The B2B Podcast Index
Evolving the Enterprise

Advancing Marketing Strategies with Christopher Rubin of BrandMultiplier

Evolving the Enterprise · 2026-01-20 · 41 min

Substance score

43 / 100

Five dimensions, 20 points each

Insight Density9 / 20
Originality8 / 20
Guest Caliber7 / 20
Specificity & Evidence11 / 20
Conversational Craft8 / 20

What our scoring noted

Our reviewer’s read on each dimension, with quotes from the episode.

Insight Density

9 / 20

A handful of useful stats and three actionable frameworks (narrative gap mapping, story bank with data, touchpoint audit) provide some value, but the episode is padded heavily with mutual affirmation and topic repetition. Novel ideas per minute are low for a 41-minute runtime.

companies that do this typically see 20% improvement in conversion in, like, 90 days
audit your touchpoint variations. So count, literally count how many different messages does your customer encounter along the journey, and then cut that number in half. And what we've seen happen when you do that is your NPS goes up by, like, 30%

Originality

8 / 20

The 'narrative OS' concept is the episode's most distinctive idea but is left largely undeveloped. The bulk of the content - storytelling matters, break down silos, customer-centricity, jazz-vs-symphony leadership - is conventional brand and marketing wisdom dressed with light AI framing.

I'm calling it a narrative operating system and narrative os. And the idea is that story becomes the intelligence layer between strategy and execution
we need are translators, people who can turn technical capabilities into human experiences that resonate emotionally

Guest Caliber

7 / 20

Christopher Rubin is a brand consultant running a small boutique; he has agency copywriting roots and some interesting frameworks, but he offers no evidence of having operated a marketing function at scale, cites no verifiable client outcomes, and functions more as a thought-leader consultant than a practitioner with a track record.

I got my career started as a copywriter at an agency. And just luck of time and place, the first two accounts I worked on were Disney and Hard Rock Cafe
you could find your storyline.com

Specificity & Evidence

11 / 20

The episode is above average on citation density - the significant objects experiment, Stanford 22x memorability, Gartner 85% failure rate, 900-apps/30%-integrated stat, and Spotify Wrapped 60M shares all ground the discussion. However, sources are loosely attributed, numerical claims like '20% conversion lift in 90 days' and '30% NPS uplift' lack any citation, and several figures feel approximate or unverifiable.

they took $129 worth of thrift store ju junk, basically, and resold it for over 3, $600. So it was a 2, 700% increase in the value of those same items
Organizations have 900 applications on average, but only around 30% are integrated

Conversational Craft

8 / 20

The host asks a few genuinely probing questions - on pitfalls, on how to prove creative value internally, on identifying cultural champions - but far too often validates rather than challenges, gives long preambles that dilute the question, and never pushes back on vague or unsourced claims.

Yeah, I like that. I know for a fact from talking to some of our prospects and customers
how do you really show them that example and say, yes, I'm an expert, so you can trust me just because I say it, but how do they Buy into the

Conversation analysis

Computed from the transcript - who did the talking, and the verbal tics along the way.

Share of words spoken

  • Speaker B50%
  • Speaker C48%
  • Speaker A1%

Filler words

like89so79right35uh33kind of22actually15sort of12you know9um4er3I mean3literally3basically2obviously2

Episode notes

In this episode of Evolving the Enterprise, host Dayle Hall sits down with Christopher Rubin - brand and creative marketing leader, and founder of BrandMultiplier. Together, they explore how creativity, empathy, and integration drive real innovation in the enterprise. Christopher shares his journey from agency copywriter to strategic brand leader, revealing why storytelling is a critical connector between technology, people, and business outcomes. They discuss how AI and data can enhance creativity, how to bridge silos with story, and why the future of marketing is about narrative intelligence - not noise.

Full transcript

41 min

Transcribed and scored by The B2B Podcast Index.

Speaker A: Welcome to Evolving the Enterprise, a podcast that brings together thought leaders from the worlds of data automation, AI integration and more. Join snaplogic's Chief Marketing Officer, Dale hall, as we dive into the captivating stories of enterprise technology successes and failures through lively discussions with industry leading executives and experts. Together we'll explore real world challenges and opportunities that companies face as, uh, they reshape the future of work.

Speaker B: Hi, and welcome to the latest episode of our, uh, podcast, Evolving the Enterprise. I'm your host, Dale Hall, CMO at snaplogic. Today, we're exploring how innovation actually happens within organizations. Not just through big ideas or certain technologies, but how to be smarter, more creative and all aspects of integration, not just the technology. That's the important part. So this one's a slightly different one, but actually it's very close to my heart because we're going to actually talk about marketing. My guest today is Christine Christopher Rubin. He's a brand and creative marketing leader. Uh, great track record helping organizations to bridge that gap between creativity and business outcomes. He's led multiple teams around the intersection of brand product strategy, as well as where to go with technology and innovation. Today he's going to share how integration, not just that innovation piece, but people, platforms and processes can unlock new innovation and new opportunities for the enterprise. Chris, welcome to the show.

Speaker C: Thank you, Dale. I'm so happy to be here.

