can quickly lead to frustration.

4. You hired a sub-par agency to produce your content for you. The reason I’ve seen most content marketing initiatives fail is that businesses hire ill-prepared agencies or freelancers to do it for them. This sounds like a good idea at first, but the results are almost always underwhelming. These outsiders sometimes produce the same bland, derivative content that sounds like everyone else in your industry — but it doesn’t sound like you. The content just doesn’t resonate with buyers, and business leaders are left scratching their heads and wondering how they paid so much and got so little.

“… But it didn’t work for us.”

There’s something to unpack here, too. What do you mean it didn’t work for you? How did you plan on measuring success?

Any marketing initiative needs to be measured to be evaluated, and those measurements need context to have meaning.

Which is why I find myself helping our clients unlearn what they thought they knew about inbound marketing.

Mistakes Business Leaders’ Make In Their Content Marketing Strategies

Mistake One: Focusing on the Wrong Metrics

The inbound funnel is a compelling idea: If you get enough traffic to your site, a percentage of that traffic will turn into leads, and a percentage of those leads will turn into sales.

So people assume more traffic will equal more sales.

Not necessarily. While organic traffic is important, it can also be a vanity metric that distracts you from the most important goals.

Imagine this:

  • Article A gets 10,000 views each month and brings in 10 customers.
  • Article B gets 2,000 views each month and brings in 20 customers.
  • Article C gets 500 views per month and brings in 50 customers.

Too often, companies chase Article A, putting their effort into high-trafficked content that doesn’t end up converting visitors into customers.

Which leads us to our second mistake.

Mistake Two: Not Getting Sales Involved

The inbound approach is not just a marketing one. In fact, if you limit it to just marketing, you undercut your results. Inbound is as much about sales as it is about marketing.

You see, if you don’t get your sales team involved with your content marketing, you are more likely to produce a library of Article A-type content. Marketers love to brag about reach, and what’s more encouraging than thousands of site visitors?

The sales team will bring your marketing team back down to earth. Because your sales reps hear from actual customers each day, they know the questions your prospects are actually asking. They know why Article C is the better investment of your team’s time.

The Promise of Content Marketing

Look, I understand that companies get started in content marketing for a variety of reasons. But in most cases, the goal is to drive revenue. Brand recognition is great, but for most of the businesses I work with, it only matters if it translates into sales at the other end of the funnel.

When I hear business leaders tell me that content marketing didn’t work for them, it’s often due to the fact that they were chasing the metrics of brand recognition (organic traffic, social media engagement, etc.) — and they were likely working with a substandard agency or putting in inconsistent effort themselves.

It’s no surprise the results didn’t materialize.

In order to get content marketing right, we need to re-acquaint ourselves with the real objectives that matter, train our employees for excellence — and be ready for a long-term commitment.

Anything less will yield sub-par results.

Categories B2B

56 Core Company Values That Will Shape Your Culture & Inspire Your Employees

Company values help you direct every person on your team toward a common goal. They remind you that you share a bigger purpose.

Businesses often look to each other to figure out how to refine their values, habits, and ideas into a set of values. To keep growing, companies need something their teams can get behind and understand.

Download Now: 50 Examples of Company Core Values

This search has led many people to HubSpot’s culture code — and the original 2013 deck has almost 6 million views online.

In this post, we’ll explore why company values are important. We’ll show you how to create your core values and serve up some industry favorites for inspiration. And we’ll talk about how HubSpot created our culture code and work to grow better.

Keeping these common values top of mind will help you make business decisions that are in line with your core principles and stay true to the company vision.

Why are company values important?

Core company values give employees purpose. Purpose is undeniably critical for employee satisfaction. In fact, a McKinsey & Company survey of employees found 70% of employees said their sense of purpose was largely defined by work. However, that number drops significantly to 15% when non-executive participants were asked if they are living their purpose at work.

This is why it’s important your core values are embraced at every level, not just by the executive team. Purpose doesn’t just improve employee satisfaction — it also increases your bottom line and builds trust with customers.

Professor and author Ranjay Gulati explains in his book Deep Purpose that “To get purpose right, leaders must fundamentally change not only how they execute it but also how they conceive of and relate to it.” Gulati calls this process deep purpose, which furthers an organization’s reason for being in a more intense, thoughtful, and comprehensive way.

Ultimately, core values are critical if you want to create a long-lasting, successful, and motivating place to work.

Whether you work for a new company in need of core-value inspiration, or an older company in need of a value revamp, you’re in luck — below, we’ve cultivated a list of some of the best company values. Additionally, we’ll examine how some companies truly honor their values.

Elements of Company Core Values

1. Clear and Concise

It is essential to keep your company values clear so that they can be understood and embraced by employees, regardless of their level or position in the company.

Your company values should ensure that employees know what to expect and effectively communicate what’s important to the organization.

2. Brief and Memorable

Don’t over explain your company values — keep them brief, instead. Having bite-sized values will make them easier to remember, making it more likely that they will be internalized and adopted as part of your company culture.

Plus, having short and catchy values can help create a distinctive brand identity, giving your company a competitive advantage. It will be easier to differentiate your company from others in the market when the values are memorable and unique.

3. Action-Oriented

Want values that create a significant impact? Make them action-oriented.

Rather than focusing on abstract ideas and concepts, establish core values that serve as a guide for how employees should act and behave in their daily work. This will help establish accountability among your employees and empower them to do their best work.

4. Reflective

Your core values establish the foundation of your company’s culture, which is why they must be unique to your company and accurately reflect your mission, vision, beliefs, and objectives.

Keeping your values consistent with your objectives can help create an authentic brand image and foster trust among your customers, partners, and employees. It will also help attract and retain employees who have the same beliefs, resulting in a more cohesive and effective staff.

5. Adaptable

While your core values should always be consistent with your overall mission, don’t be afraid to make adjustments as your company grows. Your company may not look like it did when it first started out, and your original values may not be as relevant or effective as they were then.

For instance, HubSpot has updated its Culture Code over 30 times since its founding.

As your business evolves, regularly obtain feedback from employees and other stakeholders, and re-assess your core values when necessary.

Examples of Companies with Inspiring Core Values

1. Patagonia

  1. Build the best product — Our criteria for the best product rests on function, repairability, and, foremost, durability. Among the most direct ways we can limit ecological impacts is with goods that last for generations or can be recycled so the materials in them remain in use. Making the best product matters for saving the planet.
  2. Cause no unnecessary harm — We know that our business activity—from lighting stores to dyeing shirts—is part of the problem. We work steadily to change our business practices and share what we’ve learned. But we recognize that this is not enough. We seek not only to do less harm, but more good.
  3. Use business to protect nature — The challenges we face as a society require leadership. Once we identify a problem, we act. We embrace risk and act to protect and restore the stability, integrity and beauty of the web of life.
  4. Not bound by convention — Our success—and much of the fun—lies in developing new ways to do things.

For Patagonia, company values aren’t just a few feel-good statements to put on the “About Us” page. When founder Yvon Chouinard’s first venture, Chouinard Equipment, found that their pitons were damaging natural rock, they developed an environmentally-friendly alternative — aluminum chocks.

This bold act was the first of many, including offering on-site childcare, creating the Tools for Grassroots Activists conference, and Patagonia Action Works. The most recent is the news that Chouinard is shifting his family’s ownership of the company to a trust that will support future operations. This $3 billion decision also has the potential to contribute about $100 million a year to climate change research.

“While we’re doing our best to address the environmental crisis, it’s not enough. We needed to find a way to put more money into fighting the crisis while keeping the company’s values intact…

Truth be told, there were no good options available. So, we created our own.”

This move is a clear reflection of the company’s core values above.

2. Google

  1. Focus on the user and all else will follow.
  2. It’s best to do one thing really, really well.
  3. Fast is better than slow.
  4. Democracy on the web works.
  5. You don’t need to be at your desk to need an answer.
  6. You can make money without doing evil.
  7. There’s always more information out there.
  8. The need for information crosses all borders.
  9. You can be serious without a suit.
  10. Great just isn’t good enough.

On Google’s philosophy page, they don’t just list their core values — they also provide examples.

For instance, consider their value, “You can make money without doing evil.” While many companies likely tout the benefits of integrity, Google references strategic efforts it has made to avoid “evil” business, including — “We don’t allow ads to be displayed on our results pages unless they are relevant where they are shown … We don’t accept pop–up advertising, which interferes with your ability to see the content you’ve requested … [and] Advertising on Google is always clearly identified as a ‘Sponsored Link,’ so it does not compromise the integrity of our search results.”

