Welcome to another episode of Digital Coffee: Marketing Brew! This week, host Brett Deister sits down with Charlie Riley, the Head of Marketing at OneScreen.ai, to shine a spotlight on a topic that often gets pushed to the back burner: internal marketing. In this insightful conversation, Charlie shares why internal marketing is just as crucial as external efforts, explaining how it impacts company culture, boosts employee morale, and creates the alignment needed for real business success. With over twenty years of experience building marketing functions from scratch at startups and established companies alike, Charlie offers practical advice on fostering collaboration between departments, maintaining consistent messaging, and adapting internal communication for hybrid and remote teams. Whether you’re a marketing leader, sales professional, or just passionate about workplace dynamics, this episode is packed with valuable takeaways to help you strengthen your team from the inside out. So, grab your coffee (or iced Americano) and join us for a fresh brew of marketing wisdom!
Guest Bio:
Charlie Riley is the Head of Marketing at OneScreen.ai, a platform that specializes in measurable out-of-home advertising. With a diverse background spanning multiple industries and company sizes, Charlie has often been the first marketing hire, building out functions from the ground up. Beyond marketing, Charlie has also led sales teams on several occasions, developing a deep understanding of the synergy between marketing, sales, and customer support. Charlie’s experience reflects a hands-on, collaborative approach, ensuring that marketing works seamlessly across all pillars of a business to drive demand generation and brand success.
3 Fun Facts:
- Charlie Riley prefers iced coffee over hot coffee and usually goes for an iced Americano.
- At one company, Charlie’s team sent out a daily internal email called "What We Know Now" to keep everyone updated and connected, especially after going remote.
- Charlie has been the first marketing hire at six different organizations, leading marketing and sales teams from seed stage startups up to companies with $200 million in revenue.
Key Themes:
- Importance of internal marketing for success
- Cross-functional collaboration between departments
- Impact of internal marketing on morale
- Adapting internal marketing for remote work
- Ensuring message consistency internally and externally
- Common mistakes in internal communication initiatives
- Role of technology in internal communications
Marketing is the one function that probably touches arguably
Speaker:more areas of the business than others. Marketers are being asked to do more and
Speaker:more. You have to be a financial expert. You have to be a product expert.
Speaker:You have to convert sales. You have to tell stories. You have to
Speaker:retain customers.
Speaker:That's good. And welcome to a new
Speaker:episode of Digital Coffee Marketing Brew, and I'm your
Speaker:host, Brett Deister. Please subscribe to this podcast and all your favorite
Speaker:podcasting apps. The five star review really does help with the rankings. Let me know
Speaker:how I am doing. But this week, we're
Speaker:talking about internal marketing and how it's just as important,
Speaker:and you should be probably be focusing on it as external marketing. I know this
Speaker:is a big thing because most people kind of ignore it. It's on the back
Speaker:burner because you always wanna make your sales. But, anyways, I have Charlie
Speaker:with me, and he is the first head of marketing at on screen measurable
Speaker:outdoor advertising advertising platform
Speaker:has been the first marketing hire at six
Speaker:organizations in marketing and sales at seed stage startups up
Speaker:to 200,000,000.
Speaker:Welcome to the show, Charlie. Thanks for having me. I appreciate
Speaker:it. That's the first question to all my guests is, are you a coffee or
Speaker:tea drinker? I'm an iced coffee drinker. I don't drink
Speaker:hot drinks, but I do drink, iced tea
Speaker:or I Iced tea occasionally, but, more of an iced coffee person.
Speaker:So are you, like, like, iced coffee, cold brew,
Speaker:or does it really not matter? Because they are actually brewed differently.
Speaker:Yeah. I'm not a I I don't know that the the full nuance of all
Speaker:of them, but, I I I like both. So,
Speaker:usually an iced Americano is what I go with. Well, I mean, the difference
Speaker:is that just cold brews just brewed in a room temperature or
Speaker:cold. And so that's why it's called cold brews. There's no heat involved, and then
Speaker:ice is usually traditional way, and then you just kinda ice it down.
