Find partners
Remarkable Content with Ian Faison

Remarkable Content with Ian Faison

Hosted by Caspian Studios, Ian Faison

Episodes

199

Latest episode

Jun 2026

Language

EN

About the show

Marketing lessons from Hollywood, B2C, B2B and beyond! “A smart, goofy show that blends marketing, Hollywood, advertising and pop-culture. A must-listen for any marketer looking for fresh ideas.” - Oprah and Tom Hanks, simultaneously Hosted by Ian Faison and Meredith Gooderham and produced by Jess Avellino. Sound design by Scott Goodrich. Created by the team at Caspian Studios.

Listen to episodes

60 recent
June 9, 202649 min

You Come Out of a Taylor Swift Concert Feeling Euphoric. That's the Bar for Your Brand. | Phyllis Rothschild (Pete & Gerry's Organics)

What if your most loyal customers were doing your marketing for you? Taylor Swift doesn’t just drop albums — she hides cryptic clues in her nail polish, her jewelry, her lyrics, her social posts, her tour staging. And the fans who find them? They tell everyone. Phyllis Rothschild, CMO of Pete & Gerry’s Organics, joins us to unpack what B2B marketers can learn from Taylor Swift’s Easter egg playbook — and what it has to do with selling eggs. Together, we dig into why superfans are worth more than mass reach, how to simplify a hopelessly confusing category, and why the best marketing in the world still can’t beat getting someone to actually taste the product. About our guest, Phyllis Rothschild Phyllis Rothschild is CMO at Pete & Gerry’s Organics, the maker of Pete & Gerry’s and Nellie’s Free Range eggs. With a career spanning brand and consumer marketing, she brings a rare mix of storytelling instinct and category expertise to one of the most crowded shelves in the grocery store — and has strong opinions about yolk color. What B2B Marketers Can Learn From Taylor Swift’s Easter Eggs Make your superfans do the work for you. Maybe 1% of Taylor Swift’s listeners hunt for Easter eggs. But those fans amplify everything — they find the clues, post the theories, and bring the rest of the world along. Ian’s takeaway: “The smallest number that you can make ecstatic is probably a better way to do it — because those people tell their friends.” Phyllis connects it directly to Pete & Gerry’s: “The circle back is the fact that they’re doing the work for her — because they all get so engaged and so invested in the story that they then wanna retell it.” Design for the diehard first. The rest will follow. The experience is the marketing. Going to a Taylor Swift concert isn’t just about the music — it’s euphoric. The friendship bracelets, the staging, the crowd. Phyllis draws the direct line: “That’s the kind of feeling you want when someone experiences your brand or your product. You don’t want it to just be transactional. You want them to say, ‘The overall experience is what keeps me coming back for more.’” For Pete & Gerry’s, that means showing the amber yolk oozing onto the plate — not listing certifications. Make people feel something before you make them think something. One clear claim beats a PhD’s worth of education. The egg aisle is a case study in how to confuse a customer into paralysis. Cage-free. Free-range. Pasture-raised. Organic. Farm-fresh. Phyllis is blunt: “You don’t wanna have to have a PhD in egg science to make your weekly purchase.” Her approach: pick the one insight that matters and hammer it. “We just need one claim to get people to say ‘free-range means they go outside.’ And then that’s it.” The lesson for any crowded B2B category: the brand that educates the market doesn’t always win. The brand that owns one simple truth does. “Taylor Swift’s eras are like campaigns — they’re all different, but they all ladder up into the same brand story. You can reinvent yourself, evolve, tap into new tools and mechanisms, but you still need to stay true to who you are as a brand and what got you to where you are.” — Phyllis Rothschild Time Stamps [1:22] Meet Phyllis Rothschild, CMO of Pete & Gerry's Organics [1:45] Why Taylor Swift? Storytelling, Easter Eggs, and a Lifelong Fan [5:09] The Egg Break: Favorite Egg Dishes and the Best Hard-Boiled Hack [10:44] What Are Taylor Swift's Easter Eggs, and Why Do They Work? [17:32] Marketing Lesson #1: Make Your Super Fans Do the Work for You [22:25] Marketing Lesson #2: Show the Yolk - Product Experience Over Product Claims [26:22] The Egg Aisle Problem: Simplifying a Confusing Category [30:52] Marketing Lesson #3: Trial Is Everything - Getting Them to Taste It [34:50] Selling Without a Direct Customer Relationship [39:33] The Private Label Threat and How to Own Your Differentiation [44:09] Marketing Lesson #4: Eras, Campaigns, and the Common Thread [49:36] Final Thoughts: Try the Pasture-Raised Organic (The Blue Box) Links Connect with Phyllis on LinkedIn Learn more about Pete & Gerry's Organics About Remarkable! Remarkable! is created by the team at Caspian Studios, the premier B2B Podcast-as-a-Service company. Caspian creates both nonfiction and fiction series for B2B companies. If you want a fiction series check out our new offering - The Business Thriller - Hollywood style storytelling for B2B. Learn more at CaspianStudios.com. In today’s episode, you heard from Ian Faison (CEO of Caspian Studios) and Meredith Gooderham (Head of Production). Remarkable was produced this week by Meredith Gooderham, edited by Jon Goldberg, and our theme song is “Solomon” by FALAK. Create something remarkable. Rise above the noise. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

