The 2025 B2B Marketing Salaries Benchmark Report -> see how your salary stacks up
All Episodes
#227 Podcast

#227: The B2B Event Playbook: Building Revenue-Driving Events in 2025

March 13, 2025

Show Notes

#227: Events | In this episode, Dave hosts a live Exit Five session with Zuddl and panelists Stephanie Christensen (Event Marketing Leader) and Kristina DeBrito (Director of Strategic Events at Iterable) to break down how B2B marketers should be thinking about events in 2025. From small VIP dinners to large customer conferences, events are making a big comeback—but without a solid strategy, they can be a massive waste of budget.

Dave, Stephanie, and Kristina cover:

  • The key metrics to track to prove event ROI in 2025
  • How to get executive and stakeholder buy-in for your event strategy
  • What’s working in B2B events right now (and what’s not)
  • How to follow up post-event to drive engagement and pipeline

Timestamps

  • (00:00) - – Intro to Stephanie and Kristina
  • (03:34) - – Why events are making a big comeback in B2B marketing
  • (07:01) - – The biggest mistakes marketers make when planning events
  • (09:49) - – How to align your event strategy with business goals
  • (12:34) - – The key metrics to track for proving event ROI
  • (15:46) - – How to get buy-in from executives and key stakeholders
  • (18:59) - – What’s working right now in B2B events (and what’s not)
  • (23:15) - – The role of micro-events, VIP dinners, and executive meetups
  • (27:47) - – Sponsoring vs. hosting your own event — how to decide
  • (32:07) - – The importance of post-event follow-up and engagement
  • (35:49) - – Virtual events: lessons learned and how they fit into 2025 strategies
  • (39:42) - – Live Q&A: Expert answers to audience event strategy questions
  • (45:07) - – Final takeaways on making B2B events worth the investment

Send guest pitches and ideas to hi@exitfive.com
Join the Exit Five Newsletter here: https://www.exitfive.com/newsletter
Check out the Exit Five job board: https://jobs.exitfive.com/
Become an Exit Five member: https://community.exitfive.com/checkout/exit-five-membership

***

Today's episode is brought to you by Customer.io.

You know that feeling when you open your inbox, and it’s just… noise? Bad marketing. Spam. Most companies are out here just talking at customers, not talking to them.

Marketing messages should do more than just land in an inbox – they should create impact and drive real engagement.

Customer.io helps companies send smarter, more personalized messages using first-party data. Their platform enables brands to reach customers at the right time, in the right place, on the right channel—whether that’s email, SMS, push notifications, or beyond.

And the best part is that it’s all automated, so you’re not just blasting campaigns and hoping for the best. You’re running a machine that delivers real, human engagement at scale.

7,000+ brands already trust Customer.io to make their marketing feel less like noise and more like connection.

Join them by visiting Customer.io to get started.


***

Thanks to my friends at hatch.fm for producing this episode and handling all of the Exit Five podcast production.

  • They give you unlimited podcast editing and strategy for your B2B podcast.
  • Get unlimited podcast editing and on-demand strategy for one low monthly cost. Just upload your episode, and they take care of the rest.
  • Visit hatch.fm to learn more

Transcription

Dave Gerhardt [00:00:00]:
You're listening to B2B marketing with me, Dave Gerhardt. All right, we're back. Hey, we're back. It's been a while. Has it been a while? What has it been, a month, a week? I don't even know. I'm excited. We do these live sessions once a month here at Exit 5, if you're joining us. And we like to bring in some subject matter experts and talk about a specific play and a strategy or an area that you need to go and focus on this year.


Dave Gerhardt [00:00:38]:
I'm excited to do this one because I think we found a really good lane for this. We've been doing a bunch of different variations of them, but for this one with our partners at ztle, they help us do these events, they run the software. We're going to do an awesome chat about event marketing today and I think we have a cool playbook. Danielle and I have been talking a lot about this. I know you all come every month for these, but we want to do more specific sessions about, you know, hey, here's a product marketing session. Here's an email marketing session. And so today the focus is events. We get an awesome crew here.


Dave Gerhardt [00:01:06]:
I got Stephanie and Kristina here with me and events are back, baby. That's all I can say. This is like the most. I think there's like over 1200 people that registered for this, which is so funny because events are so back. As we've been saying here at Exit 5. We did our first event drive this year in September and we didn't know how it was going to go. For those of you who don't know the story. And literally that first night, Dan texted me at 11 o'clock at night.


Dave Gerhardt [00:01:29]:
He said, do we just become an events business? And we did. And so it's awesome. We got, we're doing 30 events this year, 26 virtual events, four in person events. And they're a huge part of our strategy. And I'm excited to get to hang out with Stephanie and Kristina and hear about all you. I think the goal of this session is to do a deep dive on events, event marketing, what this looks like for B2B brands today. And we're going to have a great discussion. So quick, housekeeping for me saying hello.


Dave Gerhardt [00:01:54]:
Everybody knows the drill. They're in chat right now. People from all over the world. Jamie's in Atlanta, Henry Johnson's in the mix. Good to see you, Henry. My old friend who actually convinced me to start this whole damn thing. Funny story, we got people from New York, Salem, Mass. Oh, That's Danielle London, D.C.


Dave Gerhardt [00:02:11]:
Canada. We got a global audience here. So we're going to talk for. We got 40 minutes. 40, 50 minutes. We're going to take all your questions live. We got a bunch of discussion. We're going to get into.


Dave Gerhardt [00:02:20]:
The chat is the best part of this because you. There's a million people in here. Holy cow, Danielle. It's got to be a new record. The chat is great because it's all marketing, our marketing peers helping out each other. So we're going to have a great discussion. I guess it's. We can bring up our guests right now.


Dave Gerhardt [00:02:33]:
So while we do that, let's bring in Stephanie and Kristina. What's up, y'all? How you doing?


Stephanie Christensen [00:02:38]:
Hi.


Kristina DeBrito [00:02:39]:
Happy.


Dave Gerhardt [00:02:40]:
Do you see the turnout for this session or what? Holy smokes.


Stephanie Christensen [00:02:43]:
Awesome.


Dave Gerhardt [00:02:43]:
This is amazing. Hell, yeah. So super excited. I'm gonna, I'm gonna formally. We'll, we'll, we'll bring you both on in a second. But we're gonna, we record this for everyone listening. Right. This will be a future episode of our podcast.


Dave Gerhardt [00:02:55]:
You'll hear this in the future, but we're also gonna send out the recording after this. But to make it easy for us and producer Danielle behind the scenes, put your questions in the Q and A, obviously riff on things in chat. We'll keep building on in there. But if you have specific questions you want us to stop and answer, and we will put them in the Q and A. I got a bunch of questions that we have prepped that we're gonna use to guide this discussion. But if you put them in the Q and A, then we can sort by upvotes and get to the most popular questions. So. All right, before we get into our discussion, quick background.


Dave Gerhardt [00:03:22]:
Stephanie, why don't you kick us off then over to Kristina. Who are you? What do you do? What's your relationship with events in this context?


Stephanie Christensen [00:03:29]:
Sure, yeah. Thanks for having me. I'm excited to be here. So I'm Steph. You can call me Steph. I've been in the event space for about 15 years now. It sounds so old saying that. I can't believe it.