Speaker B: Yeah, it's going to be a good one. I'm very excited to talk about marketing again. A lot of these have been very much technology focused with a little bit of marketing involved. But I know we're going to get deep and I have a lot of other marketing contacts that are going to be excited to hear what you've got to say. Okay, so let's kick off. First off, Chris, what I'd love you to do is to give me a little bit of a background how you got to this position. Brand multiplier, AI. What it does, just give some context for the audience.

Speaker C: Sure. Happy to. I got my career started as a copywriter at an agency. And just luck of time and place, the first two accounts I worked on were Disney and Hard Rock Cafe.

Speaker B: The big ones.

Speaker C: Yeah. And just, again, just luck. But you know, what it did spark was a love for this thing called brand, this idea that can create love and loyalty that spans generations. And so I pursued for decades trying to study and figure out, like, how do you build something like that and how do you sustain it over time? You know, brands like the ones that I mentioned. I have to say that coming into this conversation, Dale I've been thinking a lot about integration, especially with what you're doing at snaplogic. It, uh, parallels what we're discovering on the creative side. For me, it seems like the most exciting thing happening right now isn't innovation for innovation's sake, it's really integration that unlocks innovation. I've been fascinated with a piece of research that Stanford did around stories showing that stories are 22 times more memorable than facts alone. And it seems like companies treat narrative as separate from their technical capabilities. So what we're finding is when you integrate storytelling with business operations, that's when you really see the exponential growth. And so that intersection is really where I've spent my whole career and I feel like it's more critical now than ever.

Speaker B: Yeah, it's a really interesting point about storytelling. I think as marketers, if you're involved in this kind of area around the brand, you always want to tell a good story. But it's so interesting these days that, uh, some of the leaders that I've talked to on this podcast, they could use help with storytelling, not just with what they're trying to achieve in their projects, but even around how AI is going to impact their technology initiatives. If they could tell a better story, you know, solving the use cases, I'm sure they could get more funding, they get more buy in. So that's a really interesting take.

Speaker C: That's it. Yeah. Thanks so much. I mean ultimately that's what we're all about, is story led growth and trying to move past the vanity metrics that have tainted our industry for a long time and focus on the metrics that matter to the founders and the leaders of the business. Uh, reducing the cac, shortening the sales cycle, increasing the long term value, those kinds of things.

Speaker B: Yeah, all the things that most executives, most leadership teams, really, I mean, that's what they care about, right? If you can get some storytelling, as long as you can show the value to the use case, I think it's interesting. So let's kick off this idea around the creative process. But in your mind, when you hear the term, um, innovation. Innovation as a tech company, we're thinking of technology and how you implement it more. But like in terms of innovation, is that used often in creative circles? Is it, ah, a buzzword and how do you frame it for the teams that you talk to? How should they think about what innovation means?

Speaker C: Yeah, such a great question. I think it's definitely become a buzzword and I feel like it's because we've conflated activity with Progress. I love that Gartner study, I don't know if I love IT, found that 85% of big data projects fail. And it's not because the technology doesn't work. It's because they don't create human connection, in my opinion. Another interesting data point. Organizations have 900 applications on average, but only around 30% are integrated. So I feel like that's not innovation. That's like expensive fragmentation. To your question for creatives, I feel like we need to reframe innovation completely. I love this example. It's called the significant objects experiment. I'm not sure if you're familiar with it.

Speaker B: No, I'm not.

Speaker C: It's an experiment, literally where they took $129 worth of thrift store ju junk, basically, and resold it for over 3, $600. So it was a 2, 700% increase in the value of those same items. How? Just by adding stories to each item. And so I just love how that illustrates the idea that story really can increase value. And it's proven in other contexts as well. It's not about technology there. It wasn't AI, it wasn't a platform. That was just narrative. And I feel like that's innovation.

Speaker B: Yeah, I like that. I like the way of thinking at it. Like I said, I think as marketers we do think about storytelling. We know it's important. I'm fascinated with the psychology of marketing buyer behavior. Anyway, I think a lot of us are interested in that. But again, I think as the listeners to this podcast, whether you're a creative or not, whether you're a, ah, data scientist trying to get funding for a project that you want to work on that could really help the business. I love the concept of saying, build the better story. Right? And you'll actually get more support and buy in for that. If you're a creative leader out there, let's say, what would you advise them to kind of reclaim what innovation means in their role? Because again, I think a lot of us feel as, oh, it's a tech change. How can a creative leader be an integral part of this storytelling across the enterprise?

Speaker C: Sure. It feels to me like there's a myth of late that creatives need to become coders to stay relevant. And I feel like that's a little bit backwards. What I would say is what we need are translators, people who can turn technical capabilities into human experiences that resonate emotionally. We already know that creative marketing delivers 2 to 11 times greater ROI than purely technical approaches. And another interesting stat, 92% of consumers prefer Ads that feel like stories. The market wants this. And so I would argue that the skill isn't coding. It's about understanding constraints and possibilities and then translating those into emotional value. I like the Spotify wrapped example. They took user data analytics and transformed that into personal stories, and they generated 60 million shares, something like that. So I feel like that's creative translation at scale. And to your question asking to offer maybe some tips or something, I think I might focus on three things to sort of bridge this dividend. First, I'll speak for ourselves. What we do first is we look to learn enough technical language in the context of our clients to understand what's possible. And then second, we prototype experiences that technical teams can build towards, like an aspirational horizon. And then third, we create shared metrics that value both emotional impact and technical performance. And typically what we see is that those projects led that way increase customer lifetime value without writing any new code. And so I might land the plane here and say that the bridge isn't built with code, it's built with collaborative understanding.