May 19, 202640 min

Advocacy, Pointy Characters, and the Brand Bank: B2B Marketing Lessons from Schitt's Creek | Jason Grunberg (Forter)

Have you ever seen Schitt’s Creek? No? You really need to watch it. That’s advocacy. And it’s older than marketing itself - somebody took a bite of something and said, “You gotta try this.” Jason Grunberg, CMO of Forter, didn’t watch the show until he got sick and had nothing else to do. By the time he was better, he was binge-watching instead of resting. In this episode, he breaks down what Schitt’s Creek teaches B2B marketers about pointy characters, ownable positioning, brand as a bank, and why the transformation story is the only story worth telling. Together, we dig into why “safe is not where we make really strong emotional bonds,” what the Rosebud Motel’s rebrand can teach any B2B company trying to differentiate, and why AI inflation has already made “AI” a meaningless differentiator. About our guest, Jason Grunberg Jason Grunberg is CMO at Forter, the identity intelligence platform for digital commerce. With a background spanning agency and in-house roles across B2C and B2B, he brings a rare perspective on what it means to treat every buyer as a consumer - because at the end of the day, a wrong decision costs someone their job, and nothing is more personal than that. What B2B Marketers Can Learn From Schitt’s Creek Advocacy is the root of every decision. Jason didn’t watch Schitt’s Creek because of the awards or the marketing. He watched it because people he trusted kept telling him to. His takeaway for B2B: “Advocacy has been a core part of marketing and brand forever for anything. This is coded almost into the human experience - advocacy is the root of like how we end up making decisions and choices.” Before you chase the next channel, ask whether you’re creating the conditions for your customers to tell their colleagues, “You really need to try this.” Pointy characters resonate more than representative ones. The safest instinct in B2B marketing is to round off your personas until they feel inclusive. Schitt’s Creek did the opposite - and it’s why strangers kept telling Jason the show was basically his family. Ian’s takeaway: “The more pointy you make it, the more weird, the more absurd, it actually will resonate that much better.” Stop asking whether every CIO will see themselves in your story. Make the character want something specific, and trust the audience to find themselves in it. Brand is a bank - and technology is never the real differentiator. The Rose Apothecary didn’t succeed because of its product formulas. It succeeded because of the experience, the distinctiveness, the emotional value. Jason connects it directly to his work at Forter: “Quality is replicable, at least now more so than ever. The brand has to mean something.” On technology positioning, he’s blunt: “If there’s always the push from your product team to be like, ‘This is the core differentiator,’ I’m like, ‘Cool. That is 2,000 lines of code deep. That sounds really replicable. And it doesn’t say I’m getting a raise if I buy this.’” “Safe is not where we make really strong emotional bonds. On the edges is where we do that - because on the inside, there’s a lot of edge. We’ve just been conditioned to not show it all the time.” - Jason Grunberg Time Stamps [1:25] Meet Jason Grunberg, CMO of Forter [2:17] Why Schitt’s Creek? The Show That Felt Like His Family [4:53] Jason’s Role at Forter: Decisions AI and Customer-Centric Marketing [5:56] What Is Schitt’s Creek? Character Development as a Foundation [12:11] Marketing Lesson #1: Advocacy Is Coded Into the Human Experience [15:56] Marketing Lesson #2: Pointy Characters Win — Stop Regressing to the Mean [23:14] B2B Is Still Consumer: Everyone Is a Person Making a Personal Decision [26:35] Marketing Lesson #3: Brand Experience — Rose Apothecary and the Bank Analogy [29:11] Marketing Lesson #4: The Rosebud Motel and the Power of Positioning [32:18] The Name, the Pun, and the Juxtaposition of Lowbrow and Highbrow [36:21] The Audacity of the Arc: Why Schitt’s Creek Ended on Purpose [39:07] Final Thoughts and Takeaways Links Connect with Jason on LinkedIn Learn more about Forter About Remarkable! Remarkable! is created by the team at Caspian Studios, the premier B2B Podcast-as-a-Service company. Caspian creates both nonfiction and fiction series for B2B companies. If you want a fiction series check out our new offering - The Business Thriller - Hollywood style storytelling for B2B. Learn more at CaspianStudios.com. In today’s episode, you heard from Ian Faison (CEO of Caspian Studios) and Meredith Gooderham (Head of Production). Remarkable was produced this week by Meredith Gooderham, edited by Jon Goldberg, and our theme song is “Solomon” by FALAK. Create something remarkable. Rise above the noise. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