Speaker:Learn something new. Thanks. I appreciate it. You're welcome. And I gave a brief summary
Speaker:of your expertise. Can you give our listeners a little bit more about what you
Speaker:do? So I'm the head of marketing at OneScreen dot
Speaker:ai. We are a measurable out of home or
Speaker:outdoor advertising platform. So we help, brands,
Speaker:utilize brand marketing, in in their demand gen
Speaker:execution. I've worked at a number of
Speaker:different companies in different sizes in in a range of
Speaker:industries. So, yeah, I've been first marketing
Speaker:hire a couple times, and I've, you know, really tried to lean
Speaker:into, I've worked on that. I've been very
Speaker:fortunate to lead sales teams, even though my background is more in
Speaker:marketing. I've led sales teams a couple of times now, so I have a deep
Speaker:appreciation for understanding how hard that role is and how
Speaker:much marketing works directly with sales
Speaker:and customer support. It's not it's not just
Speaker:siloed functions there. Everyone has to work together. And
Speaker:so, yeah, I think that the topic of internal marketing, especially
Speaker:with what I do now, where we're working with sales teams, we're working with support
Speaker:teams, we may be helping with product launches. It's really
Speaker:it's really important for marketers to understand
Speaker:how our work supports and helps other functions. So I've I've been kind
Speaker:of talking about that or or appreciating that for over twenty
Speaker:years now. Why do you believe that internal
Speaker:marketing is just as important with external marketing for a company
Speaker:success? Marketing
Speaker:is the one function that probably touches,
Speaker:arguably more more areas of the business than others.
Speaker:You know, marketers are being asked to do more and more. You have to be
Speaker:a financial expert. You have to be a product expert. You have to
Speaker:convert sales, you have to tell stories. You have
Speaker:to retain customers. There's there's a piece to all of that.
Speaker:And so you have to know a little bit about everything. You have to be
Speaker:able to to snorkel in most functions and then deep dove
Speaker:into other areas. And I think depending on the
Speaker:function or the the maturity of organizations,
Speaker:everyone has their interpretation or assumption of what marketing is, and
Speaker:especially, you know, everyone has an opinion of what good marketing looks like.
Speaker:And so I think it's important as a marketer to work
Speaker:to really listen and understand first and foremost what people think
Speaker:marketing is and how that they're that role
Speaker:supports or contributes to what they do. And
Speaker:then you have to utilize that to make sure that they understand,
Speaker:how long it takes to do certain executions, how that's going to
Speaker:impact their role, how they can help support marketing, because
Speaker:it is a team game. It's it's a team effort, especially when you're working very
Speaker:closely with sales and customer support. But you have to dive
Speaker:into understanding the product. You know, you have to be able to tell
Speaker:that that in a different way than maybe an engineer does,
Speaker:or to talk about how a product or a solution,
Speaker:why a CFO cares about it versus maybe a salesperson or
Speaker:a marketer. So you just you have to be a communicator.
Speaker:That's what marketing is first and foremost. And you have to not only think
Speaker:about your audiences are not just external from your walls or
Speaker:from your company, but you have internal
Speaker:constituents too that you have to help all get on the same page
Speaker:because it's going to reduce the cost to go out to market. It's going to
Speaker:make it your job easier, and it's going to make them
Speaker:understand, how you what you do day to day and how it helps the
Speaker:company. Can we say that internal marketing does help employee morale and
Speaker:productivity because of just how
Speaker:just checking in with employees a lot of times and making sure that they
Speaker:have what they're needed to be supported is just as important
Speaker:as just making a
Speaker:sale. Yeah. That's a that's a good maybe secondary
Speaker:benefit to being a good storyteller. You know, you're
Speaker:gonna hopefully you're gonna be involved with internal
Speaker:communications alongside HR departments,
Speaker:or operational departments because there is there's a lot of ways
Speaker:that, marketing can help to,
Speaker:extend the story. So, you know, when you launch a big campaign and
Speaker:for us, you know, that's launching a campaign with a customer is doing a
Speaker:big out of home, campaign. So they might be doing a big brand
Speaker:launch. They might be doing a product announcement. It's a
Speaker:very visual product. What we have, we've got billboards, we have bus wraps, we
Speaker:have all these different executions that we build for someone. It's a fun
Speaker:story. It's it's it's exciting to see that go live. It's exciting
Speaker:to see that out in the world. We like to share that internally,
Speaker:but we also have to help the other departments understand
Speaker:how how their work contributed to us getting to the the the
Speaker:angle. We have to we have to help maybe tell the story
Speaker:of how do they find us? We have to ask those types of questions.
