エピソード

  • The LinkedIn Advertising Strategy for SaaS and Services | Mony Chhim
    2025/07/17

    In this episode, I chat with Mony Chhim, a top LinkedIn Ads pro from France. We dive into the nitty-gritty of making LinkedIn Ads work, especially for B2B companies. Mony shares his journey from being an engineer to mastering LinkedIn Ads, and he’s got some awesome tips on targeting, creative content, and why video ads are a game-changer.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit blog.benjaminboman.com
    続きを読む 一部表示
    40 分
  • End of Season 4, What's Next?
    2023/12/14

    It's here! That's the end of season 4. Many thanks to the guests of this season. Each of them provided very actionable direction on how to apply strategic theories in practice. Based on this season, I need to narrow and define the vision for this podcast moving forward. I may restart the podcast sometime next year.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit blog.benjaminboman.com
    続きを読む 一部表示
    3 分
  • Share Your Journey to Attract New Users: How to Build in Public | Kevon Cheung, Public Lab
    2023/11/02

    In this episode, Kevon teaches you how to share your journey authentically on social media to naturally attract followers, clients, and opportunities.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit blog.benjaminboman.com
    続きを読む 一部表示
    45 分
  • Marketing the $500k+ Solo Dev Agency | Paul Xue, Spacestation Labs
    2023/08/24

    Paul Xue is the founder of Spacestation Labs, a solo developer agency he grew to over $500k p/year since 2017, while working a regular 40-hour week.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit blog.benjaminboman.com
    続きを読む 一部表示
    35 分
  • The 5 Step CRO Process For New Products | Chris McCarron, GoGoChimp
    2023/06/01

    Looking to encourage the maximum amount of signups from your product’s traffic, but unsure how to organize your efforts? I asked Chris McCarron how.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit blog.benjaminboman.com
    続きを読む 一部表示
    42 分
  • Copywriting Effective SaaS Landing Pages: Research, Structure and Proof | Lana Rafaela, Cherry Red Content
    2023/05/04



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit blog.benjaminboman.com
    続きを読む 一部表示
    39 分
  • How to Create Engaging Product Explainer Videos That Convert (While Bootstrapping) | Justin Halsall
    2023/04/27
    Recent data found that 79% of people say watching a video has convinced them to sign up for an app.But too many of my favorite products don't even have one.Hunting for best practices, I connected with Justin Halsall , who explained:* What exactly to put in the video* How (bootstrappers) can put one together* Annoying mistakes to avoid* And how to give your video the X factorHere are the details:Important note: The following is a summary written by me based on the interview, not quotes. Please listen to the audio version for the exact wording.What to put in your video?👉 Here are some tips want to put in the video itself:* Start with the main problem. There can be a temptation to add too many ideas to the same video. Stay focused on the main benefit or problem first.* Talk about sub-benefits after. After covering the main point, you will be able to detail the sub-benefits related to this problem. for example, your main problem may be dealing with too many emails, and your product solves this. After covering how you solve that, you can show the extra features that add usability or value.* Try to hook them in the first 15 seconds. More on how to do this below.* Aim for 30 seconds to 1min, 30 seconds. This is the optimal length. If not possible, aim to keep the video under 2 minutes long. You may be able to extend the time that people will pay attention by including a human face, but this will increase production of quality and inconsequence the budget required.Avoid these common mistakes:* Giving product tours. This wastes valuable time from communicating your main benefit or how you solve the main problem. Skip the login screen. This is definitely TMI.* Not showing the product. Motion graphics can be interesting, but you need to show the product being used.* Burying the video. The video needs to be placed in a location where it can actually be seen by users and affect your conversion Rates, like your home page.How to find your hook?You will find your hook by talking to your customers and prospects.You need to find the idea that really resonates with them. What big benefit do they get from solving a particular pain point? Focus on that.👉 How you present that hook depends on your creativity.* You could go full infomercial, such as “Are you struggling with X?” which is less cool, but it works. 🤷* Framer has a good example of a creative hook. They present the idea as asking you to imagine a few different ideas combined. See below:Video endingsHere are some tips on how to end your video:* One sentence recap. Especially if you have a hero video that's a bit long a one-sentence recap at the end allows you to end on a high note that people will remember.* Splash screens with a Try The Product Now button is a nice way to prompt people to engage more.How to create your hero videoHere are the steps to creating your hero video:* Create the ‘script’. Not the script probably like like you have in your mind right now but one based on high-level ideas written on post-its to prompt you through the recording. This will be flexible enough to re-arrange as you go based on what you learn from the process.* Write down the problem that you're going to address, describe the main benefit, and then describe the sub-benefits that you'd like to like to like to touch on.* Work out what you're going to show in your UI. In your video, you're going to click through different stages, etc. You will also need some assets to show this, like a demo or account with data in it already. Etc. Jot this down on a notepad.* Practice. You can practice this first just by talking it through and looking at your notes. You want to check that it makes sense.* Record and edit. Note that you want to record your audio separately from your video because that will remove a lot of the retakes.Tips:* Use the correct screen resolution. You want to record something that will also work on mobile when somebody is watching on mobile. So if you have a 30-inch screen, you're going to have to change the resolution so that it's more like a 720p display.* Turn on Do Not Disturb, turn off your notifications, and maybe start a new user profile that doesn't have a ton of extensions in Chrome.* Have the right sound environment. If you want, you can type out what you want to say, and then record that in a quiet environment.* Speak with higher energy. As is the general thumb in public speaking, bring your own self plus 10%.Testing your workBefore promoting your video, one method among many to get feedback is to use hallway user testing.👉 Ask people where you work or whom you encounter for feedback on whether the key messages were conveyed.“Hey, we just finished this video. Do you mind checking it out?After, chat with them to see:* Do they think the product actually does anything that would be useful for them or their company?* What problem do they think it would solve?⚠️ If the value proposition is a complete and utter disconnect from what your ...
    続きを読む 一部表示
    37 分
  • How to Create Your First SaaS User Onboarding Sequence | Jane Portman, Userlist
    2023/04/20



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit blog.benjaminboman.com
    続きを読む 一部表示
    42 分