May 5, 202646 min

What Chipotle's "For Real" Campaign Gets Right That Most B2B Marketers Still Get Wrong | Alicia diVittorio (Silverfort)

Nope. Yep. Nope. Yep. Everybody got choices? Chipotle didn't just sell burritos - they rebuilt trust with two or three words and some really clear visuals. No freezers. No can openers. No microwaves. Just a brand that went back to its roots and dared to say one thing loudly instead of everything at once. In this episode, we dig into what B2B marketers can learn from Chipotle's "For Real" campaign with our special guest Alicia diVittorio, Head of Global Corporate Marketing at Silverfort. Together, we unpack why "confusion equals no sale," what it really means to take a competitive stand without being obvious about it, and why the best copy - like "Microwaves Not Welcome" - has a point of view that nobody else can own. About our guest, Alicia diVittorio Alicia diVittorio is Head of Global Corporate Marketing at Silverfort, where she oversees brand, communications, PR, analyst relations, and content marketing including web and social. With a background in both brand and comms, she brings a rare perspective on the intersection of provocative positioning and human storytelling in B2B marketing. What B2B Marketers Can Learn From Chipotle's "For Real" Campaign: Go back to your roots - that's why they fell in love with you. Chipotle didn't invent a new brand. They reminded people of the one they already had. Alicia's takeaway for B2B: "Sometimes you really have to remind yourselves of your core value and make sure that comes to the top. That's why people fell in love with you in the first place." Before you evolve your messaging, ask whether you've drifted from the thing that made you matter. You get one message. Use it. Chipotle's campaign works because it says one thing — real ingredients - and doesn't look back. Ian's biggest takeaway says it plainly: "You get to tell people one thing at a time. Just stop trying to tell people two things or three things or whatever. You get one message and that's it." Everything else fades. Hit your one thing and make it interesting. Point of view beats positioning. "Real ingredients, real flavor" could be anyone. "Microwaves Not Welcome" can only be Chipotle. Alicia connects it directly to her comms background: "If we don't have a unique point of view, no one cares. You sound like everyone else. You gotta be provocative if you want to stand out." The difference between good copy and great copy is the same as the difference between a statement and a stance. Quote "Confusion does not equal a sale. We just do so much in B2B and it can be extremely overwhelming. I gotta take that back to the team." - Alicia diVittorio Time Stamps [1:12] Meet Alicia diVittorio, Head of Global Corporate Marketing at Silverfort  [2:22] Why the "For Real" Campaign: The Song, the Simplicity, the Lesson  [4:12] What Is Chipotle's "For Real" Campaign? A Brief History  [6:44] Going Back to Your Roots — What Chipotle Did Right  [15:40] Competitive Positioning Without Being Gross About It  [19:00] "Microwaves Not Welcome": The Power of a Point of View  [22:44] Targeting Multiple Demographics With One Idea  [26:49] The Bag Problem: Great Campaign, Missed Real Estate  [30:13] What B2B Marketers Should Steal From Chipotle  [43:10] Final Thoughts and Takeaways Links Connect with Alicia on LinkedIn  Learn more about Silverfort About Remarkable! Remarkable! is created by the team at Caspian Studios, the premier B2B Podcast-as-a-Service company. Caspian creates both nonfiction and fiction series for B2B companies. If you want a fiction series check out our new offering - The Business Thriller - Hollywood style storytelling for B2B. Learn more at CaspianStudios.com. In today's episode, you heard from Ian Faison (CEO of Caspian Studios) and Meredith Gooderham (Head of Production). Remarkable was produced this week by Meredith Gooderham, edited by Jon Goldberg, and our theme song is "Solomon" by FALAK. Create something remarkable. Rise above the noise. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

April 21, 202644 min

What TED Talks Get Right That Most B2B Marketers Still Get Wrong | Varun Kohli (Cequence Security/GetReal Security)