Speaker B: Yeah, I like that. I know for a fact from talking to some of our prospects and customers, some of them have a technical problem they're trying to solve. Some of them have a use case for the business they're trying to solve. So it's less about the technology. They're looking for guidance on how to solve it. But both sets of prospects or customers, whether they're coming at it from a different approach, they appreciate that the right story, the right explanation and narrative, they're going to be happier to engage with you because they'll feel like you at least understand their problem enough to be able to create that story. And I think this translates to if you're a salesperson and you're talking to a prospect, you don't want to sit in that room and say, okay, so it goes this fast, it takes this many documents, it can run AI and you can get an answer in like 12 seconds versus two minutes. That only gets you so far, I think, as a customer or prospect. Actually as a human, you said it yourself, which is we retain, we get more involved in that story piece. And I think I love the Spotify example around the data that they got from their users and then created a whole engagement mod with it. I think that's a brilliant example.

Speaker C: Yeah, thanks so much. Peloton's another great one. Right. They've got this sort of myth around achievement and personal success, maybe, if you will. But your data that you're generating, riding your peloton bike is creating to your own personal verse in their poetic kind of story of accomplishment and achievement.

Speaker B: Yeah, no, I love that. So we redefine what we think innovation is and how it can apply to creative people and that process and storytelling and how it could apply to technologists and people that are trying to get buy in for these bigger initiatives. Talk to me a little bit about. So when I use the term integration at snaplogic, obviously it means very much around the applications, the data together. And now it's very much dependent on those things being connected to really get the value around AI. But when I'm interested in your perspective around a broader integration, so not just the technical side. So when you hear the word integration, how do you think about it?

Speaker C: Yeah, I guess I think through the lens of the, uh, roles that I've been in most often, which is really creative leadership and working with some of the best in the business, in the agency world. As a younger person, I feel like this old model of creative leadership, the visionary genius from the mountaintop directing the execution of all the team members, I feel like that's fully dead. It's been dying for a while. And modern creative leaders are more like conductors, not commanders. You're orchestrating collaboration, right? It's not this dictation model anymore. We know that when leaders use storytelling, you're achieving neural engagement. Like this happens on a biological, neurological, psychological level. And it's not just about telling better stories. It's about creating sort of a narrative framework that your teams can innovate within. I often it brings to mind for me jazz versus symphony. Uh, you're like, you're setting the key and the tempo, but you're letting your talented people improvise. And so I feel like that's just really essential for creative leaders. And I think it ties to integration because really we're talking about trying to integrate a team that has disparate talents and skills. But ultimately you all have a shared objective in mind.

Speaker B: Now, when you talk to your clients or when you've talked to other enterprises around this, is that generally understood? Are they so focused on achieving certain kind of project or a goal that they're like, yeah, okay, I understand what you're saying. Yeah, orchestrating jazz. But we're just trying to solve this problem. So how do you show them that actually just shifting their thinking could actually have a much more holistic, collaborative approach? How do you really show them that example and say, yes, I'm an expert, so you can trust me just because I say it, but how do they Buy into the. How do you actually grab them by the scruff of the neck and say no, look, it's gotta work. How do you do that?

Speaker C: Yeah, it's typically that I grabbed the collar really tightly. No, I mean it's a great question. It's changes. It's a case by case basis because the leaders are always different. Ultimately what comes to mind is leading by example. I just show how it's done. It starts with a workshop. We call it Rumble at the beginning of the discovery process. And through design thinking based exercises. We're leading them through this process where I'm preaching, walking the talk I guess if you will. Then we lean on data. We're in a fortunate position now where we have one way of framing our offering called Storyline. You uh, could find your storyline.com but it features a lot of those data points from research organizations and institutions that underpin all of this story stuff with real data around, not just studies and experiments. But if you just look back at human history. For Millenn, this is the way that we as humans have retained information and passed it on. It's the way that information made it across the plains and the prairies and the mountains and even to caveman paintings on the cave walls. Those are the original stories. So there's plenty of evidence. Ultimately I think it comes back to just demonstrating it. I don't know if that's a great answer to your question, but that's certainly what comes to mind. Dale.

Speaker B: Oh, look, I think there's a little bit of having the strength to try something new, having some faith that if we do try something new it could have a compounding positive effect. I think my question here is if you're in more of a creative role, you're in a marketing role, even sometimes from a sales perspective you're also positioning or selling the art uh, of the possible. I try and think about this now as if you're in the belly of it or you're in a tech function or maybe you're in a line of business where the storytelling, the art uh, of the possible, like you're maybe trying to solve something for finance like account reconciliation, which is very detailed. But I feel like those roles could really benefit from this kind of thinking and this kind of approach. I think that's what I'm trying to get at. Like how could we as ah, people that understand this in the creative side, how could we show them the value of actually thinking about it differently? I wouldn't pretend just because I can use AI now to code, I would still go to the engineering team to help me get started on that kind of thing. And I feel like it's the same the other way. But I would just wonder if there's an unlock there for those teams that don't think of it this way. Like, how could we really get them excited?