Stephanie Christensen [00:03:40]:
All sorts of events, mostly in B2B. My primary background was at Qualtrics. I was there like, gosh, I mean, no, seven, eight years. We did their event programs, 300 plus events while I was there. And then we pivoted, had a kid, as a lot of us have, and then went from all over the world events to just our user conference locally here in Salt Lake City, Utah. And so I did that event about five times. Yeah. Shout out to Dave.


Dave Gerhardt [00:04:04]:
Hey, did you work out it. Did you work out of the qualtrics office in. Oh, yeah. Okay. I went, I went there one time.


Stephanie Christensen [00:04:11]:
Oh, you.


Dave Gerhardt [00:04:12]:
I did, I went there. I went there in maybe 2016. And I remember seeing Ryan CEO, like riding around the office on one of those like one wheel skateboards. And you walk in the office, that was like legit. The coolest office I've ever went to because you're, you're in the mountains, like the view is insane. And then like you walk in, I have a video of like, you know, shooting a three pointer in like the lobby. There's a basketball court. So like the tech world, we get a lot of flack for like our like, you know, ping pong tables.


Dave Gerhardt [00:04:40]:
But that office truly lived up to like the.


Stephanie Christensen [00:04:44]:
Well, good. I'm glad you had a good experience. I love Utah. We do events here. So I was fortunate to do their user conference. We started around 500 and grew that program to 15,000. So I was lucky to just kind of jump on it at a good time and just got exposed to things probably. Frankly, I had no business being a part of, but learned as I went and was able to get a lot of experience.


Stephanie Christensen [00:05:04]:
Then after Covid went on my own, a lot of my colleagues started going to other companies and B2B and. And I just started kind of going on as 1099 for some of them and doing their conferences, doing some of their C level events and kind of been all over the place. So it's been great. I love events. I love connection, bringing people together. It's like my passion, especially in real life, in this world, social media. So really happy to be here. Thanks for having me.


Dave Gerhardt [00:05:28]:
All right, cool. Good energy. Kristina, what about you? What's your background?


Stephanie Christensen [00:05:31]:
Hi, Dave.


Kristina DeBrito [00:05:32]:
I'm Kristina De Brito. I'm the director of strategic events and partner marketing at Iterable. If you're not familiar with Iterable, Iterable is an AI powered customer communication platform. So brands like Priceline, Redfin, they use Iterable to send hyper personalized messages to their customers. So at Iterable, I manage our user conference, our Roadshow series. I do webinars, I do smaller VIP dinners, kind of wear a jack of all trades. My work history is mostly in B2B marketing, focused primarily on events in the tech space. And then also I spent a number of years on Wall Street.


Dave Gerhardt [00:06:08]:
Cool. Okay. All right. Shout out Wall Street. What does Iterable do?


Kristina DeBrito [00:06:12]:
Yeah, absolutely. So Iterable, like I mentioned is a customer communication platform. So emails that you receive from like some of your favorite brands, they are powered by interable, same with some SMS messages. And it's, it's a really incredible tool and actually newly integrates with subtle as well. So you can be sending some really targeted communications to your customers based on real time activities on site at events.


Dave Gerhardt [00:06:34]:
All right, cool. Got you. I got it. All right, so check out the chat. By the way, I asked people why they're here and there's like Dave GPT, which is my robot brain. I've analyzed the data and it seems that most people are here because events are important and they're, you know, I think people are realizing they're back and they want to come get smarter about events as a strategy and as a part of the marketing playbook. So let's dive in and let's see if we can give some helpful knowledge. And we're going to riff on this based on what you say in chat and answer your questions too.


Dave Gerhardt [00:07:01]:
But maybe let's kick it off here. What's the biggest mistake that you see with marketers today planning events? And let's try to be with all of our answers. Let's be like hyper relevant and specific to like the people are here who, they're here because they want help now they're doing an event in June and they want to get smarter. They're thinking about it. So let's be as tactical and specific as we can today. But what's the biggest mistake that you see B2B marketers making with events right now?


Stephanie Christensen [00:07:23]:
Yeah, I can, I can kick us off and yes, you should hire a DJ for your event if you are asking in the chat.


Dave Gerhardt [00:07:29]:
All right, we'll get there, we'll get there, we'll get there.


Stephanie Christensen [00:07:33]:
I'm going to tell you a couple things. I think number one thing that comes to mind is kind of moving too quickly or packing your program too full. I think I made a mistake early on, especially in early stage startup. Like we just went to everything and every everywhere. I think sometimes you can get so focused on just executing the event that you're not thinking end to end the way that you should. Right. So really pumping the brakes, really being strategic about what you're trying to do and accomplish but then also the other end of it, and we'll get into this more in our discussion is really making sure that you see that all the way through the event's not over. After the event's over, the event starts.


Stephanie Christensen [00:08:05]:
After the event's over. In terms of follow up and the things that you want.


Kristina DeBrito [00:08:10]:
Cool.


Dave Gerhardt [00:08:10]:
All right. I have some things I want to build on too, but I want to get Kristina in and then we can kind of discuss as a group. Sure.


Kristina DeBrito [00:08:16]:
I think for me, it's not fully tapping into their strategic partners. When you look at like partner joint field events, there's a lot of opportunity there. And I think some organizations, they get a little intimidated by that kind of joint marketing motion because, you know, there's a lot of pre work that's involved with partner events. Right. So really taking a look at, like, who are your shared customers, your shared prospects, making a plan for them on site, meeting with them, and then also what does the follow up look like? It's twofold. It's really accessing their target, their customers that are potentially your target prospect, also potentially splitting the bill with them and then leveraging their customer or their brand awareness as well as your own brand awareness. So I think there's a lot of opportunity around partner events. Not seeing enough of that in B2B marketing right now.


Dave Gerhardt [00:09:01]:
Oh, okay. So people could be doing more partner events, like co marketing. Right. Like we used to. We do webinars together, but we could do events together. Okay, let's like, zoom way out and let's think about why. What are the first principles questions? I guess like, if I'm a marketer, I'm here most likely because I'm not like a. I might not be an event marketer, but I'm a marketing leader.


Dave Gerhardt [00:09:20]:
I'm someone who's responsible for a team of marketing. I want to help us grow revenue. Typically we look to things in marketing because we, we want to grow. Right. If we're not growing, then, hey, we don't need to do more stuff. We don't have a goal. So if we back it all the way out, like, what would be the reason that you'd want to put events in your marketing strategy? And should you only be doing events where the direct events are expensive? Should the direct measurement be like, can we get three deals from this? How do you all bet? Like, what's the first principles thinking for? Like, why. Why do events as a B2B marketer?


Stephanie Christensen [00:09:49]:
Yeah, I mean, I think because they're continuing to prove to be the one of the top channels performing for marketing. I think in this age of AI and digital everything, I think trust is more important than ever. It's more impactful and it's moving the needle. So when you think about your strategy, I mean, yeah, we're going to measure Three things we're going to look at our revenue, that's our bottom line. But also getting the right names in our total target accounts, looking at getting the right people there, and our retention expansion. And so I think those three things are. There's a lot of different things when we get into events measurement that we can look at. Those are kind of our top three.


Stephanie Christensen [00:10:24]:
And so why do we do that? Because that's going to help us to get into that space.


Kristina DeBrito [00:10:28]:
Plus one to that, I think events are definitely a relationship builder.


Stephanie Christensen [00:10:31]:
Right.