18 minutes. One idea. No call to action. And somehow, one of the most trusted brands in the world. TED didn't build its reputation by saying more — it built it by saying less, better. The format was the brand. The editing was the strategy. And the trust was earned before a single word was spoken. In this episode, we unpack what that means for B2B marketers with the help of our special guest Varun Kohli, CMO at Cequence Security/GetReal Security. Together, we explore what enterprise marketers can learn from TED's obsession with brevity, the danger of diluting a brand you've worked hard to build, and why the best content makes your audience calmer or more confident — not just informed. About our guest, Varun Kohli Varun Kohli is an independent CMO with over a decade of experience leading marketing at enterprise security and technology companies. With 10 exits under his belt, Varun brings a rare combination of strategic vision and executional depth to the CMO role. He currently serves as CMO at Cequence Security/GetReal Security. What B2B Marketers Can Learn From TED Talks: Build trust before you speak. TED's red dot, the curated room, the format itself - all of it was designed to signal what audiences could expect before anyone took the stage. Varun draws the lesson directly for marketers: "Trust was designed much, much, much earlier before the first word was spoken. As marketers, you need to earn that trust. If you are waiting for that trust to be given to you when you start speaking, it's already too late." In B2B, your website, your content format, and your brand presence are all making a promise before a prospect ever reads a word. It's not about what to say - it's about what not to say. TED's 18-minute constraint isn't a limitation; it's the point. Varun sees the same discipline as a requirement for B2B content: "It's not about what to say. It's also about what not to say. That is where us marketers lose our audience - we try to cram too much into a very small space." The best content finds the one problem that resonates and doesn't look back. Spend more time editing than you did creating. Make sure your tagline can only belong to you. Brevity without distinctiveness is just noise. Varun shares the litmus test he runs with his teams: "When you're creating these short taglines or headlines, you should always ask - if I remove my logo and slap a competitor's logo on it, is it still true? If it is true, you did not choose the right words." Keep rewriting until no competitor's logo fits. That's when you've arrived. Quote "Great marketing is not about shouting the loudest. The great marketing part is resonating with your buyer. If you can do that, they'll come knock on your door." Time Stamps [1:28] Meet Varun Kohli, CMO at Cequence Security/GetReal Security [3:06] Learn and Unlearn: How Varun Thinks About Walking Into a CMO Role [7:25] What Are TED Talks? A Brief History [15:31] B2B Marketing Takeaways from TED Talks [30:21] TEDx: Brand Dilution or Smart Distribution? [42:52] The Competitive Logo Test [43:30] Final Thoughts and Takeaways Links Connect with Varun on LinkedIn Learn more about Cequence Security About Remarkable! Remarkable! is created by the team at Caspian Studios, the premier B2B Podcast-as-a-Service company. Caspian creates both nonfiction and fiction series for B2B companies. If you want a fiction series check out our new offering - The Business Thriller - Hollywood style storytelling for B2B. Learn more at CaspianStudios.com. In today's episode, you heard from Ian Faison (CEO of Caspian Studios) and Meredith Gooderham (Head of Production). Remarkable was produced this week by Jess Avellino, mixed by Scott Goodrich, and our theme song is "Solomon" by FALAK. Create something remarkable. Rise above the noise. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

April 7, 202652 min

How Willy Wonka Built a 50 Year Brand on $3M | Kevin Rippon (Juniper Square)

A $3 million movie. Two big-budget remakes. And somehow, the original still wins. Fifty years later, kids who've seen all three versions of Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory keep coming back to the 1971 film, not because it has better effects, but because it was built on something the others weren't. In this episode, we break down what that something is with the help of our special guest Kevin Rippon, Head of Marketing at Juniper Square. Together, we explore what B2B marketers can learn from taking a distinct position, leading with credibility over spectacle, and structuring content that gets to the point fast. About our guest, Kevin Rippon A respected and resilient marketing leader, Kevin has held positions in product marketing, growth, digital, brand, creative, and experiential at different career stops with companies ranging from asset management to fashion to vertical SaaS. Kevin currently oversees Marketing at Juniper Square. What B2B Companies Can Learn From Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory: Know your positioning and take a stand. Gene Wilder's very first scene as Willy Wonka, the cane, the limp, the unexpected somersault, wasn't an accident. It was a declaration. Kevin draws the parallel directly: "The marketing parallel is knowing your positioning or taking a position that's distinct and different." In B2B, most brands try to appeal to everyone and end up resonating with no one. The ones that win commit to a clear, unmistakable point of view, and don't apologize for it. Start with a credible message, then dial up the spectacle. The original Oompa Loompas were real actors. The CGI version in the remake looked slicker yet felt fake. Kevin sees the same trap in B2B content: "Start with a credible message and then work your way up from there in terms of spectacle." Great content isn't about how produced it looks. It's about whether the audience believes it. Credibility is the foundation; everything else is amplification. Don't needlessly preface, let content run downhill. Willy Wonka gets to the point fast. A few lines from Grandpa Joe and you're already inside the factory. Kevin has made this a governing principle at Juniper Square: "A principle that we actually have at Juniper Square that we set is don't needlessly preface or over preface things. I firmly believe in content like running downhill." Too much B2B content spends the first half justifying why the reader should care. The best content starts in the middle of the thing they already care about and never looks back. Quote "Do you have something to say about a particular topic? How can you establish the credibility around it? And then how do you sound different from everyone else, even in your language choices?" Time Stamps [01:41] Meet Kevin Rippon, Head of Marketing at Juniper Square [01:57] Why Willy Wonka? [03:58] The Role of Head of Marketing at Juniper Square [07:42] Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory: The Story Behind the Story [13:12] B2B Marketing Takeaways from Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory [43:39] Willy Wonka as Branded Content [48:46] Final Thoughts and Takeaways Links Connect with Kevin on LinkedIn  Learn more about Juniper Square About Remarkable! Remarkable! is created by the team at Caspian Studios, the premier B2B Podcast-as-a-Service company. Caspian creates both nonfiction and fiction series for B2B companies. If you want a fiction series check out our new offering - The Business Thriller - Hollywood style storytelling for B2B. Learn more at CaspianStudios.com. In today's episode, you heard from Ian Faison (CEO of Caspian Studios) and Meredith Gooderham (Head of Production). Remarkable was produced this week by Jess Avellino, mixed by Scott Goodrich, and our theme song is "Solomon" by FALAK. Create something remarkable. Rise above the noise. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