Fulfilling values like “don’t be evil” can be complicated. As Google grows and develops more products, there is more tension and scrutiny. Ultimately, a core value doesn’t have much power if your company can’t list intentional, calculated decisions it’s made to put values ahead of profit.

3. Coca Cola

  1. People are at the center of everything we do, from our employees to those who touch our business to the communities we call home.
  2. Each one of us can make a big difference for a better shared future.
  3. We value diversity, equity and inclusion — 700,000+ people around the world work at Coca-Cola and our bottling partners. We champion diversity by building a workforce as diverse as the consumers we serve. Because the more perspectives we have, the better decisions we make.
  4. We value equality — Empowering people’s access to equal opportunities, no matter who they are or where they’re from. Our company has signed several gender diversity pledges and is working towards an even split of women and men in leadership roles.
  5. We value human and workplace rights — For 130+ years, we have built a reputation on trust and respect – everywhere we do business.
  6. We commit to supplier diversity — Our commitment is to spend $1 billion with diverse partners. We are more than doubling our spending with Black-owned enterprises across our U.S. supply chain—by at least $500 million—over the next five years.

Coca-Cola demonstrates its diversity core value with its public Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion page. It lists the company’s diversity-related efforts, such as, “It’s our ambition by 2030 to have women hold 50% of senior leadership roles at the company and in the U.S. to have race and ethnicity representation reflect national census data at all levels.”

Additionally, Coca-Cola’s Sustainability page exemplifies its commitment to climate, as well. This page includes charts and statistics about water usage, recycling, and more. By acknowledging both its efforts and its shortcomings, Coca-Cola is able to show its desire to live up to its values, while taking responsibility for any mismatch between its ideals and reality.

4. Whole Foods

  1. We Sell the Highest Quality Natural and Organic Foods
  2. We satisfy and delight our customers
  3. We promote team member growth and happiness
  4. We practice win-win partnerships with our suppliers
  5. We create profits and prosperity
  6. We Care About our Community and the Environment

Underneath each of its values on its core value page, Whole Foods provides a link, such as, “Learn more about how we care about our communities and the environment.”

Ultimately, their page demonstrates their ability to walk the walk. For instance, to exemplify their commitment to local communities, Whole Foods created a Local Producer Loan Program, which provides up to $26 million in low-interest loans to independent local farmers and food artisans.

Additionally, Whole Foods provides a list of environmentally-friendly efforts they’ve practiced since 1980, including “Printing and packaging using recycled paper and water- or vegetable-based, composting to decrease landfill waste, and no single-use plastic bags at checkout since 2008”.

Amazon’s acquisition of the grocery chain in 2017 caused some loyal shoppers to question the authenticity of the brand. But they brought in a new CEO in 2022 who wants to more deeply connect to the core values of Whole Foods. And a 30% increase in local brands and double the number of banned food ingredients in stores show that the company is still focused on its core values.

If you’ve ever been to Whole Foods, you know they’re serious about their efforts to reduce waste and help the local community. In fact, it’s part of the reason so many customers are brand loyalists — because they support those efforts, too.

5. Nude Barre

  1. We strive to make sure that all hu(e)mans feel seen and heard.
  2. We believe that everybody deserves to find their perfect hue. — The diverse world we live in needs products that account for all skin tones and body types. Every hu(e)man deserves a choice. Our company is pioneering the change we want to see in retail by providing an unmatched level of choices, regardless of hue!
  3. We believe in eliminating the “other.” — Gone are the days of “sun tan” and “beige” being the only options for nude. No one should have to dye or customize their hosiery and intimates. Through our 12 inclusive shades, we are committed to making undergarments that look good, feel good, and are the perfect hue for you!
  4. Because we all deserve to be center stage. — Here at Nude Barre, we are on a mission to reclaim and revolutionize nude. We provide people who have been historically overlooked and underrepresented with resilient and comfortable bodywear that becomes one with your skin. Our 12 unique shades close the representational gap and elevate all hu(e)mans. Because if we don’t, who will?

Nude Barre founder Erin Carpenter used her experience as a professional dancer as a starting point for her product.

“I would spend hours dyeing my tights and ‘pancaking’ my shoes [applying pancake foundation to shoes with a sponge to mattify and change their color], and had many friends and colleagues who were doing the same to meet the industry’s requirement of nude undergarments.”

These frustrations didn’t just lead her to solve a problem that she struggled with for years. They helped her create a set of company values that emphasize empathy, access, representation, and awareness.

This clear story and set of values have led to over $1.5 million in funding to continue to grow her business.

6. Gusto

  1. Embody a service mindset. — Never stop advocating for the needs of others.
  2. Dream big, then make it real. — Be ambitious. Show and do is greater than tell and talk.
  3. Be proud of the how. — Ensure deep integrity in everything you do.
  4. Embrace an ownership mentality. — Take initiative to leave things better than you found them.
  5. Debate then commit. — Share openly, question respectfully, and once a decision is made, commit fully.
  6. Build with humility. — Put collective success before individual achievements.

This popular payroll app supports 200,000+ businesses in the United States. Gusto doesn’t just talk about supporting the needs of employees and customers. Leaders at this company make it happen with radical transparency.

For example, Gusto’s chief security officer recently wrote for Fast Company about transparency. His article talks about why he shares every performance review with each of Gusto’s 2000 employees.

“Many organizations espouse transparency as a core value, but it typically doesn’t extend to performance reviews. While leaders are often privy to our teams’ reviews, it’s rarely a two-way street. The result is that for many people, it’s uncomfortable to give and receive constructive feedback at work.

When I first shared my review, the Google Doc…broke because hundreds of people—nearly 30% of our workforce—tried to read it that same day. Similarly, almost 40% of employees read our co-founder and CTO’s review the day he first shared it.”

This simple approach to company values shows their team how their leaders hold each other accountable, and that “it’s okay to fall short sometimes as long as we commit to growth.”

7. American Express

  1. WE DELIVER FOR OUR CUSTOMERS — We’re driven by our commitment to deliver exceptional products, services and experiences to our customers. We value our strong customer relationships, and are defined by how well we take care of them.
  2. WE RESPECT PEOPLE — We are a diverse and inclusive company, and serve diverse customers. We believe we are a better company when each of us feels included, valued, and able to trust colleagues who respect each of us for who we are and what we contribute to our collective success.
  3. WE CARE ABOUT OUR COMMUNITIES — We aim to make a difference in the communities where we work and live. Our commitment to corporate social responsibility makes an impact by strengthening our connections.
  4. WE MAKE IT GREAT — We deliver an unparalleled standard of excellence in everything we do, staying focused on the biggest opportunities to be meaningful to our customers. From our innovative products to our world-class customer service, our customers expect the best —and our teams are proud to deliver it.
  5. WE NEED DIFFERENT VIEWS — By being open to different ideas from our colleagues, customers and the world around us, we will find more ways to win.
  6. WE DO WHAT’S RIGHT — Customers choose us because they trust our brand and people. We earn that trust by ensuring everything we do is reliable, consistent, and with the highest level of integrity.
  7. WE WIN AS A TEAM — We view each other as colleagues – part of the same team, striving to deliver the brand promise to our customers and each other every day. Individual performance is essential and valued; but never at the expense of the team.

American Express doesn’t just hit the bare minimum when it comes to polite, helpful customer service. They go above and beyond to solve for their customers, even when there’s no protocol in place.

For instance, Raymond Joabar, the Executive Vice President at American Express, told this story in a Forbes interview: “One time, a hotel café manager [an Amex merchant] alerted my team that he had accidentally sold a display cake with harmful chemicals and needed to find the customers before they ate it. Obviously, there’s no procedure for that, but our team took ownership of the problem. They gathered all the information they could from the record of charge, identified 21 Card Members who used their cards at the café during that time frame, reviewed the accounts to find the right match, and then called the Card Member in time before they served the cake at an anniversary party.”

“The important point here,” Joabar noted, “other than that everybody ended up safe and sound — is that there isn’t a script for every situation, so we empower our care professionals to do what’s right for the customer. And we recognize what they do with this empowerment as well. We give awards to employees who go above and beyond to help customers and we share their stories across the company.”