Speaker:Where did they come from? Like, what was their main goal and how do we
Speaker:contribute to that? Because that's going to help,
Speaker:sales think about how they're messaging differently. That's going to
Speaker:help, marketing where they spend their dollars or where,
Speaker:like where they're advertising. So those types of stories are
Speaker:important to think about the whole the whole story, not just what your
Speaker:function does. But, yeah, when you talk about morale, I think that's one of those
Speaker:areas where it's like, hey, let's look at this, execution we just
Speaker:did. We just did a lot, a large, campaign for a conference.
Speaker:Let's champion that and let's call out who contributed to that because I
Speaker:may not know the day to day details of what someone on a planning team
Speaker:does. But I can start to appreciate that more and start to
Speaker:understand how long it takes to build an out of home plan. I can
Speaker:understand how long it takes, to source with different
Speaker:vendors. So that goes into my mind as I'm as I'm planning
Speaker:maybe how we talk about a case study or use case. And
Speaker:so I think it all comes back to just having an
Speaker:appreciation for what other functions do and wanting to help
Speaker:champion that because marketers, you know, their inherent
Speaker:skill set should be able to be able to tell stories in a way
Speaker:that can communicate to different learning styles.
Speaker:And has it changed a little bit since we have more remote and hybrid workers?
Speaker:Because I mean, past before, everybody had to come into
Speaker:work. Now some companies are requiring you to come back to work five days a
Speaker:week. Like Amazon just announced this past week, they're like, y'all have to come
Speaker:back to work. But how has it changed with internal marketing if you don't have
Speaker:everybody in the office five days a week now? And
Speaker:then of remote and hybrid models, it's it's even
Speaker:more paramount that internal marketing's and it's just
Speaker:executed and there's a structure to it. I think, you know, everyone in
Speaker:the company should be able to tell your elevator pitch. Everyone, there should
Speaker:be consistency there, and it's just you may have to roll it out differently.
Speaker:But you also have to keep in mind some employees may may have never
Speaker:met each other. You're working in different time zones. There's different styles
Speaker:and structures there. So being a part of helping understand what
Speaker:the expectations are and contributing that in the
Speaker:different learning styles that they have. You know, for someone in
Speaker:remote, it may not be where you're just sending them a text
Speaker:document. Maybe you're recording a Loom video and sending that because there's a little
Speaker:bit more asynchronous ability there or it's just they're a visual
Speaker:learner. So I think just like marketing
Speaker:externally, you have to think about the executions you use and you have to think
Speaker:about the different formats you use. So it's the same thing, I think, internally,
Speaker:especially, but it's probably even more important as not everyone's in
Speaker:the same office building or in the same location all the time. You have
Speaker:to reinforce that you have to reiterate that message. And that's where I
Speaker:think different learning styles comes into play with that.
Speaker:And how can internal marketing help ensure consistent messaging across both
Speaker:internal and external communications? I
Speaker:think that's where a good example of that of that would be is,
Speaker:not operating in a vacuum when you're launching a marketing campaign.
Speaker:Launching that internally first because one, it's going to get everybody excited.
Speaker:Like, here's what we're doing. Here's all the here's all the executions we built. Here's
Speaker:what this is going to look like. But you get other people to buy
Speaker:in, you get some, you get people's excitement there.
Speaker:You're also not asking everybody to give their opinion because making a decision as
Speaker:a group, a group thing can definitely
Speaker:prevent some progress there. I mean, there's some feedback you might get,
Speaker:but, you know, you take that in stride. It's like, Hey, thanks. We appreciate that.
Speaker:Here's maybe the rationale of why we did it this way or why we're
Speaker:messaging this way. It helps you to educate on the
Speaker:theory and the the execution of of what a marketing campaign looks like.