March 24, 202650 min

The Marketing Lessons Everyone Missed in The Devil Wears Prada | Ritu Kapoor (Fractional CMO)

Standards shape industries, but tastemakers decide what those standards are. That’s the real lesson from The Devil Wears Prada. What looks like a simple workplace story is really about judgment, brand influence, and how standards shape decisions for years. In this episode, we break down the marketing lessons behind the film with the help of our special guest Ritu Kapoor, Fractional CMO & Ex-CMO at Observe.AI. Together, we explore what B2B leaders can learn about the power of taste, the long arc of brand influence, and knowing when to break the right rules. About our guest, Ritu Kapoor Ritu Kapoor is a Fractional CMO and Ex-CMO at Observe.AI. In her previous role at Observe.AI, she led brand, product marketing, and go-to-market strategy for AI agents transforming customer service. At Observe.AI, she was building a modern GTM engine for the AI-first enterprise, driving a repeatable demand-generation motion, launching next-generation agentic AI products, and leading a comprehensive corporate rebrand that reflected the company’s expanded mission and rapid customer adoption. Previously, Ritu served as Chief Marketing Officer at Productboard, the product management platform used by teams around the world to build customer-informed products. She led global marketing functions that helped product and engineering teams better align around customer needs and business outcomes. Across her career, Ritu has driven both organic and inorganic growth; shaped product roadmaps and narratives; built scalable global marketing and customer success functions across EMEA, APAC, and the U.S.; and created operational efficiencies that accelerated sales velocity, improved deal sizes, and enabled faster enterprise launches. She is proud to have built and led high-performing global teams and successfully launched more than 30 enterprise products and platforms, including ten first-generation offerings, four acquisitions, and five new software categories. What B2B Companies Can Learn From The Devil Wears Prada: Taste is the real moat. In The Devil Wears Prada, Miranda’s authority didn’t solely come from her position at Runway. As Ritu explains, “Her influence isn't from authority. Her influence is from judgment.” The same applies in B2B marketing. The best marketers aren’t just executing playbooks, they’re deciding what’s worth attention and what isn’t. In a world where AI can generate endless content, the real advantage is taste: knowing what’s actually good, what’s differentiated, and what deserves investment. Brand influence starts long before the buying moment. The famous blue sweater scene captures a core truth about marketing: decisions are shaped long before someone thinks they’re making them. Ritu frames it directly for B2B: “You can't influence somebody when they're just about to buy. The influence starts years later.” By the time a buyer enters the market, their mental shortlist already exists. That’s why brand work (content, storytelling, and consistent presence) creates leverage long before the sales cycle begins. Break one rule and commit fully. Great marketing rarely comes from following every best practice. As Ritu puts it, “The magic really is to know which rule to break.” The key is conviction. The brands that stand out aren’t optimizing for average outcomes; they’re willing to take a focused leap. Quote “ We've spent so much time creating hype that nobody trusts vendors anymore… We don't lead with honesty, and we've lost the biggest thing, which is buyer trust…  Pick one thing that builds the trust. You have to find that one anchor of trust, and you have to completely go to it.” Time Stamps [01:15] Meet Ritu Kapoor, Fractional CMO & Ex-CMO at Observe.AI [01:57] Why The Devil Wears Prada? [11:23] How to Pitch Your Vision [21:19] The Story Behind The Devil Wears Prada [28:37] B2B Marketing Takeaways from The Devil Wears Prada [48:38] 2026 Content Strategy Tips [50:28] Final Thoughts and Takeaways Links Connect with Ritu on LinkedIn About Remarkable! Remarkable! is created by the team at Caspian Studios, the premier B2B Podcast-as-a-Service company. Caspian creates both nonfiction and fiction series for B2B companies. If you want a fiction series check out our new offering - The Business Thriller - Hollywood style storytelling for B2B. Learn more at CaspianStudios.com.  In today’s episode, you heard from Ian Faison (CEO of Caspian Studios) and Meredith Gooderham (Head of Production). Remarkable was produced this week by Jess Avellino, mixed by Scott Goodrich, and our theme song is “Solomon” by FALAK.  Create something remarkable. Rise above the noise. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