Speaker C: Yeah. So now where I would go is the customer. Right. So ultimately everyone's working in service of the customer. And so start with the customer stories first, gather them, and then maybe use AI to look at those data sets because often they're large and look for patterns. Sure, of course, pains, needs, desires, but ultimately transformation. I would argue that every successful story is certainly in the business context and marketing context is about offering a transformation of some kind to the customer. The way that we describe storyline is first that, uh, the thing we talked about that ultimately stories are the things that matter most when it comes to communicating value. And then the storyline is that unbroken connection between the offering that you have that has value and the people that stand to benefit the most from that offering. And so when that storyline is straight and m strong and true, and it's consistent and coherent across all the touch points, that's what good execution looks like and that's what drives the growth.

Speaker B: And I like that. And again, if you're listening to this, if you're in IT or you're in finance, then remember that as a company, you're trying to serve your external customer. But if you're in finance, your customer is the rest of the business. It's the marketing team, it's the sales team. So yes, uh, if you're trying to solve a problem that will help the customer, meaning the rest of the organization, you can still approach it exactly the where you said, but the customer just happens to be internal rather than external. I think that's a good way of looking at it. So as a marketer, again, sometimes we get pigeonholed into certain areas of expertise. I think what I've seen over the last few years is we marketing leaders, marketing organizations are at least at the forefront of being willing and open to try to be innovative and try new technology. I think AI was a good example of that. I know there's a ton more use cases now and what you can do with generative AI and certainly with agents. But I feel like marketers are one of the first creative group of people to jump on this as an opportunity. If you're in that type of role, you know, maybe you don't really have as much opportunity to be innovative, but how would you Advise people in our kind of function, in our role, what do they need to do to. I don't want to say be at the innovation table, but you had a good point earlier, which was creatives don't need to be coders. But can you elaborate a bit on that? Like, if I'm not going to learn code, how do I make sure that people still see me as someone that's going to drive innovation across the enterprise?

Speaker C: Yeah. Interesting. First, I'd be remiss without just mentioning vibe coding off the top. What is vibe coding? It's. You can build things made of code without being a coder. Hallelujah. Like, finally, we can all access that kind of building. But what is that? That's really just facility and articulation with language. You just have to clearly communicate, perhaps a story, if you will. Again, back to story. And so if you're asking for maybe actionable takeaways here, I think maybe I've got three things that anyone could do tomorrow.

Speaker B: Yeah. I'm gonna write these down just for my own edification, but let's tell the audience. Yeah, give them to me.

Speaker C: Nice. Let's do it. So first, map your narrative gaps. So the storyline is the thing that connects directly and strongly. Inevitably, most people have gaps in their narrative, so that storyline is not strong and true. So document every story your customer hears across their entire journey from the first ad to the customer service call, and I guarantee you're gonna find some disconnects. Another example is what is sales saying versus what is marketing saying versus what is customer service saying? There's gonna be gaps that there or inconsistencies. So next, fix the biggest one first. You found the gaps. Fix the biggest one. Companies that do this typically see 20% improvement in conversion in, like, 90 days. That's the first one. Second is create a story bank, but with data. So collect customer transformation stories. So go through those customer stories, find the ones that speak to that transformation I described earlier and find the ones that have metrics attached. Right. And then at your next meeting, share one of those. And so the teams that do this achieve better alignment as long as you do it consistently. Because, again, stories create that emotional investment that's not going to come through in a spreadsheet.

Speaker B: Yeah.

Speaker C: And then the third one is audit your touchpoint variations. So count, literally count how many different messages does your customer encounter along the journey, and then cut that number in half. And what we've seen happen when you do that is your NPS goes up by, like, 30%. And maybe the last Thing is, I'll just leave you with a couple of questions that I feel like are good sort of integration sparkers. So first question is, what story would our best customer tell about this? So I find that this kind of forces alignment around value. A next one is if we had no departments, what would be built? So this is sort of one of those old techniques around removing artificial constraints.

Speaker B: Yeah.

Speaker C: And then the last one, how does our offering create emotional, not just functional value? And that shifts the focus from features to feelings. And as we know, Even in the B2B space, all those bees are still full of humans. And just like us, they're all driven by emotion. Um, and that's what we're ultimately trying to get whenever we're talking about story and marketing. In my opinion, Pins.

Speaker B: I think the more I hear, I love the three particular about what you said is emotional value versus functional value. And I think there's some other trends going on around the industry. Like, you're probably reading about it too, right? Their SEO is under threat because of AI and LLM searches. And then I read it's going to be just as important around brand and storytelling to create that connection. M Because how people bought for the last 10 years and how they found you, that is dramatically changing. I'm not saying it should be like a company objective, but I see this on the the technical side. In terms of what we see with SEO, it's starting to fall off a little bit. We're seeing other tools compete, but we get more attention now from media mentions. And media mentions are exactly that. It's about telling the story. So I think as a marketer out there, I'm sure we're all looking at the data of what's happening with my website. Why is SEO kind of falling down? But I think it's about less functional, more emotional connection. Does that resonate with people when you talk to them? Do they see it as, oh, we have an opportunity here?