Speaker:But that's gonna help sales because they're gonna see the the use cases
Speaker:that you're using. They're gonna to see the emails that are going out so they
Speaker:know how to respond to that. So it's important to keep people
Speaker:involved early on in the process. It gets them excited internally. And then
Speaker:when it goes out in the market, you can then report on that. You can
Speaker:give updates. But it's very important to keep everyone in the loop early
Speaker:on, versus it being a surprise to, other departments
Speaker:internally. You're trying to do all this
Speaker:messaging to have, like, the different types of personality come in and help you
Speaker:figure out if this is the right messaging, because you're gonna have different groups of
Speaker:people with different diverse thoughts, and then they'll all disagree with each other, but
Speaker:at least, you know, like where all these diverse thoughts are going with this
Speaker:messaging, because I mean, as marketers, we can create this message. We
Speaker:think it's awesome. And then all of a sudden we bring it out to the
Speaker:wild and it's like, well, that didn't work so well. I
Speaker:mean, as we know, marketers, you're not gonna bat a hundred
Speaker:or, you know, a % every time, some
Speaker:campaigns are just not going to hit. I think there is a trap
Speaker:of asking for opinions from everybody.
Speaker:If they're not the intended audience or they don't know enough about
Speaker:the intended audience, there's going to be
Speaker:a bias towards what they like. And, you
Speaker:know, no offense, but somebody in accounting might not be your ICP. They
Speaker:might not be the person you're trying to talk to. So while they they may
Speaker:have an opinion about that, they're not the intended
Speaker:audience. And so you have to take that into my into consideration.
Speaker:You also have to take into consideration ideas are going to come from everybody.
Speaker:You'd be silly not to take ideas from other places and other
Speaker:individuals that may not sit in the marketing team. However, you have to
Speaker:just there's a balance there of, you know, too many
Speaker:cooks in the kitchen or just too many ideas versus
Speaker:we're going to go with this. This is our hypothesis. We've made a decision on
Speaker:this. Here's why we're going to learn from it. But but I've
Speaker:had great ideas coming from someone that's, you know, no marketing degree
Speaker:whatsoever, but they just they had a really good idea and you're like, Oh, I
Speaker:could see that work. So that's important. And I think you want to champion that
Speaker:as well to say, Hey, look, this idea came from someone in the product team.
Speaker:We never thought of that. And look where this got us to. So I think
Speaker:that's one of those things you can help champion for other people to contribute because
Speaker:they they should feel like they should contribute. And nowadays
Speaker:everyone has a voice. Everyone has social channels that they're active on.
Speaker:There's not you shouldn't have the expectation of everybody wanting to share your
Speaker:news. But you can champion those that do want to because
Speaker:they're going to extend the voice of who you're talking to.
Speaker:And it may start to reduce your your overall marketing costs. And what are
Speaker:some of the common mistakes companies make when implementing internal communication
Speaker:initiatives? And how should they avoid these?
Speaker:Yeah, that's a good question. I think as long as it's not a one way
Speaker:conversation, and as long as it's not well, we told
Speaker:you that once. I think you have to continually communicate,
Speaker:the same story over and over again. It's just it's just like external.
Speaker:Nobody's going to make a buy unless you're selling T shirts or something
Speaker:very transactional. Most people don't make a decision or a buy
Speaker:or are in a buying position at that time when they hear
Speaker:your message the first time, you have to continually communicate that over and over
Speaker:again. And then when they're ready to execute on that or when they're
Speaker:ready to understand that, they hopefully think of
Speaker:you. So I think a couple areas that,
Speaker:are not probably going to be effective when you're trying to build an
Speaker:internal marketing communication program or plan is if you just say it
Speaker:once and then think everyone retains it. If you do it in the format in
Speaker:one format and you don't keep into consideration
Speaker:how other people learn or absorb information, I think that's a
Speaker:way that you can fail in that, and or just
Speaker:not be open to feedback. I think it's a marketer's job to listen
Speaker:and to digest and to
Speaker:disseminate information in a way that,
Speaker:in different ways that people can understand. So if you are just,
Speaker:you know, closing that idea down, it's like, no, no, no, we're like, we come
Speaker:up with the ideas here in the marketing world. You're going to fail and you're
Speaker:going to turn people off, too. I mean, like everyone has good ideas. It doesn't
Speaker:mean it's always going to be the best idea for their execution, but
Speaker:you you should be open to those types of things within within reason.
