Build, don’t breakWe’ve all been to You know the ones. A Zoom screen filled with a bunch of talking heads no-so-subtly pushing their product under the guise of thought leadership and community. We can smell these kinds of events a mile away, and the damage they do to how you’re perceived by your network can stick with you. Because events are a lot like hammers—they can be used to break trust, or to build it. Choosing the latter means creating events not as a way to sell, but as a way to connect and provide value. Events were a hot topic at the Nearbound Summit. Kate Hammitt, CMO at Splash, and Emily Wilkes, Director of Field and Partner Marketing at Gainsight, also covered the topic at the Summit, diving into the importance of trust-driven events and the success they can drive to your GTM strategy. |
Watch Kate Hammitt and Emily Wilkes’ Nearbound Summit Session here. “Events are the most powerful lever for modern GTM teams. They help you to create authentic connections, engagement, acquisition, and retention.”–Kate Hammitt, CMO at Splash In the Nearbound Era, events aren’t about adding the noise, but about cutting through it by keeping relationships as the North Star. “Events are about bringing people together. It’s doing something fun and valuable for your customers and prospective customers, and Sales teams making connections. It’s about nurturing our community, strengthening bonds, and helping the Sales team deepen and build relationships.” –Emily Wilkes, Director of Field and Partner Marketing at Gainsight |
Event-led GrowthBut finding the balance between creating events that build relationships and those that drive actual impact is not an easy feat. Many audience members at the Summit shared their challenges with building an event-growth strategy in tandem with nearbound. Luckily, |
Event-led growth In this GTM motion, you have to match the stage of your prospect in the sales cycle to the type of event you want to do. Only this way can you generate event-influenced revenue or event-attached revenue. As you move down on the funnel, consider making your events more personalized to help close deals faster. Follow Kate’s strategy to allocate events according to your potential buyers’ journey:
By approaching ELG through a nearbound motion, these events are amplified tenfold. Why? Because leveraging nearbound ensures that you’re surrounding your prospects and customers with the content and people that matter most to them. Here’s how nearbound can drive your ELG strategy:
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The results speak for themselvesKate shared what Splash was able to achieve by ditching hollow webinars and instead focusing on a nearbound ELG strategy:
Emily also shared the results of implementing an event-led GTM motion in Gainsight’s Q1 this year: |
As we head into 2024—with tighter budgets and more pressure—we have to ensure that our co-marketing events are not just about the numbers, but about creating genuine connections, delivering value, and leveraging partnerships to drive revenue and customer success. Learn how to execute a nearbound ELG strategy in our latest article. |
Stuff you don’t want to miss!
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Give the gift of ELGShare this with a (partner) marketer who could use some support in their 2024 event strategy. |