March 10, 202645 min

What B2B Can Learn From the Barbie Movie’s $150M Marketing Gamble | Rekha Srivatsan (Tableau)

Big launches happen all the time. Very few turn into movements. That’s what makes the Barbie movie such a powerful case study. What could’ve been a simple movie launch turned into a full-blown cultural takeover. In this episode, we break down the marketing strategy behind it with the help of our special guest Rekha Srivatsan, SVP & CMO at Tableau. Together, we explore what B2B leaders can learn from having a sharp point of view, building campaigns designed for participation, and letting brand impact and demand generation work side by side. About our guest, Rekha Srivatsan Proven product marketer with experience working in both large and small (but thinking "big"​) organizations. Winner's mentality, entrepreneurial spirit, and team player. Technical and creative skill set to execute with precision. Ability to conceptualize and execute in and outbound marketing programs and assets that directly impact the organization.  What B2B Companies Can Learn From Barbie: Have a point of view and don’t apologize for it. Most B2B brands try to hedge. They sand down their sharp edges. They aim for consensus. Barbie did the opposite. As Rekha puts it: “Barbie did not try to please everyone.” That clarity is what made the campaign magnetic. In B2B, differentiation rarely comes from features. If your brand sounds like it was written by committee, it won’t move anyone. The brands that win take a stand, speak clearly, and accept that not everyone is the audience. Design for participation, not just promotion. Barbie didn’t just run ads. It became a movement. Rekha explains, “The Barbie audience, they aren't passive. Because they showed up really, really well. They showed up, dressed up, they posted.” That doesn’t happen by accident. It happens when you create something people want to join. In B2B, this means building campaigns your customers can step into. If your marketing is something people consume and forget, you’ve capped your impact. If it’s something they participate in, you’ve built a flywheel. Brand and demand are not opposites. Too many B2B teams treat brand and demand differently. Barbie proves that’s wrong. Rekha says it directly: “The brand and demand aren't opposites… This is such an emotional, playful storytelling that they had, and they created such a huge commercial impact because of that. To me, the best kind of marketing is when you do both.” The takeaway for B2B is simple: emotional storytelling is leverage. When you build a brand people feel something about, demand follows faster and scales further. Quote “Barbie didn't just break through; it actually took over the conversation and made it so intentional and thoughtful.  And candidly, it was such a reminder for all of us in marketing about how our job is so important and how it can also be very, very fun when creativity and courage come together.” Time Stamps [01:15] Meet Rekha Srivatsan, SVP & CMO at Tableau [02:14] Why Barbie?  [03:25] The Role of CMO at Tableau [05:36] Barbie & the $150M Breadcrumb Campaign Explained [10:27] B2B Marketing Takeaways from Barbie [43:13] Tips for Your 2026 Marketing Strategy [44:33] Final Thoughts and Takeaways Links Connect with Rekha on LinkedIn Learn more about Tableau About Remarkable! Remarkable! is created by the team at Caspian Studios, the premier B2B Podcast-as-a-Service company. Caspian creates both nonfiction and fiction series for B2B companies. If you want a fiction series check out our new offering - The Business Thriller - Hollywood style storytelling for B2B. Learn more at CaspianStudios.com.  In today’s episode, you heard from Ian Faison (CEO of Caspian Studios) and Meredith Gooderham (Head of Production). Remarkable was produced this week by Jess Avellino, mixed by Scott Goodrich, and our theme song is “Solomon” by FALAK.  Create something remarkable. Rise above the noise. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

February 24, 202652 min

The Obsession That Built Apple & Hilton | Sharon Oddy (TNS)

