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(upbeat music)
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- Welcome to Digital Rage.
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I'm the Jeff the producer here at Byer Company
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and it is episode 30.
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Just wanted to acknowledge that.
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This has been a pretty fun journey
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and we're gonna keep it going.
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Today is part five of our Cybersecurity Marketing Series.
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Today we're talking about why your Cybersecurity Marketing
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isn't connecting and it may be a lack of education.
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Check it out.
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- You know how sometimes really complex topics
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may be like cybersecurity.
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They can just feel, well, dance.
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Or maybe you hear about the threats
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and yeah, they sound important,
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but they don't quite feel like they're about you,
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you know, right now.
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- Absolutely, that feeling of disconnect.
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It's super common.
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It could be information overload,
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maybe too much tech talk.
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Or just that sense that, ah,
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it's a problem for someone else not me.
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So these crucial subjects end up feeling kinda distant.
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- Exactly.
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And that disconnect,
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that's precisely what we're diving into today.
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We're looking at some material
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that really tackles this communication challenge.
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Specifically in Cybersecurity Marketing.
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- Right.
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- How do you actually connect a vital message
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but one that's often complex with an audience
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that maybe thinks, man, that's not my problem.
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- Well, the article we're digging into
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asks that exact question pretty much.
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Why your Cybersecurity Marketing isn't connecting.
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- Okay.
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- And it gives a really direct answer.
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Boils down to basically a lack of education.
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A lack of education.
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Okay, well, let's unpack that a bit.
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The source puts it quite bluntly, doesn't it?
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Something like, you can't sell a solution
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to a problem your audience doesn't believe they have.
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- That's the heart of it, yeah.
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The core issue is often like the audience,
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maybe especially the non-technical buyers.
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They either don't fully get the actual risks involved
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or maybe more often,
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they just don't believe that specific problem applies
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to their situation, you know, their company,
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their data, these abstract threats,
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they just don't feel urgent.
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- So if they don't really understand the what of the threat
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or truly believe the why it matters to me for,
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then your whole message about how great your solution is,
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it just sort of bounces off.
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- Precisely, it doesn't land.
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So the article suggests a pretty powerful way around this.
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It's a strategy really built around education
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and what it calls thought leadership.
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- Okay.
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- It argues that by teaching your audience first,
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you naturally build awareness about the risks.
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You create that sense of urgency
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because they start seeing why it matters now.
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And this is critical, you build trust.
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- So the path isn't really selling a product initially.
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It's more like selling understanding.
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- You got it.
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- And the source actually gives some pretty concrete ways
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to do this teaching, doesn't it?
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- It really does, yeah.
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It outlines several key approaches
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for effectively educating your audience
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to build that foundation you need.
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- Okay, so what's the first one?
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I think they mentioned something about timing.
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- Yes, exactly.
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The first one they emphasize is starting with why now,
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why this?
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It's all about anchoring the threat
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right in the present moment, making it timely.
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- Right, grounding it.
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- Yeah, the source really stresses using current events
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or like ongoing trends to make it immediately relevant.
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So for example, instead of just talking generally
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about ransomware, you might discuss how, say,
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recent global events or maybe the big shift to hybrid work
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is making certain industries or maybe companies
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of a certain size more vulnerable today.
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- Oh, okay, so it takes it from being this theoretical risk
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to an immediate concern.
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Like, okay, because of X and Y happening right now,
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you're more exposed to this.
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- Exactly that, or maybe explaining how new tech,
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like AI is changing fishing attacks, right?
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Making them harder to spot.
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And why that means you need a different approach today.
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- Gotcha.
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- It's about leading with that immediate relevance.
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Before you even whisper about a solution.
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- That makes a lot of sense.
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Establish the why should I care now first?
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Okay, and then the next strategy they talk about,
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that's about making these abstract threats more concrete,
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right, using real world scenarios.
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- Yeah, because abstract risks are just,
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well, they're easy to dismiss, aren't they?
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- Totally.
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- But the source points out that specific, relatable stories,
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they're much harder to ignore.
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- So instead of just saying, you know,
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data breaches cost a lot of money.
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- Right.
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- You can actually walk someone through a scenario,
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like a hypothetical.
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- Yes, exactly.