Speaker C: Absolutely. Across the board, we work in all different industries. Industry agnostic. Because again, the story is the thing. You don't have to be an expert in an industry to tell a great story about it. Yes, it resonates, I think, on the SEO thing. Geo, I think, is the term. Everybody's jockeying for the term, but I think generative and engine optimization is probably where it's going to shake out. But ultimately, what does that mean? The big shift is I'm a little opinionated on this, but Google has owned this whole thing, Right. We've all just been dancing to Google's tune for 20 plus years right in the SEO space space. And it's all been about keywords. Everything was keyword driven. And now with the shift with LLMs and AI, the key shift in my opinion is shifting from keywords to answering questions. Um, structuring content in that way, you know, almost like with an faq is the original sort of framework that you think through in terms of this is strictly to be clear, just creating content in order to show up in searches, dancing a similar dance to a slightly different tune to your prompt there. I think what I'm really fascinated with is the thing that we are now helping our clients build. And I've been writing about it recently. I'm calling it a narrative operating system and narrative os. And the idea is that story becomes the intelligence layer between strategy and execution. And I feel like it's really about integrating storytelling into your operations so deeply that it eventually becomes how the business thinks, not just how it communicates. And you mentioned something earlier that's really interesting about internal customers versus external customers. The story has to start from within and then radiate outward. And there's all kinds of mouths, if you will. They're going to be repeating and iterating the story, but all of them that all starts internally. And so then it's up to the leader to make sure that the story stays true and coherent and consistent all the way through the touch points.

Speaker B: Yeah, it's interesting. You said you started as a copywriter.

Speaker C: Yeah.

Speaker B: I think some of the initial concern or worry about with things like artificial intelligence is that do you need journalists, copywriting, that kind of thing anymore? I think it's going to be more important and I don't think that's necessarily because you're going to do the same things. But you pointed this out, now we've stopped gaming the system. Well, there's another way that we have to look at it. Instead of saying okay, it's about I got to get the right answer keyword to make sure people come to my site now. It's understanding what are the questions people are asking. If I understand the question better, rather than just say this is the answer that should at least put you in. When you do get to capture someone through whatever way they find out about, then I think at least you'll probably show it more relevant if you come from that perspective. And one of the scariest things I heard recently and I see it, organizations now are building content with auto generated AI. Building content from a bot just to talk to a bot that gets right just to show up higher on some kind of search.

Speaker A: Yeah.

Speaker B: And I feel like that's almost like the opposite of what we're talking about here. It's the opposite of telling the right story, of thinking about the customer. It's just a way of trying to game the system to say, well, I'm going to use this automation, this intelligence tool to just create a bunch of content, because I know a bot's going to pick up on it and that's going to be beneficial. That can't help the customer. That can't be the answer.

Speaker C: No chance. I certainly hope not, Dale. I honestly get a little sick to my stomach when I think about it. There's a dead Internet theory that sort of touches on this. Somebody else coined the term inshittification. It's all interlinked, but I think you're onto something interesting there. So answering the questions, it's almost like you start with that core need, or perhaps the transformation that you're offering aims to enable for your ideal customer, and then you look to reverse engineer that a little bit. What are the questions that would lead someone toward discovering this particular solution to that desire, need, problem, pain, et cetera? I think that's really fascinating to explore. Not as a final answer, of course. And, uh, then one more thing I just have to really emphatic about. Is human in the loop? That's another point that you're raising there, Right? I hope that I'm right for a really long time. I don't know how long it's going to be. But machines cannot resonate emotionally with humans, not yet, because they don't have lived experience. They don't know pain or loss or grief or sadness or love or any of those really rich textured aspects of being human. And I boil all this down. What does the human bring that the machines can't duplicate? I've distilled it down into something. I'm just calling it text, taste and touch. And I feel like the taste has some layers to it. What we mean there and then touch as well. But human in the loop, sure. Use the machines to be radically efficient. Use the machines for pattern recognition and massive sets of data. Right. But then leverage that to augment our own human capabilities. AI for me, is augmented intelligence, and it augments our own intelligence. I feel like that's the key.

Speaker B: Okay, so it's interesting you say the word augmented intelligence because, okay, it's going to sound random. I've heard that term, um, four times in the last week, and I hadn't actually heard it. Before that, that mean I'm not reading the right things. But the human in the loop, it is that element of augmented intelligence for everyone out there. It just means it's still using the artificial intelligence, but it's in partnership with the human that's doing it. And I feel like we're doing that. But I think that should be getting just as much attention because I think all of us are trying to be more efficient in our role. No matter what your role is, if you're, you know, an engineer or a, uh, developer out there, of course you're going to use some of these tools, but you don't just have it build the code and just throw it out live or as an upgrade. You have to be involved in that. And I think that can apply to multiple areas. So I think that augmented intelligence. You've said it, I've heard it four times this week now. So I'm going to make a prediction that's going to become just as important as where we're talking about all the aspects of agents and generative AI. I think we're going to start talking about that. Well, you and I are connecting in six months time, Chris, after this and we'll probably do a whole podcast just around augmented intelligence.