This anecdote exemplifies American Express employees’ commitment to their customers even when it’s not easy, and demonstrates the company’s dedication to living by its values.

8. REI

At Recreational Equipment, Inc. (REI) we believe a life outdoors is a life well-lived!

We believe that it’s in the wild, untamed and natural places that we find our best selves, so our purpose is to awaken a lifelong love of the outdoors, for all.

Since 1938, we have been your local outdoor co-op, working to help you experience the transformational power of nature. We bring you top-quality gear and apparel, expert advice, rental equipment, inspiring stories of life outside and outdoor experiences to enjoy alone or share with your friends and family. And because we have no shareholders, with every purchase you make with REI, you are choosing to steward the outdoors, support sustainable business and help the fight for life outside.

So whether you’re new to the outdoors or a seasoned pro, we hope you’ll join us.

Recreational equipment co-op REI has remained true to its values since its founding in 1938. The co-op model allows them to invest a significant portion of profits back into their community through employee profit sharing and donations to nonprofits dedicated to the outdoors.

Since 2015, all REI stores close on Black Friday — perhaps the biggest shopping day of the year — so employees can enjoy time outdoors with friends and family.

The company states “We give all our employees a day off to #OptOutside with family and friends on the busiest retail day of the year. We continue this tradition because we believe in putting purpose before profits.”

But some employees feel that the company could do more to meet the expectations set by its ambitious value statement. They’re not the only people that feel this way about an employer. A 2022 Gartner survey says that 50% of employees have changed their employer expectations since the pandemic.

It’s no longer enough to have a clear set of company values, companies must show action toward those stated goals. According to a 2021 McKinsey report, only 30% of consumers want to hear a brand’s stance on societal issues. At the same time, 61% want to see companies take action on those issues.

Company values are more than a page on the website. They need to be a plan for what your company stands for over time. Let’s talk about how you can create authentic company values for your business.

How to Implement Core Values

Now that you’ve seen what core values look like at other companies, you may be wondering how to create and implement your own. While defining your core values may be a hefty task, there are a few simple steps that will help you develop and iterate your own.

1. Check in with your team.

A quick way to get started is to consult your founders or executive team. They’ll often already have a mission statement or vision for the company values.

If not, you may want to set up a few brainstorming sessions with your team. Company values can also come up as your team solves problems together.

As you start your business, jot down ideas as they come up, and keep them somewhere that’s easy to find. This way you have an easy place to go for inspiration when you draw a blank or get stuck.

Once you have that framework, you can work on fleshing out your organization’s core values.

If you’re having a hard time getting started, this company culture code template can help.

How HubSpot completed this step: HubSpot was operating for three years before co-founder Dharmesh Shah started work on HubSpot’s culture code. He started the project by asking questions and sending surveys to the team.

This took several rounds because one of the common themes was that employees love working at HubSpot because of the people. It took more time and effort to discover why and how that feeling could translate to a set of company values.

2. Solicit feedback.

The level of feedback you need for a project like this isn’t a one-time and done sort of effort. While the responses to a question like “Why do you love working here?” may feel good to hear, they may not be specific or honest enough to build your core values on.

You’ll want to ask tough questions and get into the details. This will help you collect constructive criticism. It will also help you understand the culture your business already has. Building on your existing values is the best way to create a lasting company culture.

It’s also important to key into informal conversations and non-verbal signals. Let your team know what you’re doing and why. Then, practice active listening. It may be tempting to argue or defend your point of view during these conversations. But interrupting in this way could mean that you’ll lose valuable insights.

These are some useful resources for gathering feedback from your team:

How HubSpot completed this step: HubSpot’s core employee values were initially outlined in the acronym HEART:

  • Humble
  • Effective
  • Adaptable
  • Remarkable
  • Transparent

While getting feedback for HubSpot’s culture code update, co-founder Dharmesh Shah realized that something was a bit off. He found that the acronym was missing one integral part of how HubSpot does business: empathy.

Company values examples: HubSpot, Empathy

In response, Shah proposed replacing “Effective” with “Empathy” and encouraged employees to submit feedback via an internal wiki page.

3. Implement feedback.

Part of creating a set of company values is ensuring that employees buy into those ideas. So, if collecting feedback is an essential step, the next step has to be putting that feedback into action.

While not every piece of feedback will be useful, it’s important to recognize these contributions. As you review updates from your team, you’ll want to compare these insights and start to look for patterns. Once you have some clear ideas of what you want to add or update, outline your next steps to put these changes into place.

Then, share the plan with your team and thank them for their insights.

How HubSpot completed this step: In HubSpot’s case, the team decided to update our culture code and the HEART acronym changed to Humble, Empathetic, Adaptable, Remarkable, and Transparent.

Company values example: HubSpot, HEART

This process took several years of refining. After this change and many rounds of feedback, the culture code was shared globally.

4. Make your core values unique to your brand.

Many industries have catchy phrases or jargon that are central to your business. But those phrases probably aren’t the best way to communicate the unique values of your brand.

Your company values aren’t just a blueprint for what your business does and what your employees believe in. It’s about what separates your team from everything else out there.

You learn from each other and develop tactics and strategies every day. These habits come from a foundation of shared values. So, your goal during this step is to bring those distinct values to light.

This may mean collecting quotes that inspire your team. It could arise from offsite meetings or impromptu conversations.

No matter what your creative process is, to make your company values unique, you’ll want to think about what you want those values to do.

Ask yourself:

  • How can my team act on these ideas?
  • What will make these ideas easy to remember?
  • Do these ideas inspire me to do my best?
  • Are these ideas inclusive and relevant for everyone on the team?
  • Are they specific enough to guide us when making tough decisions?

As you refine your core values, make sure that they embody the spirit of your business and team.

How HubSpot completed this step: Core values often relate to the problems your business wants to solve and how that relates to your personal values.

For example, in a talk at Stanford University, Dharmesh Shah shared the quote, “Sunlight is the best disinfectant.” He told a story of how he interpreted this Louis Brandeis quote and then explained how it came into conversations that he and co-founder Brian Halligan were having about transparency.

You can hear the full story in the video below:

Company values often use short sentences and declarative phrases. Because of this, it can also be useful to explain how your team interprets a simple phrase within your values. For example, the culture code explains what transparency is and what it isn’t at HubSpot.

Company values examples: HubSpot, Transparency

5. Continue to evolve when necessary.

Change is the only constant. Your business will change over time. Societal norms, values, and trends will change too. To keep your company culture in line with the times, you’ll want to revisit your values regularly.

First, spend some time with your core values. These will often stay the same. That said, the way your business applies or interprets these values may have shifted.

Next, add or remove values in line with changes to your culture. Take care to make thoughtful updates and bring in a group of engaged employees to offer early feedback.

Once the group feels satisfied with your updates, share them with the full team for another round of feedback. Staying open throughout the process is important for keeping your team engaged.

Your company values should consistently reflect the core of your business. This means that the way you write and edit them will impact every single person connected to the company.

As you make changes, start with leadership and ask them to model these updated values. Find ways to encourage employees to embrace updated values. And engage as many people as you can to make sure your company’s culture stays top of mind, fresh, and current.

How HubSpot completed this step: As HubSpot continues to grow there are new ideas to consider. For example, the culture code covers concerns about time off, remote work, and more with a simple phrase – use good judgment. Leaders at HubSpot talk constantly about the culture and HEART comes up in both tactical and strategic conversations.

In many ways, the team built HubSpot’s culture code in the same way they create HubSpot’s products — thoughtful updates, regular feedback, and continuous investment.

This slide from the culture code deck emphasizes the importance of updates to company values:

Company values examples: HubSpot, culture debt

As of this writing, HubSpot’s culture code has seen over 33 revisions. Updates go through a beta testing process that collects both quantitative and qualitative data. And HubSpot employees work with HEART & SOUL.

Company values examples: HubSpot, HEART and SOUL

Strong Company Values are Good for Business

Ultimately, good core values can help an audience identify with, and stay loyal to, your brand, rather than flipping between you and competitors. To ensure long-term success and long-term employee retention, it’s critical you create — and live by — certain non-negotiable company values.

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published in November 2020 and has been updated for comprehensiveness.

New call-to-action

Categories B2B

What’s a Marketing Audit? [+ How To Do One]

As marketers, we’re always looking for ways to improve our game plan. But with so many tactics and channels available, knowing where to focus our efforts can be challenging.