Speaker:So, I mean, what I'm hearing is even if you're the maybe the boss of
Speaker:somebody, don't talk down to them, talk parallel to them or, like, equal to
Speaker:them. So your messaging should be equal even if you're the boss,
Speaker:but still have that separation. Or if you're the same point, just talk equal
Speaker:to them. Because when you talk down to people, people are like, Well, I'm not
Speaker:going to do anything about this. Yeah, I think that I mean, that's just human
Speaker:nature in general. You don't don't be a jerk. You know,
Speaker:like, I think keep in consideration that sales what
Speaker:sales is doing. It's difficult and it's important, and it's equally
Speaker:as important as what marketing is doing. We're here to help each other.
Speaker:So sales team, here's why I think that our marketing
Speaker:team should sit on your calls. Here's why we should talk to your customers because
Speaker:we're going to pick things up that you may not. You're going to hear something
Speaker:different than than we're hearing it and we're going to use it in a different
Speaker:way. Not, you know, if I said that to a market, a sales
Speaker:leader like, Hey, we're going to sit on your calls without
Speaker:context, that seems like a forced entry there
Speaker:that seems confrontational. Hey, I really want to understand
Speaker:better how we can change up our landing page and we I want to use
Speaker:the words that our customers are using. So would it be okay if we
Speaker:sat if we listen to your Gong or call recordings or if we did,
Speaker:or if we could go out on some sales calls like framing it in a
Speaker:way where it's, Hey, I'm trying to help you out and it's going to make
Speaker:all of our jobs easier. Yeah, you just, you know, I think it's as
Speaker:simple as just try not to be a jerk, and which is, you know, how
Speaker:we should all, live in life, I guess.
Speaker:And and and in what ways can a company measure the
Speaker:effectiveness of their internal marketing strategies?
Speaker:I think when you when you can see cohesion between teams,
Speaker:when you can do things like,
Speaker:when you can think about, like, requests that come into
Speaker:marketing and maybe, you know, depending on how you kind of keep track of that
Speaker:or structure it, but, I think there's some efficiencies of scale
Speaker:that could come with, maybe not having so many
Speaker:rush requests and maybe the education around
Speaker:a salesperson coming to a marketing team. I need a sell sheet,
Speaker:which happens probably very often. You know,
Speaker:the first thing I would do is ask, well, what do you what do you
Speaker:actually try to accomplish? They do. Do they specifically ask for a sell sheet
Speaker:or do you need a reason to follow-up and like they're just a tangible
Speaker:type of of learner? Do we not have enough information on
Speaker:our site? What's what? What are we trying to get across them?
Speaker:Because we may have another execution for you that's already built, or we may have
Speaker:a different way that you can deliver that. That's a track
Speaker:that's easier to be tracked than just handing someone a PDF.
Speaker:So there's a lot of ways to think about that. But I think if one
Speaker:of the ways that I've found in the past that there's been some efficiencies there
Speaker:is that the rush orders don't always come into marketing. It's
Speaker:there's an appreciation for I understand how long things take or I'm
Speaker:going to plan out ahead of time because I know how long things take versus
Speaker:a mad scramble at the end. So those are some ways where I think, you
Speaker:know, you're just going to see you're going to see a better relationship between sales
Speaker:and marketing. You're going to see maybe some bottom of funnel or
Speaker:middle middle of funnel closing better because we're just getting better
Speaker:at executing on what the needs are versus working in silos. I
Speaker:think those are a couple of ways that you can say, hey, this is working,
Speaker:we're all we're all, you know, whatever the analogy you want to use, rowing our
Speaker:orders on the same direction. Or I always butcher analogies like that.
Speaker:But you know, you can pick whatever analogy you love the best,
Speaker:but, that sort of teamwork model, you can just you
Speaker:can see that working together. You can see proactive communication happening
Speaker:like, Hey, we heard this from this prospect. They
Speaker:referenced that, that one campaign you ran.
Speaker:That's a good sign of that. People are working back and forth, and it's
Speaker:not just a one way street. And how does technology
Speaker:and digital communication play a role in facilitating internal marketing
Speaker:strategies? Like, do you guys use email marketing, maybe
Speaker:internal podcast, private podcast, videos? Like, what do you use
Speaker:specifically? Yeah. I think it depends on the the size
Speaker:and structure and and of each company. You know, I
Speaker:think email marketing is one way that, you know, there was
Speaker:a company I had worked for in the past. We actually
Speaker:had a daily email that we put out, and it was it was called what
Speaker:we know now. And the whole theory behind that was we had all these different
Speaker:departments. This is when we went remote. So everyone this was sort of a
Speaker:new structure for everyone. And we try to communicate
Speaker:what we knew at that point about a lot of the changing landscape
Speaker:of things, of just what each different department was working
Speaker:on. And it was a great model because
Speaker:everyone was used to email communication. It was simple to put
Speaker:together. It took some time, but the the ROI on that was
Speaker:was incredible because people felt more connected.