Kristina DeBrito [00:10:31]:
It's getting that, like, personal time outside of the boardroom when you're making a buying decision. Right. A lot of products today, they have similar features, they do similar things. Right. So it really comes down to, like, a lot of times the relationships that you've built with the ae, with the csm, with the enablement team that you've gotten early access to during the deal cycle. And that's how you're doing that in person live. You're reaching the target audience. It could be, you know, traditionally hard to get like the executive audience.


Kristina DeBrito [00:10:55]:
An event is a great way to reach those hard to get audiences as well.


Stephanie Christensen [00:10:58]:
Yeah. And we're talking about. Sorry, Dave, I'm just going to have one more thing. We're talking about new revenue, but we're also talking about like NRR and Internet. Like, that's a huge initiative space, like retention.


Kristina DeBrito [00:11:09]:
But that would be.


Dave Gerhardt [00:11:10]:
You would have that goal first, right? You would do it. You would say, we want to improve NRR or something, or we want to do X. I've made the mistake of in the past. It's like, we're doing an event, we start doing the event and they're like, well, it's kind of for sales and it's kind of for this. And I found, like. And the reason that I asked this question about, like, why do events in the first place, it's because it's kind of this. It's this weird thing. Like the event needs to be tailored to what the goal is.


Dave Gerhardt [00:11:31]:
Right. Like, if you just go and shoot the shit with 10 potential customers at a dinner, that's not necessarily going to magically turn into revenue. But if you have the strategy first of, like, hey, we want to get these 10 people in the room, we want to build these relationships so we can follow up after. I think it changes how you look and measure at all these things. And then there's also this, like, fundamentally competing objective, which is like, the key to a great event is to have an enjoyable, to create an enjoyable Experience for the attendee. Right. But oftentimes what we get is I have to sit through a demo or it's overly venting too many. If you're sponsoring somebody else's event, it's a trade show booth and you're scanning badges, you're doing things people don't want to do.


Dave Gerhardt [00:12:07]:
This is weird. This is the. There's a creativity in this at the same time that you have to be able to figure out to deliver on these things, right?


Stephanie Christensen [00:12:14]:
Yeah, 100%. I think if you do it right, you got to do three things right? You got to educate them. What is it that you do? You got to entertain them, let them go home with a story that they're going to tell their families about. And you got to inspire them. You got to make them feel something. Right? And that's the constant challenge. And balance is like, how do you do all three things? And I think it all just goes back to knowing your audience and getting the right people in the room. Which is why I said my big mistake is not pumping the brakes, not thinking strategically, just trying to fill an event or execute an event to go do it and cross it off our list.


Stephanie Christensen [00:12:45]:
You know, that's one of the reasons I use zle, not to jump into zle too much. But I think one of the things I love about that, that platform that we're all on now is you can approve and decline who goes to these things or who's at these things. And that's huge, right? Because if you're really thinking about this end to end, you're going to get the right people in chair and you're going to. You're going to customize your content so they feel all three things. Educate, inspire, entertain.


Dave Gerhardt [00:13:07]:
Have you found people that you want to sell something to? Like, are you run marketing at a company that sells HR software? Right. You want to do an event for HR pros? Do you feel like getting butts in seats is hard or is someone just going to show up because you invited them? Like, how do we. Or maybe a lot of people have not traveled. Maybe people, like, there's a post Covid era where people are like, yeah, I'm leaving my family. I'm coming to your HR convention in Vegas.


Kristina DeBrito [00:13:34]:
You know, it's funny that you brought up, I used to work in HR tech, so I've been in this exact scenario. For me, it always comes down to, like, that decision of, as an attendee, am I attending this event or am I attending that event? Value prop, right?


Dave Gerhardt [00:13:47]:
Well, I'm just Like, I'm thinking about, like, you know, I get a DM from someone, it's like, hey, leave a review for our product on G2 and I'll give you a $20 Starbucks gift card. And I'm like, I don't want 20. I'm not. That's not worth $20 to me to leave review for your thing. Right? And then we're asking the bigger ask, which is like, spend a night away. Go travel somewhere. I thought about this. I had immense stress before doing our first event at Drive with Exit 5, because I'm like, oh, my God.


Dave Gerhardt [00:14:10]:
People are like, leaving their house for two nights. They're flying here, they're spending money on a ticket, they're leaving their family. Like, how do you get them to go to that? And I think that's what's fascinating about events. And just this is the stuff in marketing that I love. We can talk all day about MQLs and ABM and metrics. It's like, no, this is the craft of marketing. It's like, how do we get someone to want to come hang out with us? That's the offer. Like, we argue about, like, oh, people, you know, webinars are boring.


Dave Gerhardt [00:14:35]:
Blah, blah. No, webinar is not boring. Well, how is a webinar different than the YouTube video, really? @ the end of the day, it's the content. And I think about that a lot. For events, we see questions in the community, but, like, how do I do better events? It's like, you got to make better content. It's got to be like, why do people want to go to that? Right.


Stephanie Christensen [00:14:49]:
I love that. I think that that's the challenge is balancing our, you know, looking at our analytics, but, like, being truly creative. And in order to do that, you have to. We hear empathy all the time in marketing, but you really have to know your audience. You have to know, what are these people against? What's going to really bring them away from din time with their family? Probably they're not going to. So maybe let's do a lunch or a breakfast, right? Like, really being able to p pivot your strategy. And then on top of that, I wouldn't say you. You don't always have to think about getting all these people to come out.


Stephanie Christensen [00:15:15]:
You need to go where they're going to go. Right? So that's where you're seeing more piggyback events, is I know that a ton of my ICP is all going to be in money 2020. So instead of blowing all this money on a third party, like a booth or on a trade show floor. Let's just rent out a restaurant close by because they're all going to be in the area and do something really cool. Right? So I think that the challenge is this creativity aspect and really, really putting ourselves in those shoes to make it worth their while.


Dave Gerhardt [00:15:41]:
But I also think, like, it's about time spent with somebody. So we did an event. I have more questions on my list. I'm going to ask you, but I'm telling a story. We did a dinner with a bunch of CMOs in Austin when we were down there for an event. It was amazing night and I got the bill, maybe 1300 bucks for two and a half hours of FaceTime with like these incredibly important people to our business. Like, that is the most insane. You can't even capture an email address with an ad on LinkedIn with that amount of spend.


Dave Gerhardt [00:16:06]:
Right. And it's like to get to hang out with people and hear the nuance and look each other in the eye and get the tone of voice. There's so much value in the person to person connection. Especially in B2B when we're selling things that are, you know, multiple thousands of dollars, we can hang out.


Kristina DeBrito [00:16:19]:
I think the key there, though, that dinner that you just described is really like, then what's the next step? And I think, you know, back to where people kind of missing is like, okay, the dinner's over. Now what? So, like something that we've tried recently is like creating a shared Slack channel and like keeping those conversations going, keeping them engaged. Coming to that event with like, okay, if you had fun tonight, here's the next move. We're doing this event.


Dave Gerhardt [00:16:39]:
Oh, interesting. And is that a Slack channel with you or with like the people? Because I would, I would want to be like, oh, I met these four people last night. I want to know who they are and stay connected to that.


Kristina DeBrito [00:16:48]:
Exactly. So it's all like, you join the Slack channel and you keep these relationships going through there. The communication's going. Leveraging the Slack channel.