Speaker C: Love it. Great.

Speaker B: I want to talk a little bit about the organizations. We've covered a bunch of areas around how to use the opportunities where creatives need to play, how you can, can take advantage of it internally or externally in terms of the organization setup, in terms of like how some of these larger enterprises are very complex, some often political. There's multiple organizations, functions. Some of them are trying to solve the same problem just in different ways, even though they're in the same company. So basically we know they're silos and this is across every enterprise. How would you advise someone, particularly with the concepts that we've talked about, how can they use this creative. Think about integration beyond technology. How would you advise someone to really break down some of these silos? That again, I think we all see when we talk to these large companies.

Speaker C: Yeah. See it a lot. Right. Yeah. I don't think the biggest barriers are technical. They're human and they come back to emotions. In this case, fear. There's a fear of sharing data, fear of losing control. That's a big one. Fear of being blamed if something fails. You can have perfect systems, but it's almost a psychological safety, maybe and shared purpose. That's huge. Yeah, that's a key to integration, I would say. And oh, here's one I love so listen to how your teams talk. If you hear them saying they about other departments, instead of we, you have silos. Right. Uh, it's really that simple. Language reveals mindset, and mindset determines whether integration succeeds or whether you can really be truly united across the organizational barriers. We have a practice that we use with our clients that try to break down some of these barriers. It starts with that workshop where there's no hierarchy and we've got people from all different levels and roles and areas of expertise. But then once we're sort of moving through the engagement, we have periodic story circles. We bring cross functional teams together and we're sharing customer narratives instead of reports. And one example, the cfo, uh, one organization heard, heard how a budget decision that they made affected an actual customer's journey and experience. There's other cases where, like a developer can see how a choice they made in their code created delight or frustration. It feels like this kind of greases the rails of integration maybe a bit more naturally. And then if you can do that periodically, maybe every week, every few weeks, have a little integration sprint where two departments get together and share an insight. Just consistent collaboration across those departmental lines. It's really about culture. Right. If you start with culture, then structure follows. And if you just start with structure, then you probably just got sophisticated silos.

Speaker B: Yeah. And I like what you said about language reveals mindset. Again, if you think about organizations and the we versus us or, uh, them, and you think about everyone's business, everyone's got their own objectives. Yes, they may layer up to, like a company mission and vision, but generally there are still silos that get created. Is it a fair statement to say that the one great way to break down those silos is to get aligned on. On. I don't want to call them customer journeys, but on customer stories. Customer journeys. Because no matter where you are in your organization, the ultimate goal of an organization is to sell more to their target audience. Grow. That means every function is happy. Is the customer story getting aligned on that? Understanding it, appreciating it? You use two examples. A finance and developer story that impacted the customer directly. They didn't see it, but it probably brought everyone together. So is the customer story the customer journey? Is that the linchpin by which silos get broken down, by which people get aligned?

Speaker C: I would say so if you set all the financial metrics aside, ultimately, what are you all there to do is to serve that customer. That again, stands to benefit the most from what you have to offer. And so when that connection is Made stories happen. Right. And I, uh, come back to that word transformation. Sometimes it feels like an overstatement, but I feel like in every situation, when you're looking at that valued offering being delivered to the person who really benefited from that, there's some kind of transformation, micro or macro that's happening for that person that creates a really compelling story. And to your question, Absolutely. Collect those stories, gather them, put them up on the wall. What better North Star is there for an organization than delivering value to humans who derived real substantial benefit from that thing that everybody's worked so hard to produce and deliver?

Speaker B: Yeah. When I was at a company years ago, it was a community software, social media software. One of the most inspirational things that we did was when you walked into the headquarters in Francisco, we had customers on the wall, but not the logos. The company had done a specific initiative with their customers to send a professional photographer to take a photograph of their champions in their customer organization. This massive wall was full of the logo on a sheet. So the picture is like a size, uh, of a sheet of paper. The logo was down here and it was probably about 4 to 6 inches. The main thing was the customer, the person and the CEO at the time and our CMO back in the day did it because they wanted the company to walk in and look at the faces of the people that they were impacting on every day. So you come in and you see John, that works at AstraZeneca. Like, we're here to help John achieve his goals. And that in itself, Chris, that's a story, that's a narrative that the CEO and the CMO explained to the company and got us bought in. You just prove your point.

Speaker C: Yeah, absolutely. What a beautiful example. Yes. Literally illustrates the point. Yeah, I love it. Focus on the faces, right? It's the people that matter.

Speaker B: Yeah. What about as leaders in the organization, Depending on what kind of company you are, if you're sales led company, it's the sales leadership. If you're a product led company, it's the product engineering, product management, so on, those are, uh, kind of the heroes. And again, there's benefits. I'm not saying any of those are wrong. But in terms of being a leader, if you're in our type of role and you're trying to show either the storytelling or trying to integrate some of this for the benefit of the content company. So not just the product team, for example, like, how can we be leaders? What are the things that we can do in our remit to make sure people understand that we do have the best interests at heart. Uh, but we may not be front and center because we're not a product led company. How would you advise someone to go about that?