It’s easy for B2B marketing to sound interchangeable. That’s why Steve Jobs and Conrad Hilton are such compelling leaders to learn from. Behind Apple and Hilton is a disciplined approach to customer experience, brand consistency, and raising expectations instead of reacting to them. In this episode, we unpack the B2B marketing lessons behind two of the world’s most iconic brands with the help of our special guest Sharon Oddy, VP of Marketing & Communications at TNS. Together, we explore what B2B marketers can learn from anchoring their positioning in customer experience, building trust through consistency, and delivering value buyers didn’t even realize they were missing. About our guest, Sharon Oddy Sharon Oddy is the VP of Marketing & Communications at TNS. She’s a marketing professional who understands the power of storytelling, the importance of a consistent narrative and the art of using it to inspire action. Sharon is an effective and talented communicator who makes the extraordinarily complex, comprehensible. She’s a versatile and decisive leader skilled at building high-performing teams and activating cross-functional collaboration to drive strategic growth, customer retention and acquisition globally. What B2B Companies Can Learn From Steve Jobs + Conrad Hilton: Customer obsession is the only real differentiator. Jobs and Hilton didn’t win because they had better marketing. They won because they cared more about the customer experience than anyone else. Sharon nails the mindset: “They listened and they observed in a way that put them in the shoe of the customer.” Jobs makes it the rule: “You've gotta start with the customer experience and work backwards to the technology.” The B2B takeaway is clear: if your marketing starts with what you want to sell instead of what your customer needs to feel, you’re already behind. The brands that win build from the buyer backward. Trust is built in the details. Hilton’s last words weren’t about expansion or revenue. They were: “Leave the shower curtain on the inside of the tub.” Jobs obsessed over design even when customers would never see it. Why? Because as Sharon puts it: “It's always about putting the customer first.” In B2B, this means your credibility lives in execution; consistent messaging, polished touchpoints, and an experience that feels dependable. Don’t let the small things create big doubt. The best marketers redefine demand. Customers can’t always tell you what they want, but great companies can see what they struggle with. Sharon explains, “Jobs was really good at looking at people and saying, what are they struggling with and how do I make that experience better? Because when I do and they taste it, they're never going back.” That’s the B2B lesson: don’t just market what exists, create the expectation for something better. The strongest marketing doesn’t follow the category. It changes what the category believes is possible. Quote “  If you keep looking backwards and trying to copy instead of lead. That's [an] area of demise. You can't look back and be like, “What does everybody else do? What does everybody else think?” You just have to have confidence that you understand your audience. You understand where the puck is moving, and you're going to keep going forward.” Time Stamps [01:20] Meet Sharon Oddy, VP of Marketing & Communications at TNS [01:27] Why Steve Jobs & Conrad Hilton? [04:00] The Role of VP of Marketing & Communications at TNS [06:25] Deep Dive: Steve Jobs and Conrad Hilton's Obsession with Details [11:19] B2B Marketing Lessons from Jobs and Hilton [47:45] Sharon's Marketing Strategy [51:24] Final Thoughts and Takeaways Links Connect with Sharon on LinkedIn Learn more about TNS About Remarkable! Remarkable! is created by the team at Caspian Studios, the premier B2B Podcast-as-a-Service company. Caspian creates both nonfiction and fiction series for B2B companies. If you want a fiction series check out our new offering - The Business Thriller - Hollywood style storytelling for B2B. Learn more at CaspianStudios.com.  In today’s episode, you heard from Ian Faison (CEO of Caspian Studios) and Meredith Gooderham (Head of Production). Remarkable was produced this week by Jess Avellino, mixed by Scott Goodrich, and our theme song is “Solomon” by FALAK.  Create something remarkable. Rise above the noise. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

February 17, 202641 min

How Snoop Dogg Built a Brand That Transcends Time | Shay Thieberg (MAIA Digital)