Ultimately, no marketing strategy is perfect. A marketing audit gives you a holistic view of your marketing efforts, including what’s working, what could be improved, and where new opportunities are present.

Here, we’ll take a closer look at marketing audits, the best time to conduct one, and a few best practices to pull one off.

Download Now: Free Marketing Plan Template [Get Your Copy]

Table of Contents

What is a marketing audit?

What are the elements of a marketing audit?

Who does a marketing audit?

When should I do a marketing audit?

How to Do a Marketing Audit

A marketing audit identifies the biggest strengths and weaknesses of your current strategy. It highlights what plans, processes, and practices are most effective at meeting goals. Just as importantly, it builds a foundation for future decision-making by identifying opportunities, gaps, and areas for improvement.

To get the best results, your marketing audit should be objective, systematic, and recurring:

  • Objective to ensure your it’s free of bias
  • Systematic to ensure your audit is structured, organized, and measurable
  • Recurring so you can discover and address problems early on

Keep in mind that a marketing audit can encompass your entire operation or a subset of it — such as a specific campaign, process, or focus (e.g., social media marketing).

Elements of a Marketing Audit

Marketing Audit: SWOT, competitive analysis, and market research

A comprehensive marketing audit may include one or more of the following elements:

1. SWOT analysis.

A SWOT analysis outlines the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats of your marketing. Using this framework, you can take inventory of your marketing assets and roadblocks.

2. Competitive analysis.

As the name suggests, a competitive analysis takes stock of the strengths and weaknesses of your competitors. It puts a magnifying glass on their products, prices, marketing strategies, campaigns, and target audience.

3. Market research.

Even if you think you know your customers through and through, market research can reveal even deeper insight into their needs, preferences, motivations, and behaviors. On top of that, you can tap into emerging trends and new opportunities in the marketplace, helping you stay ahead of the curve.

Who does a marketing audit?

A third party typically conducts a marketing audit. This is for a few reasons.

First, your audit needs to be as objective as possible. With this in mind, outsourcing to a third party – rather than conducting it internally — is the sounder option.

On top of that, third-party firms have more experience in conducting audits — and that experience really matters. Often, they’re better equipped to identify best practices and opportunities for improvement, and they may have access to specialized tools, technologies, and research capabilities.

When should I do a marketing audit?

A marketing audit should be conducted on a regular basis. After all, the sooner you capitalize on what’s working (and remedy what’s not), the stronger your marketing plan will be.

Of course, the exact frequency depends on your organization’s industry, size, and goals. Generally, it’s good practice to conduct an audit on an annual basis.

Other factors may trigger the need for an audit, including:

Marketing Audit Triggers: significant market changes (e.g., a new competitor), lack of results, notable business changes (e.g., a merger), and/or planned investments (e.g., a rebrand or new product launch).

Now let’s cover the steps for conducting a marketing audit and a few best practices.

1. Choose what you want to audit.

As already mentioned, your marketing audit can cover your entire operation or target a specific campaign, process, or area, such as social media or content. That said, different components of your marketing are often interrelated, so it can be helpful to analyze “the big picture.”

Ultimately, what you choose to audit is entirely up to you and will depend on your marketing priorities.

2. Identify your goals and objectives.

Want to know which of your social media campaigns are performing well? Or how your content strategy stacks up against your competitors? Or, maybe you want to refresh your branding or customer personas.

Start by picking an objective that will serve as the “North Star” for your audit. Next, break down your object into measurable goals.

For example, suppose your main objective is determining which social media channels provide the best engagement. In that case, your goal might be, “Meet a minimum quota of 200 new followers per month on TikTok.” Then, your marketing audit would put this to the test.

3. Collect the right information.

Now that you have well-defined and measurable goals, the next step is gathering information. This can come from a number of sources — such as campaign metrics, website traffic, social media metrics, and marketing spend.

For instance, if you’re tracking the effectiveness of a specific campaign, HubSpot users can access a wealth of campaign data via the marketing analytics dashboard. From here, they can direct their marketing budget toward their most successful efforts.

Screenshot 2023-05-11 at 3.33.58 PMImage Source

You can also gather data from external sources like market research reports, industry benchmarks, and competitor analysis — but ensure the data is reliable and accurate.

Once you’ve gathered the data, organize it in a way that is easy to analyze and reference later. You may want to create charts and graphs, and consolidate data into a single document.

4. Surface any findings or insights from the data.

How you evaluate your data depends on the goals of the audit. For instance, you might perform a competitive analysis if you’re looking to evaluate your pricing strategy against your competitors. 

Document the results or findings from this step so you can make effective recommendations down the line.

5. Make recommendations (and track them).

Lastly, make recommendations for improving your marketing strategy — such as readjusting your messaging, marketing channels, or spend.

For example, if you discover your Facebook advertising strategy isn’t capturing enough leads, a recommendation might be to redirect that spend to another channel.

After you make these adjustments, monitor the results to determine their effectiveness. This involves tracking key performance indicators (KPIs) and making changes as needed.

Back to You

Again, no marketing plan is perfect. By running a marketing audit, however, you can capitalize on what’s working and resolve what’s not. The result? A more optimized strategy that drives results.

New Call-to-action

Categories B2B

8 Strategies for Google Shopping Ads That’ll Boost Your Conversion Rates

Did you know there were over 214.7 million digital buyers in the US in 2022? Online shopping has become a mainstream revenue source for businesses. So, with the right Google Shopping campaign structure, your business can soar.

Free Guide, Template & Planner: How to Use Google Ads for Business

Google Shopping ads are an essential part of any successful digital marketing strategy. They are a great way to drive more sales and increase online visibility. Most businesses today are already investing in Google Shopping ads. If you’re not, it’s time to get started.

Keep reading to learn eight Google Shopping ads strategies that will help you drive more sales and increase your ROI. You’ll also get tips on optimizing your campaigns for maximum effectiveness.

The Benefits of Google Shopping Ads

Google Shopping ads allow you to target specific customers based on their demographics, interests, and other characteristics. It helps ensure that your Google shopping campaign structure targets the right audience.

These ads use visuals to draw customers in and make them more likely to click.

Here are six key benefits you can enjoy with Google Shopping ads:

  • Your products will have increased visibility.
  • You have improved brand recognition.
  • You’ll see an increased click-through rate.
  • Google Shopping ads can improve your marketing’s return on investment (ROI).
  • There’s a lower cost per acquisition (CPA).
  • You’ll have a competitive advantage against other businesses.

Your business can enjoy these benefits if it sets up its campaigns correctly. Although Google Shopping ads can be tricky, with the right strategies in place, you can make sure that your campaigns are effective.

Google Shopping Ads Strategies

Now that you know what Google Shopping ads are, it’s time to learn the strategies that will help you drive more sales and increase your ROI. Here are eight Google Shopping Ads Strategies you should consider.

1. Use automated bidding.

This allows you to set a target cost-per-click (CPC) and have Google adjust your bids to reach that goal. The strategy can help you optimize your campaigns for maximum effectiveness.

You can also set bid limits to ensure you stay within your budget. Automated bidding helps you save time and money while achieving your goals.

You can set an automated bidding strategy on the Google Ads website. You can do this by selecting “Tools” and then selecting “Bidding Strategies.”

Select the type of bidding strategy you want to use, such as “Maximize Clicks,” “Target ROI,” or “Target Cost-per-Conversion.”

2. A/B test your campaigns.

A/B testing is a great way to test different strategies and determine the most effective ones. You can try different ad copy, images, and keywords to see which ones have the best results.

You can also test different bidding strategies and determine which one is most cost-effective and drives the most sales.

A/B testing can help you optimize your campaigns for maximum effectiveness. As your company grows or changes, you should reexamine your campaigns to see if they still need tweaking or if a new strategy would work better.

3. Optimize your product page.

Your product page is one of the most critical aspects of your Google Shopping ads campaigns. It needs to be optimized to be successful.

Ensure your product page contains all the relevant information, including images and product descriptions. You should also include customer reviews to help build trust and encourage people to purchase.

Other effective strategies include using keywords on your product page related to the products you’re selling. It will help Google better understand your products, resulting in more effective ad campaigns.

4. Split your ad groups by product type.

Ad groups are a great way to organize your Google Shopping ads campaigns. You can divide your ad groups by product type or price range, depending on your goals.