Speaker C: That's a great question. I think I'm maybe just too biased here. But you know, again, it's about language, right? That's how we connect and communicate. And then if you formulate the language in a story and then root it in the customer, the sort of, I don't know, I think about, I have kids and I'm trying to help them understand that when you contribute to something that is outside of yourself, you get this special kind of benefit when it's not self directed charity, whatnot, helping somebody, whatever it is. And so I think when you root and organize everything around the customer, it brings that other kind of intangible sort of sense of purpose. And then if you communicate it consistently in a way that's resonating in some form of some kind of story, I just feel like that is the best way to drive and energize and organize a big group of people where ultimately they do all have a shared purpose and maybe they just need to be reminded of it as consistently as possible from the ones at the top.

Speaker B: Yeah, it's a great point. I do the same with my kids, which is helping to understand that life isn't just about you get to live in a nice area and you get to play on soccer teams and you have the opportunity to drive a car when you're able to. It's. There's a lot of other things that you can be doing to give beyond what you get for yourself, which I think is interesting. If we try and identify who the people are that could really resonate with this, that will take that message forward. Is there a trait in people? Is there a type of personality? Is it funk? Is it like role based? Or what should we be looking for? Because what I've seen, I'll give you an example. We have a development center which is out in the Far east. And there was one of the guys that was running the team, very technical, you know, writing code, building products. But whenever they did a recruiting event at one of the local universities, he was like creating posters and logos and all these kind of so creatures creative. And when he came over here, we actually had a really good discussion. And what I realized is he is actually could be one of the storytelling cultural leaders within the organization that he's not here in hq, he's not part uh, of my marketing leadership team, but he is what we need in a far flung part of the world to inspire a bunch of developers that will probably never even make it to San Mateo, California. So I think I was probably lucky to find that, that person. But is there a trait to look for? Is there a way to try and identify people and parts of the organization that can help?

Speaker C: Fascinating question. I wish I had a magical sort of unlock to that puzzle, right. How valuable that would be. But I guess what comes to mind is, uh, champions, right? You mentioned, is it role based? I feel like ideally you've got at least one champion in each department, the torchbearer, if you will. Those are the people who deeply understand the story that you're telling as an organization which ties to purpose and the customer, as we've talked about. And then the ones who, more importantly are living that every day. The way that they show up just communicates already without them even opening their mouth, that they are carrying that torch. They are emblematic of what your organization stands for and what you want to deliver and communicate to your audience and your icp.

Speaker B: Yeah, just giving me a thought now. I think one of the things is when the pressure's on and you're trying to hit targets and potentially you're a couple of head counts down because people have left and you start to see potential cracks in the organization, your team, right. People are overworked or whatever. It's interesting because I don't think anyone sits down in the morning and thinks I'm just going to do the bare minimum in their job. But I think what's missing sometimes is what you just described is the champion, the story, the person that really has taken the story of the organization and what they're trying to do to heart. And I think there are people who are pushing themselves, who look at multiple ways that they could improve or maybe it's not an area that they own, but they've identified something that could be fixed. And you can agree to disagree on this one. But rather than be a, uh, you guys have to work harder or why aren't you checking on these things? Why don't you care enough? Maybe the opposite way is to actually make them the champions of the story or get them more engaged in why we're doing these and maybe the other piece of it will come, maybe the digging in deeper or looking for other ways to help. If they were really bought into that space story, maybe you wouldn't have to tell them. Why did you miss that and why aren't you asking that question? Is that feasible?

Speaker C: I think so. Certainly if you run through the process that we orchestrate, you come out with a piece of media that can take different forms, but it's the North Star that is the story that the core strategic narrative, if you will. But we call it a storyline. But it's the thing that everybody. It's a rallying cry. So we talked about the internal and external audiences. Internally, it's a rallying cry. It's like, yeah, this is why we get up in the morning and come here. And for the customers, it's, yeah, give me some of that. It plays the bow to groups. Sounds a little different for the different audiences. But, uh, I'm also brought to mind of hiring in the workshop that we lead. One of the elements that we dig into is, you know, a core truth. Right. And we get a bunch of them up on the board. But what's one thing that no matter what, is always true about your organization, your brand as an entity, as a living, breathing thing? And that core truth is something that you would also want to be true about anyone who joins the organization. And so it's something that's really interesting to include as a filter in the hiring process. That's what we've seen anyway.

Speaker B: Yeah, no, I like that. What's the thing that's true? No matter what? I like that. I'm going to think about that even just again, top of mind for my own team right now. Okay, so look, I have a feeling we're going to have more conversations around this stuff, but I like where we are right now. If we start to close, if you're a marketer, maybe you're listening to this and you're bought in. You're like, I understand the concept. Yes, I agree. I do want to do the storytelling. I am trying to think about customers at the heart of these things. But if you're in a meeting, maybe it's a marketing meeting, maybe it's with other parts of the organization. Are there things that you would advise these people to say? Look, these are some questions to ask. The Core Truth actually is a good one. You have a workshop for that. But what is our core truth as an organization, as a function, with our customers? If you're in these type of meetings as a marketer, what could you be asking to spur, uh, to create this active dialogue to help people get to, uh, being innovative and really thinking about integrating all these, these pieces?