Dave Gerhardt [00:16:56]:
Okay. That's actually a good segue to event follow up. So what is the playbook for event follow up? Right. Because ideally it's, you have an amazing time at this event. We're not selling. We're not selling. Maybe we're selling a little bit and then it's.


Stephanie Christensen [00:17:10]:
No, it's, you know, we got it after it's over.


Kristina DeBrito [00:17:14]:
I was just gonna say I think it depends on the types of events that you're doing too. Right. Like a lot of times you do really top of funnel events like a trade show sponsorship and you get this huge lead list and what are you doing with it? A lot of times I'm seeing that people are throwing it into a generic nurture about your company.


Stephanie Christensen [00:17:29]:
Right.


Kristina DeBrito [00:17:29]:
But you know more about the people on this list. You know what their job functions are. You from there know what they care about and be putting them into targeted, you know, nurture campaigns. Right. And be thinking through strategically like okay, this person is exactly our icp. I have these other campaigns coming up. Let me start marketing these activities to these leads. And I think being really smart and intentional I think is really important with the follow ups.


Stephanie Christensen [00:17:50]:
Yeah, 100%. And I would also add, I think timing's key, providing value is key. So wrapping up all the content is key. You'll see it from Zuttle after this event. Every single person on this webinar is going to get a step by step playbook of how they follow up from events and you can just forward that to your event teams and use it. But essentially I think number one is just kind of integrating your attendee engagement data to what your CRM platform is and then cheering that out. And I imagine most of you have tiers. We have like strategic accounts tier one, tier two, three based off their, our ICP and their deal average deal size.


Stephanie Christensen [00:18:25]:
And then we're going to do a really creative unique offer and then we're going to just monitor. I would just add babysitting and bold letters.


Dave Gerhardt [00:18:34]:
Well, you said the most important thing there, which is we're going to, I don't see enough of this. We're going to create a unique offer. We're going to create a unique offer. Right. It's not just about sending personalized emails. Following up. It's like I had Steph at our event. She's a key prospect for us last night.


Dave Gerhardt [00:18:48]:
Right. I'm not going to immediately email her and send her to like some non relevant offer or send her a completely an email. That just doesn't make sense. I think thinking about those next steps and maybe the next step is like hey, we talked about that thing. Do you want to have a call about that? Like I think it's thinking about the customer journey and the offer is where a lot of the like marketing goes sideways. It's, we spend all the money to get them there. Whether it's a webinar, whether it's ads, it's the classic conversion problem. This is just now like hey, we just spent a bunch of hours in person.


Dave Gerhardt [00:19:17]:
What is the best Next step going to be here 100.


Stephanie Christensen [00:19:20]:
And I think going back to your question on mistakes, it was not babysitting was one of my mistakes. And I love salespeople. They are fantastic. They're great. They're good at their jobs, but they're safe.


Dave Gerhardt [00:19:29]:
They're safe here. I bet you the chat is thinking like, yeah, okay, they don't care so.


Stephanie Christensen [00:19:34]:
Much about the event necessarily. Right. They've got their eyes on their deal in front of them. And so having a dedicated person that is in the weeds saying, what is the next follow? Follow up. Who have you called? Who haven't called, looking at those analytics daily even to make sure that those things are actually happening, assuming someone else is going to own that, Your content team, your sales team. That is a big mistake I've made in the past. And I would just say keep all eyes on it all the way through from months after.


Dave Gerhardt [00:20:00]:
Right. You just went shopping, you brought home this, like, haul of fresh groceries, and you keep walking in the kitchen and they just been sitting on the shelf for days, like rotting, and now nobody can use them. That's what happens.


Stephanie Christensen [00:20:12]:
That's a great analogy.


Dave Gerhardt [00:20:13]:
I love that we have a bazillion. That's a. That's a very big word. We have a bazillion questions in the Q and A. So I'm going to just like, abandon my list. And I think we can just give people, like, we can riff on these and I'll be helpful. So the first question is from Diana. What are ways to stand out at a booth in a sea of companies at a conference? Maybe.


Dave Gerhardt [00:20:32]:
Kristina, have you done this recently?


Kristina DeBrito [00:20:34]:
That's a really good question. So, yes, I have done this recently. And one thing that we tried recently at a big conference was doing tarot card reading. And so it's not really like a super expected activity to see, hey, it's.


Dave Gerhardt [00:20:47]:
Better than the branded Frisbee. It's pretty good.


Stephanie Christensen [00:20:50]:
Exactly. Real tattoos that I mix. You want to stand out wholly. I mean, I've seen some. Some crazy stuff.


Kristina DeBrito [00:21:00]:
Yeah. Yeah. So it's like, it's experience activity. Sometimes it's the swag. People do crazy things for a pretty solid hoodie. So I think it's that. And then I think also, like, don't forget about your booth design.


Stephanie Christensen [00:21:12]:
Right.


Kristina DeBrito [00:21:12]:
Like, we really have to be kind of thinking about how can you make it stand out from a design perspective as well. It doesn't. They don't all have to look the same.


Dave Gerhardt [00:21:18]:
That's a good one. Tarot card readings.


Stephanie Christensen [00:21:21]:
It's Fun. I like that idea. And it is shocking what people will do for swag. It is mind blowing to me. The other thing I would add is I think standing out, pre event outreach is everything. There's going to be a million booths on the show floor and you can only do so much to like, brand that or build that out. But what you do beforehand is everything, right? And so I think tying an offer or say you did like a Plinko thing, send them a Plinko chip ahead of it and bring them something physically to their home that they can take to the event and look for you the booth, right? So thinking outside of the box, it doesn't necessarily have to be split. It just needs to be creative and awesome.


Dave Gerhardt [00:21:54]:
Check this out. We did an event. When we did this event in Austin, our sponsor was this company, Customer IO, and we did networking and we decided we were going to give prizes to the audience and they came up with this idea. They. I feel like other brands I've worked with, they would be like, we're going to give people hoodies with our logos on them and stickers and hats. And I'm like, nobody, with all due respect, no one's going to wear that. Especially if they don't know who you are and haven't bought your product yet. Right? And so what they did is they gave away a pair of like $400 cowboy boots, a yeti cooler, a paddle board, and a set of AirPods, right? All in to them.


Dave Gerhardt [00:22:29]:
That probably cost, I don't know, two grand, 2,500 bucks. The people who won those prizes were like, holy crap, this is a real, actual prize, right? And so I think, like, at least for me, I have just a. This is just personal opinion. Corniness in marketing, like, makes my skin crawl. And so, like, I would want to have a booth that, like, attracts people and it has awareness. But there's also a line between, like, I don't want to have something ridiculous that makes me uncomfortable at the booth or. Or it's just like, so corny. I'm not gonna.


Dave Gerhardt [00:22:55]:
I'm not gonna use this. I'm not gonna ever take this home again. And like, I like the stuff that you can deliver on that promise, but do it in a way that's like, real and legit and feels authentic for sure.


Stephanie Christensen [00:23:06]:
And I think especially more than ever, people are just more environmentally conscious. It's just not cool to buy junk anymore. It's a huge turn off, you know, so give them a eco postcard that they can send home to their families. That they can plant that turns into a tree. Like do something different, you know, think outside the box and just stop buying.


Dave Gerhardt [00:23:25]:
You know, it's fun. My brother in law loves startup swag. He's an engineer and for my whole life, for basically a decade, everything that someone has sent to me, I give to him. And so he'll be like, he'll be walking around his neighborhood somewhere and he's got like some like super niche B2B SaaS marketing tool like hoodie on. It's the best.