Speaker:We also put some fun things into there too. So it wasn't just, you know,
Speaker:being hit over the head with business information all the time. There were some
Speaker:you got to learn about your employees more, your coworkers,
Speaker:especially sitting in a work a remote environment. So, it
Speaker:really depends. I mean, it's like don't try to boil the ocean, find
Speaker:what works for your organization. If it's email, if it's Slack,
Speaker:if it's, you know, like I said, Loom videos at the end of the
Speaker:week. I've I've used those before just to kinda give people a heads up on
Speaker:what's going on. Find what works for you. But, you know, you don't
Speaker:have to I wouldn't focus on the technology or building out a
Speaker:big structure. I'd focus on telling that story first. And if if it resonates
Speaker:great and you can always expand upon it. Successful and
Speaker:then experiment on other things, maybe to enhance it if need be.
Speaker:But if not, don't try to, like, reinvent the wheel
Speaker:again. Yeah. You don't need to buy a lot of technology. You
Speaker:probably are using things in ways that people communicate. But just remember, everyone
Speaker:has different learning styles like a long you know, some people might
Speaker:want the too long didn't read bullet version and some people want the
Speaker:documentation. So think about the different styles that you're using with with
Speaker:people. And that goes for external marketing too. You know, everyone's gonna
Speaker:have a different learning style outside your company.
Speaker:The success of internal marketing programs.
Speaker:A good internal marketing program without leadership buy
Speaker:in. I think everyone has to be on the same
Speaker:page that we're all working together. Sales and marketing are not
Speaker:enemies. They're working cohesively. They're working with
Speaker:customer support. You know, product
Speaker:now is, you know, like a a newer term for product marketing,
Speaker:but that function needs to be integrated with, the
Speaker:different departments. They need to be able to understand what's coming down
Speaker:the line and be able to tell that to prospects and the customers. So there's
Speaker:retention there with current, excuse me, with current
Speaker:customers and customer support, but then there's prospecting with sales. So
Speaker:if that buy in isn't there and there's not appreciation of, like, why why
Speaker:does this team need to be in this meeting and why what are we trying
Speaker:to do? Then it's it's gonna fail.
Speaker:How let's say some company you're trying to get the
Speaker:leadership to Dubai and how do you convince them? Because sometimes it's like,
Speaker:well, why do I need to do this type of a thing? Because everybody has
Speaker:a long list of things to do or not do, or they think they're busy
Speaker:or they actually are busy. But how do you get that buy in? Because sometimes
Speaker:it is a little difficult to be like, hey. Look it. We need you guys
Speaker:to do this because, I mean, you are the leadership and people look up to
Speaker:you for this. I think you have you have to think
Speaker:about what's important to them. So
Speaker:a CFO or a finance person is going to care about,
Speaker:they're going to care about budgets. They're going to care about ROI. They're going to
Speaker:care about, probably more in an analytical way. And
Speaker:so if you can help them understand,
Speaker:listen, we're gonna spend a lot of money or time on these
Speaker:marketing campaigns. If we operate in a silo, there's
Speaker:a good chance that we may not be as effective because we are not
Speaker:understanding the feedback from the customer feedback loop from
Speaker:sales. So if we can do this, but if we don't hear
Speaker:back from them, we're gonna maybe use the wrong words
Speaker:and on our communications, and it's not gonna resonate
Speaker:with our buyer and they're gonna go somewhere else. So that's like you have to
Speaker:think about what's important to them. The sales team may
Speaker:say, like, well, we need to book, you know, we want to book more meetings,
Speaker:not just awareness. Well, okay. That's great. Like,
Speaker:help us understand which, like, which
Speaker:prospects are not converting and, like, give us enough of
Speaker:a sample size so that we can maybe make some deductions around, hey. We
Speaker:shouldn't maybe target this segment because we're learning that they're just not ready
Speaker:to buy yet or this industry is at the wrong sales cycle.
