
Forget “Vibing,” Traction is Where It’s At
We’ve all heard the buzz about “vibe” marketing, vibe coding and vibe – everything and let’s be serious. If it has “vibe” in the name it means “Zero skill and a subscription to ChatGPT.”
We’ve all heard the buzz about “vibe” marketing, vibe coding and vibe – everything and let’s be serious. If it has “vibe” in the name it means “Zero skill and a subscription to ChatGPT.”
In weekly episodes streamed live on LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, veteran marketers Pete Monfre and Bill Lowell share decades of hard-earned wisdom, interview Master Marketers, host panels on cutting edge topics and more.
If you are relatively new to marketing and want to enhance your skills or if you are a veteran marketer keeping up with the latest approaches, The B2B Marketing Mindset is a treasure trove of free knowledge.
Soon we’ll be launching free B2B Marketing courses to help you become a Master Marketer either for your own business or to advance your career goals.
UH-OH. We are ruffling some feathers today talking about the dumbest, most vapid, lame brained, AND MOST COMMON boondoggles we see over and over again in our practice.
It’s always a good idea to talk to customers, get feedback, etc. but they don’t want to hurt your feelings so they withhold the most important information you need. The painful information. The stuff you need to improve.
Today Bill Lowell and I discuss Relationship Marketing. I can’t count the number of times I’ve heard somebody say, “Marketing doesn’t work for us. Our business is all relationship driven.”
Today we take a critical look at the future of Artificial Intelligence in sales and marketing.
Our guest is Bill Leake with Apogee Results together with my co-host William Lowell.
A.I. tells us the dangers of…uh…itself
In this podcast I’m telling the truth about nasty networkers – the folks you hide from and mock behind their backs.
Today my guest is Dan Klopp and we are talking about a topic that is sure to confuse and amuse.
There is a huge difference between a “market expert” and a “marketing expert” and if you get them mixed up – that’s probably going to be an expensive mistake.