Welcome to HubShots, the podcast for marketing managers who use HubSpot hosted by Ian Jacob from Search & Be Found and Craig Bailey from XEN Systems.
In this episode, we chat about HubSpot's latest research piece that highlights the strong link between business growth and customer service, HubSpot's new bot filtering setting (you should turn it on), Google My Business's new features, tips for managing deals, plus a handy productivity tip.
Listen to the episode here: https://soundcloud.com/hubshots/099-business-growth-via-customer-service-focus-more-google-my-business-tips
Join our WhatsApp group here: https://hubshots.com/whatsapp/
Join the Facebook group here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1608138752821574/
Recorded: Wednesday 16 August 2017 | Published: Saturday 26 August 2017
The connection between business growth and customer service:
https://research.hubspot.com/reports/customer-success
Growing companies put more focus, time and money into providing excellent customer service.
Customer service = Looking after customers
It’s a virtuous cycle: Business growth is linked to customer service
Growing companies:
Takeaways: there’s value in making customer service a priority instead of an after-thought
Some personal notes: My goal is to never have a ticketing system in our agency - at least not in the current format that support ticket systems work.
Note: If you created your HubSpot account on or after April 1st, 2017, this feature will be on by default. So do this for older accounts!
Adding posts to your Google My Business account:
http://searchengineland.com/google-posts-now-live-google-business-users-277710
Allows you to add a simple 300 word post, with a CTA button. Just to be META Craig added a post about how to optimise GMB, as the post on the XEN GMB listing:
Using filters to find Deals with an Owner who is no longer with the company:
https://blog.hubspot.com/customers/managing-deals-in-your-crm
Tip #1 walks you through creating a filter:
Should you guarantee success?
Answer: in digital marketing, the answer is probably no.
Send people reminders about things they’ve said they will do.
Typical scenario: you’re chatting with someone and they mention they’ll send you something when they get back to the office… often they’ll have the best of intentions but completely forget
So, make it easier on them, and send them a reminder email - but tell them you’ll be sending it to them, so they (1) don’t have to remember it (2) won’t get annoyed when they get your reminder email
Here’s a script to use (eg set this up as a Canned Response in Gmail or a template in HubSpot Sales):
Hi [name]
As per our chat today, here’s the reminder email I promised I’d send you - thanks for [enter details about what they said they’d do]
Cheers,
[your name]
A great insight and look into the way we value and move money. Walter explores Bitcoin and the long evolution of currency with guests Neha Narula, Don Tapscott, Felix Martin and Max Levchin.
https://overcast.fm/+Iip-hioWU
Dark social is traffic that appears as Direct in Google analytics, but likely comes from social sources eg links in Messenger. SME has an article that attempts to give some insight into it - but is mostly useful in highlighting how hard it is to track:
http://www.socialmediaexaminer.com/how-to-track-dark-social-traffic-in-google-analytics/
But one good tip is about adding in sharing buttons for the usual dark social suspects including social sharing links for Messenger, WhatsApp, etc
An interesting aside in the article: use links to Messenger bot replies eg instead of sending to an FAQ page, send to a Messenger thread with a bot reply that contains the FAQ content. It adds people to your contact list so you can potentially communicate with them again in the future
We see our customers as invited guests to a party, and we are the hosts. It's our job every day to make every important aspect of the customer experience a little bit better.
~ Jeff Bezos
Other stuff we’ve been reading and recommend, but had to cut from the show:
https://databox.com/facebook-ad-roi-secrets-revealed
HubSpot discuss the ‘learnings’ from their recent blog email subscription overhaul:
https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/hubspot-marketing-blog-email-subscription-overhaul
If you’ve been confused about those noreferrer links in WordPress, then this article explains why they were added:
https://blog.templatetoaster.com/rel-noreferrer-noopener-seo/
Tool to investigate:
Some of Craig’s reading:
https://getpocket.com/@craigbailey
Please rate and leave us some feedback as this helps us.