By creating specific ad groups, you can target more relevant customers and ensure they see the products most likely to appeal to them.

Plus, depending on their importance, you can set specific bids for each ad group. It can help you optimize your campaigns and ensure they are as cost-effective as possible.

5. Use retargeting methods

Retargeting is a great way to stay top of mind with customers, even after they’ve left your website. It can help keep them engaged and more likely to buy.

You can set up retargeting campaigns that display ads to customers who have already visited your website or interacted with your products.

Platforms like Google Ads allow you to create retargeting campaigns where your ads will show when customers are browsing other websites or using other apps.

You can also use retargeting to display ads for products customers viewed but didn’t purchase in the past.

6. Build a similar audience list.

Similar audiences are a great way to reach customers similar to those you have already successfully converted.

You can create a list by taking data from your existing customers and using it to find other potential customers with similar characteristics.

For example, you can create a list of people similar to customers who have purchased from you. Google Ads will then use this list to display your ads to similar audiences.

7. Include a special offer or deal.

You can use special offers or discounts in your Google Shopping ads campaigns to attract more customers.

It’s essential to ensure the offer relates to your product and provides good value to your customers. You can also use special offers or discounts to encourage customers to purchase from you.

You can increase sales and capture more customers by including a special offer or deal in your campaigns.

8. Consider your pricing strategy.

Your pricing strategy is an essential part of your Google Shopping ads campaigns. Ensure that your prices are competitive and that you get the most value.

You can also use dynamic pricing to adjust your prices based on market conditions and customer demand. It can help you stay competitive and ensure your prices are as attractive to customers.

How to Create a Google Shopping Ad Campaign

Creating a Google Shopping ads campaign can be complex and time-consuming. However, with guidance or professional help, you can create a comprehensive Google shopping campaign structure.

1. Select the products you want to advertise.

Before you flesh out your campaign, you’ll need to choose which products to advertise. Consider which products are relevant to the widest audience or which products seem to appeal most to current customers.

Consider factors such as the demand for the product, its profit margin, and its competitiveness in the market.

Pro tip: Make a list of the products you want to include in your ad campaign. This can help you stay on track throughout the campaign process.

2. Create groups based on the products and their characteristics.

Now that you know which products you want to advertise, think about how you can group them together. You can put products of the same type, price range, or brand in the same campaign.

When you divide your products into groups, you can better advertise to your target personas. You can segment your customers to tailor your ad campaigns to their interests and needs.

For example, you could create a product group for high-end handbags and another for budget-friendly bags. Or perhaps all your prom dress options are in one campaign, and bridal dresses are in another.

3. Create an ad and choose a bid strategy.

Now that you know what you want to advertise, it’s time to create the ad itself. Use clear and high-quality product images to attract potential customers. You’ll also want to target the right keywords so you’ll reach the appropriate audience.

Once you have your assets together, decide on a bid strategy based on your business goals and budget.

You can use manual bidding to have more control over your ad spend, or you can use automated systems such as Maximize Clicks or Target CPA to optimize your campaigns.

4. Monitor and adjust your campaigns to improve your performance.

Putting your ad on Google Shopping isn’t the end. You’ll need to regularly review your campaign to see how it performs.

Use the data provided by Google to identify which ads are generating the most clicks and conversions. Adjust your bids, ad copy, and targeting as needed to ensure maximum performance.

You can also use A/B testing to compare the performance of different ad variations and see which ones are most effective.

Google Shopping Ad Campaign Example

Now that you know best practices, let’s see Google Shopping Ads in action. Check out these brands for inspiration.

Lululemon Running Shoes

google ads, lululemon sneakers

There are hundreds of sneaker options that customers can choose from. Top brands must break through the noise. That’s especially true in Google Shopping ads.

Lululemon gives themselves a leg up with their masterful use of keywords. While their products don’t appear on the first page for a general search for “shoes,” their sneakers become much more relevant when users search more specific keywords.

Lululemon is among the top Google Shopping ads for running shoes, women’s running shoes, and women’s athletic shoes.

Pro tip: Segment your product into multiple ad groups to create targeted campaigns. You can then show relevant ads to the right audience.

Chewy Cat Trees

google ads, chewy

Cat trees come in all shapes and sizes. However, for a plant lover, the cactus-shaped cat tree above may have a particular appeal.

Even with such a niche product, there are multiple options to choose from. Chewy helps its cat trees and scratching posts stand out by highlighting a reduced price. The brand also mentions that shipping is free, which will likely push some buyers over the edge.

Pro tip: Discounts and free shipping can help your product stand out.

Cast Iron Skillets

google ads, skillets

There are dozens of brands that sell cast iron skillets, so how do customers know which one to buy? They take a deep dive into the reviews.

If you search “cast iron skillets” on Google, you’ll see many shopping ads pop up. The searcher is automatically drawn to the bright yellow stars on certain products.

Those who are happy to pay a higher price for a great product will gravitate toward the Smithey skillet. With 483 five-star reviews, a buyer will feel assured that the product will be worth wild.

Someone else may have a smaller budget. They’ll see that the Target skillet has a lower star rating but more than 2,000 reviews. This creates trust in the quality of the product.

Pro tip: Make the most of social proof and add ratings to your Google Shopping ads.

Making the Most of Google Shopping Ads

When researching an upcoming purchase, most people will turn to Google for advice. That’s why it’s essential to craft a Google Shopping strategy so you can reach the right audience.

Start brainstorming which products you’d like to advertise and keywords that your customer persona might search for. Soon you’ll be on your way to increased engagement and revenue.

New Call-to-action

Categories B2B

How to Perfect Personalized Marketing with the Help of Your Data Warehouse

Today, the bar for personalized customer engagement is higher than ever.

As a marketer, you know that customer data is key to delivering personalized experiences that drive growth. A whopping 82% of marketers say having high-quality data on their target audience is important to succeeding in their role – but more than half of them say they’re missing key information.

Get HubSpot's Free CRM Now

Data silos are one of the biggest hurdles that prevent businesses from delivering personalized, data-driven experiences to their customers. Only 27% of marketers say their marketing data is fully integrated with their systems and tools, resulting in fragmented and inconsistent outreach.

The good news is: It’s possible to unify your data and make it actionable in one place. One key technology for effective data activation? The cloud data warehouse.

In this blog, we’ll discuss a strategy to get first-party data out of the data warehouse and into your CRM, so you can leverage it for more effective marketing.

Data warehouses allow marketing teams to consolidate data from multiple platforms including advertising channels like Google and Facebook, analytics platforms like Mixpanel and Google Analytics, and CRM systems like HubSpot and Salesforce. Even better, both first-party and third-party customer data can be unified in the warehouse.

The most popular cloud data warehouses include:

How Data Activation Provides a Single Source of Truth

Unifying all of your customer data points (that you’ve collected through tools like HubSpot, Google Analytics,or Zendesk) into a customer 360 profile enables you to have a holistic understanding of your target audience.

A customer 360 profile refers to having a 360 degree view of your customer’s information and behavior. This might include company data, purchase history, support interactions, and even engagement with your website, app, or social media accounts.

Fortunately, many companies have already employed data teams to consolidate customer 360 data in a central place: the data warehouse.

In the past, the warehouse was limited to technical users who knew SQL. Accessing customer data was a battle between Go-to-Market and IT teams, resulting in reduced agility and low autonomy for business teams.

Enter data activation: a way to bridge the gap between data and marketing.

Data activation platforms like Census provide warehouse-native no-code tools that enable marketers to unlock data directly from the warehouse – all without needing to know SQL.

This makes it easier for marketers to use customer 360 data to personalize recommendations and customize promotions.

Leveraging the same data infrastructure across the organization improves efficiency and team collaboration, because marketers now work with the same source of truth as data and IT teams. You can be confident that your data is fresh and trustworthy because it’s approved and maintained by the data team.

Activating the data warehouse for customer segmentation

Collecting data is useless without action. Let’s talk about how to actually use your customer data to drive more effective engagement.

Customer segmentation is key to reaching the right customers at the right time with the most relevant information.

This way, you can better understand your customers and meet their unique needs at every stage of the customer journey.

For instance, you would want to send different and targeted messages to:

  • Users who are on a free trial of your product, versus users on your highest paid plans
  • VIP customers who have purchased multiple times, versus visitors who just signed up for your mailing list
  • Companies that have 50 user seats versus companies who have 2 user seats

Data activation platforms like the Census Audience Hub help you build dynamic audience segments with your unified customer 360 profiles.