Stephanie Christensen [00:23:44]:
I love it. The other thing I would add to Dave is you don't have to just give them stuff, give them an experience, right? One time I did an event where we, we hired a pancake artist to come and he was making live pancakes and turned them into logos. I showed him a picture of my kid and he put my kid's face on a pancake. That's the stuff that is cool that you're going to go home and tell your family about, right? Like, sorry, I'm talking about my kids so much. I've been gone in India for 11 days and I miss them. But those are the things that are going to make them feel something, that are going to tie them to your brand, that are going to give them a unique experience. They don't have to carry home junk, they can eat it, you know, so think of activations that are experiences, not just stuff at your booth.


Kristina DeBrito [00:24:25]:
Draw on your own experiences. I mean we've all been to trade shows, right? What are you looking for? You're looking for a good cup of coffee. I've done cold brew at my booth before that attracted a bunch of people.


Dave Gerhardt [00:24:34]:
I'm just giggling. I was like, oh, what was your husband do? He's a pancake artist at conferences.


Stephanie Christensen [00:24:42]:
Mind blowing. You got. If you haven't hired one, I'll send the vendor in the chat.


Dave Gerhardt [00:24:47]:
It's a great idea. And then like there's a, there's a thing like you're at the conference and there's a crowd all the way in the corner at that booth and you're always like, damn, I wonder what they have over there. And you're like, oh, there's some guy making pancakes. Like it's genius. This is, see, this is the marketing. Like let's bring B2B. Let's bring marketing back to this. This is what's fun, right? This is the fun marketing stuff.


Dave Gerhardt [00:25:05]:
Yeah, this is where like this is.


Stephanie Christensen [00:25:08]:
Put things in the chat too while we're talking. It's so fun to see what all Right.


Dave Gerhardt [00:25:11]:
Yeah, it is. Any advice for must have comms channels for event marketing. I'm assuming that means like what channels you like? Email? I don't know. What do you. How do you interpret that?


Stephanie Christensen [00:25:21]:
I would interpret that internal and external channels. Right. So internal channels again, going back to Zelda, they'll like tie their event reg data to like a Slack channel so you can see every single person that's registering and then tie that to basically any metric you want in Salesforce, whether it's a Target account or a deal size of over 100k or however you want to do that. So internal comms are huge. To make sure that people know who's coming and they're staying on top of those, making sure they actually show up once they're here, they have a great experience, et cetera. So internal comms are huge and getting talked about.


Dave Gerhardt [00:25:53]:
Pause and after a sec go a level deeper in that. And. And what do you do for in internal comm? Any plays you've run specifically that that have worked. I hear from a lot of marketers that like I do adhere in Slack channel and no one responds. How do you incorporate your babysitting advice into.


Stephanie Christensen [00:26:07]:
Yeah, so like I was saying that Slack channel through Zo. So they'll, they'll basically integrate the Slack with the event registration data. So I can see everyone's getting pinged as soon as anyone signs up. Or I can set it to like only deal size over 100k or whatever. I can ping the rep to let them know. Same thing with on site. Once they check in, I'm going to notify my rep. They can take them to the VIP hall and whatever.


Stephanie Christensen [00:26:31]:
Right?


Dave Gerhardt [00:26:31]:
Oh yeah, that's a good one. We use that like for drive for example. When people started buying tickets, Dan had set up the Slack channel so all the ticket purchases or registrations posted in that channel and we got everybody's LinkedIn with the submission. And so we would be going through and be like we go see someone bought a ticket, we go click on their LinkedIn. We'd connect with them on LinkedIn and then we'd see this person's like a director of marketing at a B2B SaaS company and we write in the chat like ICP and I would tag Dan and it just, it built this like knowledge of who was coming to our event before event. That's a good one.


Stephanie Christensen [00:27:02]:
I've even taken a step further, Dave. I have pre programmed it. So before they check in we know what their favorite song is because we send them a feedback Survey. As they check in, we play their music. Like walk on music. Right. We've got into that level of detail where we know who they are, what their favorite song is and what snacks they want during the break. And we're customizing the event toward that.


Stephanie Christensen [00:27:23]:
Right. So that's what I mean by like internal columns is really paying attention.


Dave Gerhardt [00:27:26]:
Kristina, what about you? What about you?


Kristina DeBrito [00:27:29]:
Yeah, I mean, I think Steph touched on it earlier about just getting sales folks in particular to pay attention and care about an event. And so what we've done is we've started creating friendly competitions. And so we have leaderboards where we show like, oh, the enterprise team is ahead of the growth team or ahead of emerging. And it's just fun. It becomes an internal competition. Other things with like SDR specifically, we run Spiffs. We get a lot of really good engagement from Spiffs. And then we have tried to like at here and slack channels and what happens is it's just noise.


Kristina DeBrito [00:27:59]:
Right. So what we started doing is we started going to like larger kind of team meetings and just marketing our marketing internally.


Dave Gerhardt [00:28:06]:
What do you do at that meeting?


Kristina DeBrito [00:28:07]:
Yeah, it's kind of like an ama. We come with whatever event updates we have. Like, we just released a new speaker, we have a new session added to the agenda. What questions do you have? And then help them kind of think through other strategies. Like I have this target prospect account that I can't figure out how to get them to the event. What can I do? And then we'll kind of brainstorm with them. Is it a direct mail? Something we can send them like that? Is it more lean into this experience they can have on site. And so it's kind of like that, like one to one approach.


Kristina DeBrito [00:28:34]:
But by going to the team meetings, we can do that at scale. Like obviously it's not scalable for a large organization to go one on one to each ae, but that's how we do it.


Stephanie Christensen [00:28:42]:
That's great. Someone just asked what Spiffs are, but they're like ways to incentivize your team to get registrants in the door. You can do that with bonuses and actually like money or you can just if you're trying to be a little scrappy or you can say, hey, we're having a concert anyways. I've got 10 backstage meet and greets, top two reps to get their accounts there can go to a meet and greet or something you're already doing. You can do it that way. It's ridiculous. We have to incentivize Sales to do their jobs. But that is the bottom line, that it's required sometimes because like I said, they have their quotas.


Stephanie Christensen [00:29:09]:
But that's think what you mean by Spitz, right, Kristina?


Kristina DeBrito [00:29:12]:
Yeah, exactly. Item. Either like we do for the SDRs on our team, we do a trip to the actual event, right? Like, we know we're going to send sales folks anyway to the event, but still, you know, they're competing to beat folks to get to come.


Dave Gerhardt [00:29:24]:
I'm at the point in my life now where I'm like, let me be on the list who doesn't have to go. Can I be on the list who does have to go to the event? I'm going to stay home and go to bed. 8.


Stephanie Christensen [00:29:33]:
Well, Dave, we actually have data on some of the larger user conferences that I've done. If you are able to get five accounts there, you're going to hit your quota for the year, right? So they're really incentivized to get their people there. But in order to come, you got to get 10 registrants there or whatever. So we'll set rules around who actually gets to go in order incentivize that way too.


Kristina DeBrito [00:29:52]:
Are we really leaning into metrics like deal length, time and the impact that attending an event has on that, or like the different contacts that you'll meet that help close the deal?


Dave Gerhardt [00:30:01]:
Like, what have you learned about what have you learned about that at your company, Kristina? About if you can get someone to attend an event, what does it do for their propensity to buy?