Speaker C: That's a good one. I think I might go back to some of the questions I introduced earlier. I really like the one about, if we had no departments, what would we build so thinking more expansively, another one that comes up in the workshop is uncomfortable truth. So we got a core truth. We got an uncomfortable truth. What are the things that are inherently true about our brand, about our organization that we wish they weren't? It's a little uncomfortable to admit, but they are definitely true. Often you really uncover some things there around hidden assumptions. I'm fascinated with that idea that we as humans carry around these hidden assumptions we're not even aware of. But when you're forced to sort of look at them, you realize, oh, gosh, actually that's not something I want to carry around in my mindset day to day. Those are the ones that come to mind in the moment.

Speaker B: Yeah, no, I like those with very positive discussion, very proactive discussion. My second to last question is there must be examples where this hasn't gone right, where you've seen organizations, teams either struggle. I don't want to say completely fail because it just feels like it's probably more of an iterative process, but other pitfalls to avoid. Again, I like map your narrative gaps. Create a storybook with data. Uh, like all those things we talked about, I get those. But in terms of watching for the fails, there's something that hasn't worked that you've seen, and you can just say, look, this is what really to look for. Make sure that you're prepared for this outside of the points you've already raised.

Speaker C: For me, it just comes back to language. Are all of the mouths that I mentioned earlier that represent the organization, they're telling the story? Are they all telling the same story? That's back to the gaps. I think if you don't have any success metrics that overlap across departments, again, I think that's pointing back to silos that are inherently not great. The they versus we. I think that's a big one that's easy to spot once you're tuned into it. It's a habit that organizations easily fall into. And B, one that as soon as you're aware of it, you realize, oh, gosh, that's an indicator of something that we probably want to look at more closely. Maybe one more like a really telling sign that maybe there's something that needs a little more work and exploration. When no one can tell you the complete customer story, from awareness to advocacy, like that story, from when they first discover you to when they become a raving fan. If nobody can tell you exactly how that happens, how that unfold, that's something that you should probably take a closer look at.

Speaker B: Yeah, I, uh, Like those. Okay, last question. Something I ask, depending on doesn't vary by person I talk to, whether I've had people from, like nonprofits, from education, high tech, someone like yourself that's one of the creative marketing leaders. With all the technology that we see right now, obviously generative AI and using LLMs has taken off. We're now talking about autonomous agents making decisions for themselves. Is there something that you look at right now, could be a year, could be three years out. Something that you're excited for, maybe to see something come to fruition or the art of the possible with some of this technology? Because I feel like we've talked around the people, the process, the organization. There's just something that you're excited that AI is going to do to really help move a lot of this along. And what are you excited for in the future?

Speaker C: Yeah, sure. I think there's so many things. I come back to this idea of a narrative os, this intelligence layer, but between your core brand truth and the way that's expressed in the market. So it's about how do you maintain authenticity while achieving scale? Again, augmented intelligence. Use the tools and the machines, if you will, to augment our own intelligence to make us more capable, more powerful, more efficient. Things like that. Zero click funnel. Right. That's the thing where people are finding you without clicking on any blue links anymore. Uh, your brand's getting defined by AI before customers ever reach you. So you've gotta have this narrative OS that is operating in real time. It makes sure that the story stays coherent across every AI interpretation and customer touch point. And without it, market forces and algorithms are going to write your story for you. And it's probably not going to be the story you want told.

Speaker B: It's definitely not going to be what you want to tell them for sure. I love that, Chris. I think that's a great way to end the podcast. Thanks for your time today.

Speaker C: Oh, thanks so much, Dale. It was a real pleasure. I hope we get to do it again at some point.

Speaker B: Yeah, me too. If, uh, people want to reach out to you, connect, what's the best way for them to make that connection?

Speaker C: Sure. I'm not a huge social media person, but I'm pretty active on LinkedIn. Check me out there. I've written recently about the narrative OS if you want to learn more about it. And yeah, if you have any questions, feel free to reach out.

Speaker B: Great. Thanks everyone for joining us today. These are the kind of podcasts that I think just excite me as a host. We've talked about the technology. We talked about activating different parts of the organization. We talked about storytelling as a marketer. These are important. But I think I want everyone out there to remember too is you don't have to be a marketer, you don't have to be deep in creative thought to use some of this. Really take on board what Chris has said. Really think about how can I use that in my day to day role. Whether you're a data scientist, a developer, whether you're in finance, finance or legal or doing, you're in the weeds of the organization on a daily basis, I think there's some great advice. Chris, thanks again.

Speaker C: Thank you. Hear here. What a great closing. Thanks so much, Dale.

Speaker B: Thanks everyone. Appreciate you uh, joining us today and we'll see you on the next one.

Speaker A: As we wrap up this episode of Evolving the Enterprise, we want to extend our gratitude for joining us on this exploration of enterprise technology. Keep the conversation going. By subscribing, rating and sharing our podcast together, we'll shape the future of work. Until our next episode, stay innovative and stay tuned.

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