Any user, regardless of technical skill level, can easily create, explore, and manage audiences — then send them to your CRM for targeted outreach.

pesonalized-marketing-audience-hub

Success stories from Clockwise and Prolific: Using first-party data for better personalization

Clockwise and Prolific are two companies that activate their first-party data to deliver personalized, cross-channel experiences. Both companies use Census to power HubSpot with relevant, real-time data.

Clockwise

clockwise-app

Image Source

Clockwise is a SaaS productivity tool that helps busy professionals manage their meeting scheduling and find more time for uninterrupted flow.

They needed a better way to get product usage and engagement data in front of their go-to-market teams. By setting up real-time data syncing, the business operations team was able to:

  1. Reduce time to stand up segmentation growth experiments from weeks to hours
  2. Enable more personalized onboarding communications with granular user segmentation
  3. Provide self-service access to real time product engagement data

Read the case study here.

Prolific

prolific-researcherImage Source

Prolific simplifies online data collection by connecting researchers with the study participants they need, quickly.

Their newly-minted sales team was eager for data on their customers and prospects. After connecting their data warehouse to HubSpot, their salespeople now have important context for every sales interaction — without ever leaving HubSpot.

Prolific used Census’s data activation platform to:

  • Build Customer 360 profiles in HubSpot with complete product behavior data
  • Automate sales workflows based on product usage and segmentation data
  • Identify purchase intent and personalize messages

Read the case study here.

Key learnings from Clockwise and Prolific: Building a robust and scalable data foundation makes first-party data more valuable and usable. But collecting data is just the beginning. The real value is in activating data to drive business decisions and revenue.

Key Takeaways

Accessing and leveraging customer data is crucial for marketers who want to deliver personalized experiences that drive growth.

By integrating your data warehouse with your CRM, you can unlock new insights and create a central repository of customer data that can be used to power all of your marketing efforts.

Our three key takeaways from this article are:

  1. Data Activation is crucial. It connects your data infrastructure to your marketing efforts, making you more data-driven than ever.
  2. Real-time segmentation is key to personalization. To target accurately, go for a solution that updates audiences continuously and makes your data available seamlessly.
  3. Your martech stack should embrace data. Choose a customer engagement platform that integrates with your tech stack, instead of using siloed tools.

To exceed customer expectations, empower your marketing, engineering, and IT teams to activate a 360° view of customer data.

crm software free

Categories B2B

10 Business Grants for AAPI Entrepreneurs (+ Where to Find More)

Welcome to Breaking the Blueprint — a blog series that dives into the unique business challenges and opportunities of underrepresented business owners and entrepreneurs. Learn how they’ve grown or scaled their businesses, explored entrepreneurial ventures within their companies, or created side hustles, and how their stories can inspire and inform your own success.

Courage and hope reside at the heart of building a business. Hope for a better quality of life, financial stability, and, if we’re lucky, generational wealth for our families.

However, for Asian American and Pacific Islander entrepreneurs, spinning an idea into a profitable business requires startup funding that is often difficult to access because of systemic barriers.

Read more Breaking the Blueprint content

As an alternative to venture capital, angel investments, and loans, business grants can help bridge this gap by awarding money that doesn’t require repayment or equity exchange. This post will explore where AAPI entrepreneurs can find business grants, and how to apply for them successfully.

Why are grants helpful for AAPI business owners?

Although the AAPI community owns around 2 million enterprises, including small sole proprietorships, and is the most rapidly growing ethnic group in America, grant opportunities specifically for AAPI businesses are scarce.

Beyond the absence of support for these aspiring business owners, AAPI entrepreneurs are also hesitant to apply for the small number of available funds and grants due to cultural and language barriers. According to a survey conducted by Bank of America, 37% of AAPI business owners don’t feel sufficiently informed on how to apply for capital and 23% don’t know where to apply. The National CAPACD also reports that 58% of AAPI entrepreneurs struggle with federal, state, and local relief programs for small businesses.

There is a clear need for more visible resources and mentorship related to business development and funding opportunities so that a new generation of AAPI-founded companies can make culture-shifting and innovative contributions to society. The first step to picking the right resource for you is understanding how much money you’ll need.

How much does it cost to start a business?

Finances are unique for each person or company and depend on the type of business, the number of employees, and other details. According to Small Business Trends, on average, startup and first-year costs fall between $30,000 and $40,000, although it can cost significantly less for service providers and online businesses. There are several variables to consider when evaluating how much money you’ll need to launch, including:

  • One-time and ongoing costs
  • Essentials such as equipment, software, and supplies
  • Fixed and fluctuating costs such as rent and utilities
  • Marketing expenses
  • Legal and accounting fees
  • Insurance
  • Licenses and permits
  • Employee salaries and benefits
  • Taxes

The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) has a handy worksheet for calculating startup costs. After determining how much money you’ll need, you can assess your options for funding, whether it’s pulling from your personal accounts, courting investors, applying for a grant, or seeking lending options through banks.

The Difference Between Investors and Grant Programs

This money doesn’t appear like an ancestral blessing with no strings attached. Investors earn a return on their investment through equity and earning dividends in the form of cash or shares of stock, or in some cases, repayment with a pre-decided interest rate.

On the other hand, business grants are non-dilutive, meaning you keep full ownership of your business and don’t have to pay back any money. Many grant programs award the money upfront, while some pay as reimbursements after expense reports are submitted.

Where To Find Business Grants

The main types of grants for entrepreneurs include general business grants, industry-specific grants, grants for women minority-owned businesses, and COVID-19 relief grants. Each grant is unique and differs on who is eligible, the use of the money, and the award amount. Here is a list of grant-making organizations.

  • Search and apply for federal funding on Grants.gov, a database with grants from around 26 federal agencies, such as SBA, MBDA, and USDA. The agencies award grants for critical recovery initiatives, innovative research, and other projects for non-profit organizations, for-profit businesses, and other entities. Annually, this site helps award approximately $500 billion across more than 1,000 federal grants.
  • Non-profit organizations can offer grants to support small businesses and entrepreneurs.
  • Private foundations offer industry-specific grants.
  • Local Asian Chambers of Commerce offer grants, funding opportunities, networking, mentorship, and financial literacy resources to Asian American-owned businesses.

10 Grants for AAPI-Owned Businesses

Although the list isn’t long, there are a handful of grants for AAPI entrepreneurs that could be your ticket to accelerate the growth of your business.

1. Gold House

Gold House invests in AAPI entrepreneurs disrupting their industries to give them the capital and tools they need to scale. It offers two grant opportunities: SAFE Gold House Ventures and Gold Futures Challenge.

Gold Futures Challenge gives awards to organizations/projects that support API communities and help them feel seen, heard, empowered, and united. It’s a challenge-based fund and the public votes for winners from a pool of finalists chosen by a selection committee.

  • Grant Amount: Prizes range from $25k – $100k
  • Eligibility: AAPI-serving organizations registered as 501(c)(3) nonprofit, fiscally-sponsored projects, or government organizations.
  • Application Date: Apply by June 15, 2023

SAFE Gold House Ventures invests in AAPI entrepreneurs disrupting their industries. It’s a 12-week startup accelerator with 1:1 advising, masterclasses, and networking opportunities.

  • Grant Amount: $150k investment for each winner
  • Eligibility: Open to founders of C Corp companies who identify as AAPI. LLCs can apply but are required to convert to a C Corp to receive funding.
  • Application Date: Fall 2023 applications open in August

2. USA Funding Applications

USA Funding Applications is an online funding resource that gives you access to 20K applications and grant sources. AAPI entrepreneurs and business owners can apply within the Minorities/Demographic section, and there’s no limit to the number of grants you can apply for.

  • Grant Amount: Varies by grant and case-by-case basis.
  • Eligibility: See eligibility requirements for your category after signing up.
  • Application Dates: Applications accepted on a rolling basis throughout the year.

3. Hawai’i Foundher

Hawai’i Foundher is a six-month accelerator program that provides five businesses with grant funding, flexible child and elder care stipends, a workspace on each major Hawaiian island, two core mentors, and access to an advisor network. The program helps Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, and Asian women and mothers with businesses in the five core markets of Hawaii: food, health and wellness, fashion, tech, and education.