Kristina DeBrito [00:30:10]:
Oh, it's much higher. All of the metrics that we pull, they're all much higher as compared to, like, you know, accounts that don't attend our events. And we look at, like I said, billing size, their billing time, renewal rates, all of those kind of metrics.


Dave Gerhardt [00:30:23]:
Let's talk about measurement. There's a question here about measuring brand awareness, but I kind of want to spin that into a what are the ways that you each have measured an event? How can you think about measuring an event? Because probably just like good marketing, you shouldn't only do things that are going to be direct correlation to sales. Like, that's not what good marketing is. So if you're going to do an event, can you do an event for brand awareness? Can you do an event for just customer love? Can you do an event for sales? Have each of you done? Kind of. Obviously you do an event where the goal is pipeline. Can you do other events and measure them?


Kristina DeBrito [00:30:57]:
Yeah, totally. When you think about like customer events, right? It's like product adoption, health score impact integration partners that were added. All of these things kind of like pre event, post event, customer nps. Yeah, I think those are all like pretty good metrics that we report on.


Dave Gerhardt [00:31:13]:
Yeah, that's good. That's good.


Stephanie Christensen [00:31:14]:
I would say on the brand side. Yeah, there's lots of ways you can measure and there's going to be events that maybe some marketing leaders might not want to hear this, but the reality is there's going to be events that are not necessarily going to be these revenue driven events. You just can't afford to not go to them. You gotta be there. Right. And so in order to measure those, I think like she said, you know, you can look at the customer impact, but you can also measure site traffic, you can look at social names, you can look at press mentions, app usage, NPS score return, attendees feedback. I mean, there's a lot of other things. I think the challenge though is keeping your primary and secondary metrics, I would say your primary or your growth metrics like we talked about with revenue pipeline, and then also measuring those secondary metrics, but staying focused on, on growth.


Stephanie Christensen [00:31:59]:
So that's always the challenge. Right. Sometimes we measure so much we don't measure anything that kind of like differentiating between the two is huge.


Dave Gerhardt [00:32:06]:
I like pairing what you said about having primary, understanding that it doesn't just have to be one. So having primary and secondary metrics and then like I like a bunch of the metrics Kristina kind of pointed to is okay, we could, we might decide to sponsor Saster or some Gartner event. Right. There might be a new revenue play there, there might be an expansion play there, there might be some key accounts and people we want to meet with. And so we're going to build maybe a scorecard for that event that's beyond just direct sales. Speaking of that, there was a question about this earlier. And when should you do your own event and when should you go sponsor someone else's event? Do either of you have strong opinions or a philosophy to help somebody think through that? Kristina? You do.


Kristina DeBrito [00:32:45]:
That's a tough question. My go to is like looking at your budget, right? Because I mean, if you're gonna blow like a big portion of your budget going to a big trade show where you're like one of a hundred and you don't even have that much to do, like a big splash at the trade show, that's a waste in my opinion. I'd rather take that budget and do like a more impactful ancillary event around that Big tent pole.


Dave Gerhardt [00:33:04]:
But that's the catch though, right? Which is, like, you got to pay. They might have the audience. What if you don't feel like you can bring in? Can you get people to show up? Like, the reason to go to someone else's event is because, like, okay, then we don't have to worry so much about, like, getting butts and seats. I saw a question about that. Steph, what's your answer to that?


Stephanie Christensen [00:33:20]:
I was just going to say I think it depends on where you're at as a company too. Like Quadrants, for example. Our early days, we were going all the third party stuff. We didn't have a big enough database. We didn't have enough people to recruit to these things quite yet. They didn't know who we were. We had to get our name out there. Right.


Stephanie Christensen [00:33:33]:
So we did third parties and a lot of shows in the beginning. And then as we evolved and as we grew that database and people started knowing us, then that's when you start doing your own hosted stuff. Because you're going to put customers and prospects together and let them sell each other. Right. And that takes time. And so I think I would just say, like, there's no, like, clear answer. It kind of depends on where your company.


Dave Gerhardt [00:33:53]:
Yeah. Kelly's in the chat said micro events during conferences are trending, which is a great play. Right. We know this event is happening. We know people are going to be there.


Stephanie Christensen [00:34:01]:
Let's.


Dave Gerhardt [00:34:01]:
Let's go do dinners.


Kristina DeBrito [00:34:02]:
100%.


Stephanie Christensen [00:34:03]:
I call it a piggyback event and it's going to save you money. You can kill two birds with one stone. You can do a smaller investment on a show floor and then a bigger afterparty or something like that, where. Where they're already going to be. Same with your staffing. They're all going to be there. Get two for the price.


Dave Gerhardt [00:34:17]:
Either of you ever worked at a company? Do you have, like, friends? Or maybe your company does this now? Where does your company do a kind of flagship customer conference every year? Yeah. Kristina, you do.


Kristina DeBrito [00:34:28]:
Yes, we do.


Dave Gerhardt [00:34:28]:
Steph, you've done that? Yep.


Stephanie Christensen [00:34:30]:
Multiple. Most of the tech companies I've worked with are doing a flagship event these days.


Dave Gerhardt [00:34:34]:
How do you know when the right time to pull that card is? Because it's a great play. But there's kind of like this. When are you at the right size to do it?


Stephanie Christensen [00:34:39]:
Customer size. Unless you're confident that you can get at least 500 people there, you're not ready. That's my opinion. I think if we're doing Flagship. I mean, that's what I say. It can't be lame. If you're going to do a flagship, it needs to be full and you get a smaller venue and you pack that thing. Right.


Stephanie Christensen [00:35:01]:
And so in order to do that, you've got to have a certain amount of customers and be confident in your prospect pool that you can pull into that if you're not there yet, do road shows, go to their cities, do smaller things until you've built that up to do a flagship.


Dave Gerhardt [00:35:14]:
So you wouldn't, you wouldn't do a 200 person event, say in Burlington, Vermont in September?


Stephanie Christensen [00:35:21]:
I would, but I wouldn't call it a flagship conference. I would call it something else.


Dave Gerhardt [00:35:25]:
Damn, Dan, you hear that? That's. That's me. Deflate.


Stephanie Christensen [00:35:28]:
Being like, it's all about. I mean, it's all about how you're perceived too. Like, if you're gonna. What we're all trying to do is become leaders in the spaces we're in. Right. And so you put on an event and it's like awkwardly half full. It's gonna be a flop. You gotta be confident and pack.


Dave Gerhardt [00:35:43]:
One of the best marketing lessons I work for David Cancel is the CEO of Drift and he's a master marketer. And he was the first one to teach me about the lesson called no empty seats, which is either that event better be packed or you better not do the event. Because if you do an event and you got a room for 40 and six people show up or 13 people show up, that's worse for your brand perception than not doing an event at all.


Stephanie Christensen [00:36:07]:
100% indeed. We're talking about like ROI and customers, but there's even a bigger play to this for a lot of these companies, which is an acquisition or an IPO and our partners kind of buying different areas. Right. Like, there's so much more, especially when flagship context, that is important to think about, which is why I always do a smaller venue and package. It's so important that that first impression and that feeling and that energy in that room is packed. So until you're even think about it.


Kristina DeBrito [00:36:36]:
Yeah, less seats for the number of attendees. You want people standing in the back for your keynote?