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Or maybe describe step by step what actually happens,
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if say an employee clicks on one particular kind
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of malicious link.
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- Okay.
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- You could use an anonymized example, a real breach,
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but with the names changed and show the specific consequences
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it had for a company that's similar to your audience.
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- Oh, I see.
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- Or even show a kind of before and after.
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Like, here was a vulnerability,
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here's how it was exploited,
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and here's what happened after it was fixed.
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That really helps the audience picture themselves
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in that situation, doesn't it?
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They can imagine their own team, their own business,
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facing that exact problem.
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- It really does.
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It transforms it from just a statistic,
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you know, a risk percentage into a narrative.
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Something the listener can connect with more personally.
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It makes the threat feel, well, tangible.
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- Okay, so you grab their attention with the wine out stuff,
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make it feel really scenarios.
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What's the final pillar of this teaching approach
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that the source really pushes?
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- The source strongly advocates for basically,
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generously offering free educational value.
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Giving stuff away.
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- Right.
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- This is where that thought leadership idea
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really comes into play.
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Not just talking about expertise,
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but actively giving helpful information.
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- Teach before you pitch, is that the idea?
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- Precisely, yeah.
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The article highlights a bunch of ways companies can do this.
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Like host webinars and invite people
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who aren't even customers yet,
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just to learn about current threats.
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Or create, say, downloadable checklists,
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or maybe toolkits that help businesses assess their own risk,
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or even implement some basic protections themselves.
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- Okay, practical tools.
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- Yeah, or share detailed how-to guides,
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maybe blog series explaining complex topics,
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but in really clear, simple language.
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- So it's really about becoming a trusted resource, isn't it?
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Someone they turned to for understanding first.
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- Absolutely.
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The source is very clear on this.
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Thought leadership in this context anyway,
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isn't really measured by how much you talk at people.
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It's measured by how much genuine value
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you actually give away in the form of helpful educational content.
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- And the underlying idea, I guess,
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is the more helpful you are,
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the more trust you build up over time.
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Which, I mean, that feels like a principle
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that goes way beyond just cybersecurity, or even marketing.
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- It really does.
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It's fundamental, isn't it?
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Whether you're, I don't know, explaining a health issue,
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or a complex financial strategy,
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or, yeah, a technical risk,
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building understanding and providing real value first,
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that build credibility.
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- The source kind of sums this all up
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with a phrase that really stuck with me.
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The smartest marketers teach first.
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- Yeah, that line really captures the whole essence, doesn't it?
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It's all about enabling the buyer,
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helping them gain confidence,
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get some clarity about the threat landscape,
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understand where they might be vulnerable,
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and then start exploring the options out there.
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And if you're the brand that helped them navigate
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all that confusion,
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well, you're already halfway there, aren't you?
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You've started building that crucial trust you need
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for any kind of potential partnership or sale demeline.
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- And the article wraps up
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with a pretty powerful statement too,
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something like, the companies that win
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are the ones that teach best.
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- It's a very direct link they're drawing
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between being a leader in education within your space,
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and actually achieving market success,
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especially in complex fields like cyber.
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- So, thinking about this, for you,
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listening right now,
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understanding this whole dynamic,
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it isn't just for marketers, is it?
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- Not at all.
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- It really highlights the incredible power
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of clear explanation,
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of providing genuine value whenever you encounter
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complex information yourself,
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or maybe when you need to communicate it,
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could be cybersecurity,
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could be health choices, financial planning, you name it.
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It just shows how focusing on teaching,
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on fostering real understanding,
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can cut through all the noise
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and build a genuine connection.
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- Which does raise a pretty interesting question
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for all of us, I think.
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If prioritizing genuine understanding, teaching first,
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if that really is the most effective way
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to connect and build trust in these complex areas,
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what does that suggest about the responsibility of,
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well, anyone who's communicating critical information,
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is the main goal just to inform, or push a message,
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or is there maybe a deeper obligation there
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to really ensure genuine understanding comes first?
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Even before you start thinking about selling something,
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or persuading someone to agree with you.
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- That's a really provocative thought to end up.
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Definitely something to chew on.
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- Reach out to us at jbuyer.com for comments and questions.
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Follow us at buyer company on social media,
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and if you'd be so kind,
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please rate and review us in your podcast app.
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