  • Grant Amount: Undisclosed
  • Eligibility: Must be a for-profit, early-stage business with 50% of founders being women of Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, or Asian descent and based in Hawaii.
  • Application Dates: 2023 – 2024 dates to be announced

4. AAPIStrong

National ACE’s AAPISTRONG has a grant page updated annually with available opportunities. At the time of this writing, two grants have deadlines in May, and you can sign up for new grant alerts here.

The National ACE and Verizon Small Business Digital Ready Program Grant will provide $1 million in small business grants in 2023 to help with marketing, equipment, team building, and more.

  • Grant Amount: $10,000 each
  • Eligibility: Complete any combination of two Small Business Digital Ready Program courses, coaching events, and community events before applying.
  • Application Dates: 2024 dates to be announced.

The Greg Hill Foundation and GrubHub Community Fund Grant will provide $1.25 million to small business restaurants. A portion of this fund is dedicated to supporting minority-owned businesses for technology and equipment, marketing services, staff training and wages, and more.

  • Grant Amount: Ranges from $5,000 to $25,000
  • Eligibility: Must own only one restaurant location with 50 or fewer employees in Boston, Chicago, New York City, and Philadelphia.
  • Application Dates: 2024 dates to be announced

5. Asian Pacific Community Fund

APCF provides alternative funding for Los Angeles County nonprofit organizations serving low-income and underserved Asian and Pacific Islander (API) communities. It offers long-term funding opportunities, core operating support, and resources beyond traditional grant-making. APCF has awarded over 260 grants and distributed over $1.6 million in funds.

Firecracker Fund

  • Grant Amount: Undisclosed
  • Eligibility: Nonprofit organizations with programs that promote healthy lifestyles through nutrition and physical fitness for AAPIs in Los Angeles and Orange counties.
  • Application Dates: 2023 dates to be announced

APCF Operating Grant

  • Grant Amount: Ranges from $5,000 to $15,000
  • Eligibility: Organizations that serve AAPI community members needing the most assistance in Los Angeles County and beyond.
  • Application Dates: 2024 dates to be announced

Asian Pacific Community Giving Circle

  • Grant Amount: Undisclosed
  • Eligibility: Organizations that serve AAPI communities throughout Greater Los Angeles County. The area of focus changes each year and previously included organizations with programs for mental health, youth leadership development, language access, bullying prevention, environmental justice, and financial literacy.
  • Application Dates: 2024 dates to be announced

6. Asian Women Giving Circle

AWGC believes funding is a form of activism. Its team has granted $1 million in the past 16 years through 100 grant projects. Annually, they award 8 to 10 grants to help fund projects led by Asian American women artists and community groups in NYC that bring progressive social transformation and raise awareness of critical issues affecting Asian American women, girls, and gender-expansive people.

  • Grant Amount: Typically $8,000 each, depending on how much AWGC raises for their annual pot.
  • Eligibility: Open to 501(c)(3) organizations and individual artists. Projects must incorporate art, highlight women and gender-expansive people’s leadership, and be applied to a specific project, not ongoing programs or operations.
  • Application Dates: 2024 dates to be announced

Tips for Successfully Applying for Business Grants

1. Start early.

Having a small window of time to draft a business plan, gather the necessary paperwork, and fill out a grant application will make it harder to complete. Start the process early to give you enough time to plan, write, and submit the best application possible without any additional stress that comes with feeling rushed and overwhelmed.

2. Do your research.

When preparing to apply for a grant, thoroughly research to understand the organization offering the award. Treat it as though you’re preparing for a job interview and customize your application to show why you’re the best fit to receive their funding. Take your time while reading the grant guidelines and application requirements to ensure you’re addressing all the necessary points and letting your proposal and vision shine.

3. Get help from a grant writer.

You’re capable of completing your grant application, but if financially possible, hiring a professional grant writer with experience crafting award-winning applications can help increase your chances of receiving funding.

4. Apply to more than one grant.

Grants are limited and competitive, but don’t let that discourage you from applying to as many of them as possible. The more applications you submit, the greater your chance of being awarded. Don’t sacrifice quality for quantity; ensure your applications are customized for each organization.

Mistakes to Avoid With Business Grants

1. Falling for a scam.

Be cautious when applying for grants. Scams exist to trick you into paying money or sharing sensitive information. Verify the authenticity of a grant opportunity (they are always free) before applying.

2. Committing fraud.

Misrepresenting how you plan to utilize grant money can result in serious consequences, such as being barred from receiving future funding, civil lawsuits, and criminal prosecution in some cases. When applying, be honest about how your business will spend the money.

3. Forgetting to pay your taxes.

Most business grants are taxable because the money is considered income. Research federal and state tax laws to understand how much of your grant needs to be claimed for your tax return, and work with an accountant to guide you on how to report it. The organization that awards the grant can also clarify some of these details.

Rise to the challenge of launching a business.

Obtaining funding can be intimidating, but now is your chance to turn your ideas into an operating, money-making business. If you aren’t offered money during your first round of grant applications or raising capital, keep trying. If those funding sources aren’t working in your favor yet, consider looking into business loans or crowdfunding. You always have options.

Click the link to discover more Breaking the Blueprint Content.

Categories B2B

AI Marketing — The Complete Guide

ChatGPT has entered the chat, bringing the resurgence of the conversation around artificial intelligence (AI) and marketing.

Sign Up to Try HubSpot's AI Tools

It seemed like AI marketing as a concept had stalled, but in 2023 it’s more popular than ever, leaving everyone wondering, “How can marketers use AI?” Today, we’re going to answer that question.

We’ll cover what AI marketing is, how to use it, examples, pros and cons, and marketing strategies that benefit from AI. Let’s dive in.

Table of Contents

To use AI in marketing, typically, the AI will collect data, learn customer behaviors, and analyze this information to help a business achieve its goals. AI can even reach out to customers who do a specific behavior on your website, like clicking a button or liking social media posts.

There are several AI tools and software marketers can use that will trigger automated responses for your customers. AI marketing is used for data analysis, media buying, content generation, personalization, and more. Now, let’s dive into how marketers use AI.

Pro tip: If you’re a HubSpot user, check out our new AI tools. We have a new content assistant and ChatSpot tools to streamline your day-to-day. Plus, many of our features use AI, including SEO, call recordings, social media, data management, and more.

i marketing tool, hubspot content assistant

Get started with HubSpot content assistant.

How do marketers use AI?

AI has been a growing industry and topic of conversation for the better part of a decade. In fact, there was a 27% reported increase in implementing AI or machine learning into companies’ marketing toolkits.

The top three reported uses for AI in marketing were content personalization, predictive analytics for customer insights, and targeting decisions. Below, we’ll dive into some of the use cases for AI in marketing.

When to Use AI Marketing

1. Content Personalization

One of the ways to use AI in marketing is to personalize content. This means AI can change the customer’s experience depending on their online behavior or whether or not they’ve filled out a form for your company.

For example, dynamic content changes depending on the user — their name, occupation, online behavior, etc. AI analyzes a user online and gives them a more personal experience with marketing assets, including web pages, social media posts, and emails.

6Sense is a helpful tool that leverages AI to sift through intent data. You can then understand who in your audience is looking to make a purchase so you can personalize the marketing experience.

2. Data Analytics

Data analytics is one of the main uses of AI in marketing. AI can collect and sift through large amounts of data from several marketing campaigns and summarize the findings.

AI can predict the outcome of marketing campaigns by using historical data, such as consumer engagement metrics, purchases, time-on-page, email opens, and more.

This will help you save time when strategizing and developing marketing assets for your campaigns.

Pro tip: HubSpot Sales Hub has conversational intelligence capabilities to help you understand how your team performs on customer calls through data-driven insights. Learn how to use account-based marketing recommendations powered by AI. 

3. Content Generation

AI can also be used to help generate content. It can help develop captions, social media posts, email subject lines, and even blog copy.

We’ve all seen how AI can write articles when given a certain subject. Still, it’s important to note that most AI-generated content isn’t ready for publishing immediately.

Most marketers today use generative AI to recommend content and generate portions of an article. They then fact-check, edit, and adjust AI’s writing to make it sound more human.

The best way to use AI in content generation is to help get you started. The best, high-quality content is produced by marketers using insights from AI to create content faster.