Dave Gerhardt [00:36:41]:
Yeah, absolutely. I just want to ask this in case I'm hogging the direction of this. It's my job. But do you either have something that was on our list of questions or in the Q and A that you feel like you have a strong opinion on that I want to make sure we can talk about.


Stephanie Christensen [00:36:54]:
There is one thing I think we should talk about that's important. And it's the question you had about securing buy in, especially with executives and stakeholders. That is a common challenge I see in this space.


Dave Gerhardt [00:37:06]:
For budget, for budgeting, budget.


Stephanie Christensen [00:37:08]:
Just buy in on the program itself. Just the best way to work to advocate for your programs, prove your value. All of that is a challenge. I think Kristina, you're, you're nodding your head. I think that we've seen that that's tricky. So maybe we can touch on that one and get into more Q and A. Yeah, totally.


Kristina DeBrito [00:37:25]:
I mean to me it's always comes down to the data. But then I think like my biggest tip for the group is if you have a leader who's skeptical about your events and your strategy, get them out in the field, Send them to events, let them interact with your attendees and see how much they're enjoying it, how much value they're getting from that in the field. Time with you. I've seen a lot of success recently doing that.


Stephanie Christensen [00:37:47]:
I love that. I think it's so important for them to feel it like to actually experience it in order to see that. I would add too to that that I think understanding how your execs process information is super important. So I've had executives I work with, like One of my CEOs was a visual guy. So I've had to put mood boards together and then the CRO obviously is analytical and I had to put data points together. But I think as you as marketing leaders are all trying to secure budget and buy in and get everybody because it does take all hands on deck for events, as most of us know. But I would just say that understanding how they process information in addition to having some experience, it is super important.


Dave Gerhardt [00:38:25]:
Shout out to you, Chelsea, how are you doing? Good to see you girl. She said, do these amazingly smart women have any takeaway resources they can share with us after this is over? So yes.


Stephanie Christensen [00:38:35]:
Yeah.


Dave Gerhardt [00:38:36]:
All right, I'm going to go back into the Q and A. Our leadership wants to understand revenue impact specifically from in person events and trade shows. What are the best KPIs you've seen to track impact and or attributed revenue?


Stephanie Christensen [00:38:48]:
For me it's pipeline in the room. How much is actually in attendance but then also pipeline after the event that's generated total reg number. They want to see that we're building our program year over year and that's expanding. I have actually found execs care more about how many people are there than anything else for at least for flagship events, which is fascinating to me because Even at a 5,000 person event, I've had 100 VIPs that make up 80% of our pipeline and they care more about the giant number, which is shocking. But those are probably like the two Pipeline and Total Red. And then Brad and then we talked about those secondary metrics on the brand side that are super important. We can send that over afterwards as well.


Kristina DeBrito [00:39:26]:
I think it's worth noting that it's important to kind of look at the event that you're executing on and like where in the funnel is it? So I'm looking at kind of a trade show, right? That's very tofu, generating new leads, impacting pipeline. Those are kind of like my key metrics there. If I'm looking at something like a roadshow, that's more probably mofu. You know, somebody who's not really, who's already familiar with you. I'm probably looking at like bookings after. I'm looking at renewal rates. I'm also looking at impact on pipe. Right.


Kristina DeBrito [00:39:52]:
And then kind of a macro levels. I'm looking at like as a cmo, right. Like I want to see like how much are my events of my total Pipe portfolio, how much are those affecting Pipe. Right. And also affecting bookings. So I would just be thoughtful about where in the funnel and then kind of match your goals based on that too.


Dave Gerhardt [00:40:09]:
Yeah.


Stephanie Christensen [00:40:10]:
And we're talking about again, we're talking about all new, like new business. But I don't want to glaze over the fact that like NRR is so important. Right. And so I think just being able to look at deal acceleration, look at renewals, look at help scores, like you mentioned, Kristina, all of those things are, I think to be mentioned as well.


Kristina DeBrito [00:40:30]:
Yeah, I saw that Hassan posted in here, source or influenced Pipe and like which one is better? I think again, like that's really looking at the active activity specifically.


Stephanie Christensen [00:40:40]:
Right.


Kristina DeBrito [00:40:40]:
Because like source, that's going to be something like tofu, right. From your conference, right? Like a big industry tent show. That's you're going to mostly be talking about that, right? Because that's probably like your first touch. That's where they met. You influenced to be like more middle of the.


Dave Gerhardt [00:40:54]:
Give me your knuckles through the camera. Let me tell you why you just did this. This is the ultimate dream as a host, when your panelists are actively participating in the discussion, reading the chat, bringing in a question from the chat, weaving it on. Oh my God, Chef's kiss.


Kristina DeBrito [00:41:08]:
Thank you.


Stephanie Christensen [00:41:11]:
I'm having to focus both ways. That's tricky.


Dave Gerhardt [00:41:13]:
No, this is great. This is great. All right, this is from Rachel. Tips for getting execs to attend an event. Dinner slash happy hour as a start. I wonder if that is. Is that getting them to come or getting them. Getting the people who work at your company to go? Let's say it's getting them to come.


Dave Gerhardt [00:41:31]:
Let's say it's helping her get butts in seats. Let's read it as that.


Stephanie Christensen [00:41:35]:
It's funny, I think I keep hearing that everyone's saying attention spans are shorter than ever. Right? That's what I keep hearing. And then Liz Latham, who, she does Club et a whole event, marketers club, she mentioned, you know what, I just binge watched Grey's Anatomy for eight hours. So I'm going to challenge the notion that our attention spans are down. Same thing with events. Like, I think that in order to get people to come, you got to make it interesting enough for them. It's not that their attention spans are down. It's not that they're so busy.


Stephanie Christensen [00:42:02]:
It's that it's not cool or interesting. Right. And so going back to that empathy, like, what's in it for them? Are they going to meet people? Are they going to learn something, like, that's how you do it. And then going back to knowing who they are and timing that appropriately. I'm probably not going to go to dinner, but I'll go to a lunch because I work remotely. My kids are at school. Right. So, like, thinking through it on that level, I think is key to getting.


Kristina DeBrito [00:42:22]:
Those right people there and then tailoring the content about what they care about. Right. Like, if you're trying to get an executive there, you better know, like, what is it that's top of mind for them?


Dave Gerhardt [00:42:31]:
I'm going to bring this up because we're talking about this out as a team right now. And I'm, I'm seeing Danielle on our side talk about this in our chat. But we're planning our events and we're evaluating options for like a event space in, in Boston we're going to in March. And, you know, it's like this weird. You want to be conscious of the budget. You don't want to do it in a certain place. We're realizing that the space that we select, like the aesthetic of the venue matters so much on, like, how people are going to feel from this and, like, if it's a truly cool event space. I don't know if any of you know Pep from Winter.


Dave Gerhardt [00:43:02]:
They're like a user testing company, right. They started putting on these events and his event formula was really simple. It was a pretty standard couple speakers and hang out, but they did it outside at like a partial brewery in Austin. It was a little bit less formal. Like those little things matter and they count for your brand so much. Right before this I did a podcast with The CMO of 1Password and 1Password is like going up market and they're trying to sell to the enterprise and so they're doing like they started do advertising on like PGA Tour golf events. I was like, whoa, that's a crazy strategy. He's like, well we have the budget to do it but if you think about it, the reason we're doing it is because people will now see the 1Password brand with brands like Accenture, BMW, these high end brands.