Speaker:So let's focus on other ones. If we can help them understand
Speaker:what they're motivated about, and usually that's like selling more and
Speaker:getting a more a higher paycheck. Well, how do I help them do that?
Speaker:I'm going to help them find the right prospects, but I need I need some
Speaker:feedback from them first. I care about what motivates
Speaker:them. And so when they see that you're intrinsically
Speaker:motivated to help them out, then I think that there's
Speaker:a two way street there. So I think you just have to, you know, you
Speaker:can't say, well, here's here's why, because I'm telling you so. I think you have
Speaker:to put yourself in their shoes. And, again, this goes back
Speaker:to like common sense marketing or just telling stories.
Speaker:But think about what they care about and how do you tell the
Speaker:story in a way that they they're like, Oh, yeah, Okay, then that makes sense.
Speaker:And how can internal mark internal marketing help a company achieve
Speaker:its business goals and objectives in the long term? I think we talked
Speaker:about a number of those things there. I think you're just you're going to,
Speaker:you're going to work faster. You're going to be on the same page with other
Speaker:teams, especially when it comes to go to market. So when sales,
Speaker:customer support and marketing are all rowing in the same direction,
Speaker:you're going to execute faster. You're going to hopefully spend less, to
Speaker:acquire new customers and you're going to keep them because you're finding the
Speaker:right people. So I think, you know, I I it's not
Speaker:easy and it doesn't happen overnight. But when everyone understands what we're trying to
Speaker:accomplish, when everyone understands the buy in around what marketers are trying to
Speaker:do, you can hopefully get sales quicker and you can keep
Speaker:customers longer. And, I mean, for those companies that haven't really done
Speaker:or done internal communication very well, what is kind of like
Speaker:your rundown of, like or like your two bolt thing about, like, why why
Speaker:is it so important for them to start now? I don't think you want any
Speaker:department working in a silo. I think, you know, how often are they talking to
Speaker:each other and how often are they sharing ideas? It's
Speaker:important and it shouldn't be a blame game. It shouldn't be sales did this. Well,
Speaker:no marketing did this. We're all in it to learn together. So I think
Speaker:the the sooner that everyone can buy into that idea of we don't
Speaker:need to spend every minute together. We don't need to have meetings every day,
Speaker:but we should be sharing back and forth of how we get
Speaker:better as a go to market, group or or or function,
Speaker:it's gonna it's gonna it's gonna deliver dividends. Alright. People are
Speaker:listening to this podcast and wondering where they can they find you online to learn
Speaker:more about what you do and how internal communication is so great. Yeah.
Speaker:I mean, I'm pretty active on LinkedIn. So, you know, if you if you search
Speaker:for Charlie Riley on LinkedIn, happy to connect there or,
Speaker:or check us out at 1screen.ai if you're, interested
Speaker:in outdoor advertising. That's, you know, where I'm focusing my
Speaker:time now. So, trying to help build some internal internal
Speaker:marketing and external marketing for for our organization to do, measurable out
Speaker:of home. But, yeah, you can find me there or or or like I said,
Speaker:I'm active on LinkedIn. Alright. Any final thoughts for us for our
Speaker:listeners? No. Thanks for having me. It's, yeah, I think
Speaker:marketers marketers are asked to do a lot. So the more that you can help
Speaker:get others on board internally, you're going to have more champions
Speaker:that, you know, that get that moment of how you're helping them out.
Speaker:You know, just be a good listener. It's kind of it's, you know, table stakes
Speaker:for marketers. Alright. Thank you, Charlie, for joining Digital Coffee Marketing Brew
Speaker:and sharing your knowledge on why internal marketing is just as important as
Speaker:external marketing. Thanks for having me. And thank you for listening. As
Speaker:always, please subscribe to this podcast and all your favorite podcasting apps. Leave
Speaker:a five star review. It will always help with the rankings. Let me know how
Speaker:I am doing. Join me next week as I talk to another great player
Speaker:in the PR marketing industry. Alright, guys. Stay safe. Get to understanding
Speaker:how you can make your internal marketing better, and see you next
Speaker:week. Later.