Pro tip: HubSpot has an AI-powered content assistant that can help you generate blog ideas, create outlines, and write blogs or marketing emails.

ai marketing, person using hubspot content assistant to improve writing

4. Media Buying

Another way to use AI in marketing is through media buying. AI technology can predict the most effective ad and media placements to reach a target audience and maximize ROI.

To implement this tactic, use AI software specifically made to help your media buying team. Pattern89 is one example. This AI marketing tool provides recommendations on your ad spend and enables you to target the right audience to increase performance.

Additionally, if you use Google Ads, you’re already encountering the AI that helps with the auction process.

5. Chatbots

One use of AI in marketing that we’ve seen for years is chatbots. Chatbots, created with natural language processing (NLP), can solve quick problems for customers, help nurture leads, answer repeated questions, and more.

A chatbot can personalize the customer journey during the stage when they’re consuming marketing content. This tool can also answer customer questions.

Let’s look at Drift. The company has trained its chatbot to answer questions, even if it’s outside a pre-programmed path. This way, if a person has a question that isn’t loaded into the system, the user will still get an answer.

Pro tip: Looking to better understand how AI-powered chatbots can answer customer questions? HubSpot Academy can help. This course describes the difference between rule-based and AI-powered chatbots.

6. Automated Email Marketing Campaigns

Automated email marketing has also been around for years. But AI tools can help produce more engaging email content and learn about your email list behaviors.

The goal is to have your marketers spend less time researching and brainstorming so they can focus on sending successful campaigns. As AI expands and improves, automated email marketing software becomes even more important to include in your marketing stack.

HubSpot Content Assistant can help you create marketing emails. Write a prompt about what you’d like to promote — from a discount to a webinar to a blog post — and AI can generate a message with the right tone.

ai marketing tool, hubspot content assistant

7. Forecasting Sales

A great use of AI in marketing is to forecast sales.

Now you might think that has more to do with sales than marketing. However, AI can help marketers understand the predicted outcome of their campaigns and marketing assets.

This insight can help marketers develop better campaigns that actually produce sales and ROI.

8. Improving Customer Experience

Marketing is all about the customer experience, and AI can help marketers deliver the best experience for their visitors to convert them into leads.

AI can help increase customer retention and loyalty, delight customers with personalized content, and improve assets.

9. SEO

One of the most significant advantages AI can bring to SEO is the ability to optimize content for search engines. AI algorithms can analyze website traffic, identify keywords that can help improve search engine rankings, and track competitors’ activity.

Plus, using AI-powered tools, marketers can learn about their audience’s preferences and customize their content to match their interests.

To learn more about how AI can impact your SEO efforts, visit HubSpot Academy. Our Keyword Research for SEO course includes information on how search engines leverage AI to suggest related searches by keywords.

Examples of AI Marketing

At this point, you might be wondering, “Okay, but how does this look in practice?” Let’s review some real-life examples of how big media companies have used AI in their marketing.

1. Netflix

If you’re in marketing, you know you have to deliver the right message to the right person at the right time. Netflix uses AI to do this. How?

On a Netflix Tech Blog, the company explains how it uses previous viewing history to determine the artwork for recommended movies or TV shows.

For example, if you’ve watched a lot of one actor’s movies, they might recommend another movie they’re in. But if the artwork doesn’t show off the actor, you may click away. So, when the movie is recommended to this specific viewer, the artwork will showcase that actor.

Or maybe a viewer tends to watch more comedies than romances. When Netflix recommends a movie, they might change the artwork to show off comedic scenes versus romantic moments from the film.

Let’s take a look at how Netflix would recommend the movie Good Will Hunting to someone who watches romance movies versus the artwork they’d use to recommend the movie to someone who watches comedies.

AI in marketing, example from Netflix using AI to personalize movie recommendations.

Image Source

So, why does Netflix do this? The goal is to increase conversion rates and improve the customer experience on their platform.

2. Spotify

Spotify uses a similar approach to Netflix. The company will use AI to understand a user’s music interests, podcast favorites, purchase history, location, brand interactions, and more.

Then, customized playlists and recommendations are curated for each user.

AI in marketing, example from Spotify

This type of content personalization has helped major media companies like Spotify become top streaming platforms. But the personalization doesn’t end there.

Spotify will also send automated email marketing messages with personalized recommendations.

The goal? Create automated marketing messages and assets that will convert a user because the message is specific to that customer.

3. Amazon

Two major use cases for AI in marketing are forecasting sales and analyzing data. Amazon uses AI to do just that.

When you go on Amazon, there is a recommended products section that uses predictive analytics to determine if a customer is likely to make a purchase.

AI marketing example from Amazon.

This helps the marketing teams at Amazon know what products to place in front of which customers. Plus, they can predict how well a product will sell based on their recommended product campaigns.

This type of AI helps increase conversions, improve customer satisfaction, and measure the overall success and ROI of various marketing campaigns.

AI Marketing Pros and Cons

We’ve covered a lot so far, including what AI marketing looks like in the real world. However, is this something you should implement at your company? Below, we’ll discuss some of the advantages and disadvantages of AI marketing.

ai marketing, pros and cons

AI Marketing Advantages

1. Increase your ROI.

As you can see from the examples above, the main goal of using AI in marketing is to increase ROI and build campaigns that are easier to track.

The data analytics and insight AI provides can be leveraged to produce better marketing assets and improve your campaigns in real time.

This will save your marketing team time and money, allowing them to work more efficiently and increase profits.

2. Improve customer relationships.

Another advantage is that using AI in marketing can help improve your relationship with your customers.

The more personalized your recommendations are and the deeper your relationship with your customer is, the more likely they’ll become repeat purchasers. This happens through AI’s ability to personalize marketing assets and content in real time.

Additionally, AI can identify customers at risk of churning and put them in an automated marketing campaign to get them to re-engage with your company.

3. Make better, strategic marketing decisions.

AI is becoming more popular in marketing, culminating in the ability to make better strategic marketing decisions. As your company and marketing team grows, scaling has never been more important (but also, it’s never been more difficult).

AI can make scaling your business easier, using data to analyze, predict, and create marketing assets that sell. See how your team can use artificial intelligence and automation in this course from HubSpot Academy. 

AI Marketing Disadvantages

1. Content quality.

If you’re going to use AI to generate content without having a human edit it, you’re going to see a drop in the quality of your content. The success of AI is reliant on high-quality data that is accurate and timely.

Without a human editor, AI can produce content with factual inaccuracies, bias, or a divergent tone from your brand. Using AI requires human oversight so these types of mistakes don’t happen.

2. Privacy.

As marketing assets have become more personalized through the years, customers are beginning to value privacy more and more. With AI, some of these techniques require using a customer’s cookies and previous internet behavior to predict future purchases.

If your marketing team downloads and uses AI software, you’ll need to be sure you comply with privacy laws, such as GDPR.

3. Evaluating non-quantifiable KPIs.

It might be hard to get buy-in to invest in AI at your company because there are non-quantifiable KPIs at play.

Certain metrics will be easy to track, but others — like improving the customer experience, increasing brand awareness, or improving reputation — will be much harder. That’s why it’s important to have the right measurement tools in place.

Marketing Strategies That Use AI

Many marketing strategies take advantage of AI. Consider whether your team could benefit from some (or all) of these tactics. These strategies include:

  • Content marketing. Whether it’s for content generation or personalization, AI can help your team produce more content in less time. Personalization software may be just the thing your brand needs.
  • Product marketing. By tracking user behavior, AI can make recommendations for customers and predict purchases. AI can keep your brand top of mind while you engage in other tasks that AI can’t perform.
  • Email marketing. AI can help you produce lead-nurturing marketing emails and analyze past email behaviors and performance. It can send automatic emails based on customer behavior and flag outstanding emails and those needing work.
  • Advertising. AI can take care of buying media ads, whether it’s display ads, PPC, or paid social, so the content you’ve crafted can make it to your target audience.

Remember: AI should help your team level up their operations. Human input and editing will always be part of the process.

Critical thinking skills should be positioned alongside AI content. to empower your team to engage AI effectively and accurately. Learn best practices for critical thinking and problem-solving in the workplace. 

Harnessing the Power of AI

Marketing teams can scale their operations with AI, and it doesn’t have to break the bank. However, it’s important to keep in mind the limitations of AI, even as the technology continues to get better over time in the changing marketing landscape.

While you might be able to use it to aid several marketing campaigns (and should), it isn’t replacing marketers just yet.

New Call-to-action