Dave Gerhardt [00:43:42]:
The same is true with your events, right? If you, no disrespect to any company who's done this, but if you're hosting your event in like a overly air conditioned little corner of like a Marriott somewhere that is going to feel different than like an amazing venue. And I think I'm totally, I totally see that now as like running, being a part of this company and like that matters. And you can basically get the marketing points for that just by picking a great venue. So there's a whole, there's a whole taste making element to events that I think matters. It's not just about like did we send the right emails and follow up after. It's like this is the art of this, right?


Stephanie Christensen [00:44:14]:
Yeah. And Kelly said it right. Like gone are the days where steak dinners are cool. Right? Like you gotta be way beyond that. And I think especially more than ever execs, they have fomo. So if you're two things I would say if you're able to, number one, tell them who else is going to be there. Make it seem like something they're going to miss out on if they're not there. Hey, just so you know, BMW and Porsche, all these other companies are going to be here.


Stephanie Christensen [00:44:35]:
Wanted to make sure we save you a seat. And then number two, I would say in order to get them to show up, try to give them a responsibility. And this has worked really well at some of the events I've done where we do like a roundtable discussion. For example, we give them a table topic that they're in charge of facilitating. When they feel tied to your event with a responsibility or a job, they're going to show up, they're going to be engaged, they're going to be excited. And people love hearing themselves talk, especially executives. So Let them do that at your events. And that's a great way to kind of boost engagement and attendance, I think for execs at least.


Kristina DeBrito [00:45:06]:
Plus one.


Dave Gerhardt [00:45:07]:
We need another hour. Do you all want to stay around? I got like a thousand hours.


Stephanie Christensen [00:45:14]:
It's fun to see all the time.


Dave Gerhardt [00:45:15]:
Danielle, producer in my ear. She knows what she's doing. She told me I got to pick one more this amount outreach and filling seats. Somebody said no mention of technology about cvent. No, this is put on by Zettle. That's the technology. What do you think about trying to align an in person event with a trade show? Targeting your audience in the same area? We love that. Obviously go to where the attention is.


Dave Gerhardt [00:45:36]:
All right, here's a good one. This is from Henry. What unique thing. I guess we talked about this, but what unique things do you do to make an event worth coming to versus just watching the recordings? Anything that stands out to you, the FOMO 100%.


Stephanie Christensen [00:45:48]:
Like you can watch the content, you can get all the basic talking points but you're not going to be able to see who was in the room. And so I think anything.


Dave Gerhardt [00:45:56]:
Oh, here's a. So we talked a lot about in person events. Is the role of the event person inside of a company changing kind of post Covid where a lot of companies are doing hybrid, where like a webinar might be an event, more companies are doing virtual events. High production, high end virtual events. Where do you all see virtual events living in the event ecosystem?


Stephanie Christensen [00:46:15]:
Go ahead, Kristina.


Kristina DeBrito [00:46:16]:
Yeah, I mean for me personally I still think there's a line. I still think that webinar in my opinion is a demand gen function and not necessarily an events person's role. So yeah, that's kind of where I'm standing. But I do also want to say just for the record that I think virtual events are not dead. I think the way we think about virtual events just needs to change. Right? So like I think what is dead is probably like those cocktail making, beer and cheese tasting. Like I think we just need to get more creative with the experience that we're offering virtually so that it is a unique experience. You kind of can't get on your own because gone are the days of like just meeting that social interaction online like that we needed during COVID We don't really need that anymore.


Kristina DeBrito [00:46:53]:
So we have to get creative.


Stephanie Christensen [00:46:55]:
Right. I would add to that. I, I think that I kind of joke that I think your event portfolio should kind of be like your financial portfolio. Like the more diversified you can be. Like you're going to better your chances and like hopefully drive new business across the board. And so I would just say like, where possible and where resources allow, you should be doing all of the above. Right. You should be having a healthy mix of in person of trade shows, virtual quick webinars and you know, a one or two day virtual if you're able to, like if I'm running an event program, I'm trying to think cross all those things off my list to have a really healthy balance so that it all kind of works out in terms of numbers.


Dave Gerhardt [00:47:30]:
Well said. Okay. Brittany just says put cheese at every event. That will. That's interesting.


Stephanie Christensen [00:47:36]:
All you need to do.


Dave Gerhardt [00:47:38]:
Okay. All right, thank you so much. All right, Steph, Kristina, we're gonna have to do a part two. I feel like Matt, Danielle, if you're listening, like do we need to do like a follow up AMA in the community or something where like Kristina and Steph could just an of we could all answer questions over the course of a week or something. I know we haven't done as many AMAs in the community, but I wonder. Everyone's saying they need a part two. Darcy says, wow, we sat there an hour and all we needed was cheese. Okay, Danielle's going to throw up a poll right now before we wrap up.


Dave Gerhardt [00:48:02]:
Shout out to you. Shout out to zle for helping put this on. We use it. It's awesome. Daniel's going to put up a poll for this one. You hated the Session 5. You loved it. There's a billion questions that I really want to get to because this is such a good topic.


Dave Gerhardt [00:48:15]:
Clearly what's so cool about doing this business is we have this content feedback machine which is like this is a signal. There was almost 400 people live for this today, which is a signal that this is a topic people want to hear more about. How can we help people with their event strategy? There's so much we could cover in person. Virtual, doing your own event, sponsoring somebody else's event. We could talk about all this. I'd love to be able to help out more. So awesome. Really good, really positive review.


Dave Gerhardt [00:48:39]:
Steph, Kristina, thank you so much. Events are back, baby. We'll see you all in the follow ups. Thanks everybody for coming.


Stephanie Christensen [00:48:46]:
Thank you.


Dave Gerhardt [00:48:46]:
Appreciate it. Okay, Rebecca says, I don't think a webinar had me like this in years. Thank you. So great job to you too. And thank you for everybody for the, the feedback and ideas. We want to do more stuff like this. Maybe less slides, less presentations. I'm speaking this out to the universe, which the team is going to hate because that means we're now putting the pressure on making it happen.


Dave Gerhardt [00:49:03]:
But this was awesome and I'd love to do more like this. So we'll see y'all later. Okay? Thanks, you two. Awesome job. Great job. See you later.


Kristina DeBrito [00:49:10]:
Bye.


Dave Gerhardt [00:49:14]:
Hey, thanks for listening to this podcast. If you like this episode. You know what? I'm not even going to ask you to subscribe and leave a review, because I don't really care about that. I have something better for you. So we've built the number one private community for B2B marketers at Exit 5. And you can go and check that out. Instead of leaving a rating or review, go check it out right now, now on our website, exit5.com our mission at Exit 5 is to help you grow your career in B2B marketing. And there's no better place to do that than with us at Exit 5.


Dave Gerhardt [00:49:42]:
There's nearly 5,000 members now in our community. People are in there posting every day, asking questions about things like marketing, planning, ideas, inspiration, asking questions and getting feedback from your peers. Building your own network of marketers who are doing the same thing you are so you can have a peer group or maybe just venting about your boss when you need to get in there and get something off your chest. It's 100% free to join for seven days, so you can go and check it out risk free. And then there's a small annual fee to pay if you want to become a member for the year. Go check it out. Learn more exit5.com and I will see you over there in the community.

Recent Podcast Episodes

Sponsor the exitfive newsletter

Want to get in front of 32,000 B2B marketers each week?  Sponsor the Exit Five newsletter.