Most B2B brands want to stand out, but they end up blending in by trying to look more professional and more polished than everyone else. The result is marketing that’s safe and completely forgettable.That’s why Snoop Dogg is such a powerful case study. Behind his music, reinventions, and cultural ubiquity is a masterclass in relevance. In this episode, we break down Snoop’s B2B marketing lessons with the help of our special guest Shay Thieberg, CMO & Co-Founder at MAIA Digital.Together, we explore what B2B marketers can learn from leading with authenticity, owning a clear niche, and building trust through consistent presence instead of chasing short-term attention.About our guest, Shay ThiebergShay Thieberg is the CMO & Co-Founder at MAIA Digital. Specializing in LinkedIn marketing, Shay holds a Masters degree in Social Psychology & Decision-Making. Shay is among 30 Global LinkedIn Certified Experts and Faculty members at Reichmann University where he teaches “B2B Marketing for Tech”.What B2B Companies Can Learn From Snoop Dogg:Authenticity scales better than polish. Snoop Dogg’s enduring relevance comes from never pretending to be someone he’s not. Shay points out that when Snoop came to LinkedIn, he didn’t dilute his identity to fit the platform. Instead, he expanded the platform by being himself. As Shay explains, “He could have come to LinkedIn, put up the suit and tie, be a super LinkedIn-ish persona…  he was able, two years ago, to start making a shift and bringing and showcasing to other people with uniquenesses that they can stay cool, they can stay themself.” The B2B lesson is clear: credibility isn’t earned by sounding professional. It’s earned by sounding real. Brands that over-polish lose signal. The ones that feel human get remembered.Be known for one thing before you try to be known for everything. Snoop’s brand works because it’s anchored. No matter how many industries he touches, there’s a core idea people immediately associate with him. Shay translates this directly into B2B positioning: “You want to be well known for this exact thing that you do uniquely from other people.” The strongest B2B brands don’t chase every opportunity, they reinforce a single, unmistakable identity until the market does the work for them.Visibility is about presence. One of Snoop’s most underrated strengths is that he never fully disappears. He doesn’t overwhelm audiences, but he consistently shows up across moments, mediums, and decades. Shay say, “It’s not about motivation, it’s about staying constant.” For B2B marketers, the takeaway is uncomfortable but liberating: you don’t need viral hits to stay relevant. You need continuity. In markets where buyers forget fast, staying present is the strategy.Quote“ Smoking, that's his thing. Now maybe some people will think it's a bad thing, which is fine, but I'm looking at it from a B2B perspective… That's his thing. So he is well known about this one and then he utilizes it for its own good… So you want to be well known for this exact thing that you do uniquely from other people.”Time Stamps[01:20] Meet Shay Thieberg, CMO & Co-Founder at MAIA Digital[01:30] Why Snoop Dogg?[02:26] Founding MAIA Digital[06:07] Who is Snoop Dogg?[16:46] B2B Marketing Takeaways from Snoop Dogg[23:31] Optimal LinkedIn Strategy for 2026[25:28] Thought Leadership and Trust[26:23] Challenges with LinkedIn Video Content[30:33] Creating Effective LinkedIn Videos[33:00] How to Optimize Your Content on LinkedIn[40:32] Final Thoughts and TakeawaysLinksConnect with Shay on LinkedInLearn more about MAIA DigitalAbout Remarkable!Remarkable! is created by the team at Caspian Studios, the premier B2B Podcast-as-a-Service company. Caspian creates both nonfiction and fiction series for B2B companies. If you want a fiction series check out our new offering - The Business Thriller - Hollywood style storytelling for B2B. Learn more at CaspianStudios.com. In today’s episode, you heard from Ian Faison (CEO of Caspian Studios) and Meredith Gooderham (Head of Production). Remarkable was produced this week by Jess Avellino, mixed by Scott Goodrich, and our theme song is “Solomon” by FALAK. Create something remarkable. Rise above the noise. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

February 10, 202648 min

What Mad Men Reveals About Persuasion in B2B Marketing | Fahad Muhammad (TealBook)

Most B2B marketing fails for one simple reason: it forgets how persuasion actually works.That’s why Mad Men still hits. Beneath the suits, pitches, and personal drama, it’s a masterclass in what actually moves people. In this episode, we break down its B2B marketing takeaways with the help of our special guest  Fahad Muhammad, Former VP of Marketing at TealBook.Together, we explore why fundamentals matter more than tactics, why emotion drives demand, and how originality is the only real advantage left in modern B2B marketing.About our guest, Fahad MuhammadFahad is a revenue-centric and data-driven marketing leader with 17 years of experience in strategic marketing at severalSaaS/Tech companies ranging from start-ups, SMBs to enterprise organizations. Specializing in demand creation and generation, he takes a data driven approach to identify unique growth opportunities in order to drive revenue and foster meaningful connections with customers. He is a diehard college football fan (Sun Devil for life!) and attends ASU's homecoming game each fall. An avid reader, he loves to read with a cup of his favorite coffee in hand.What B2B Companies Can Learn From Mad Men:Anchor on positioning before you touch tactics. Fahad’s biggest takeaway from Mad Men is that modern B2B often skips the hard thinking and jumps straight to execution. The show strips marketing back to its core, and the lesson is uncomfortable in its simplicity. As he puts it, “This discipline is around three core things. It's about positioning, it's about having a very compelling piece of creative… and then the last piece is really understanding who your audience is.” The danger for B2B teams is mistaking activity for strategy. If positioning is fuzzy, no amount of optimization will save it. Get the foundation right first, or everything else is just noise.Emotion is the real differentiator. Fahad makes it clear that cutting through the noise is about resonance. He says, “Something that does speak to us, no matter what medium [it’s in], is always going to cut through the noise.” Mad Men works because it understands human psychology hasn’t changed, even if the channels have. For B2B marketers, the lesson is simple: logic might justify the purchase, but emotion earns attention. If your message doesn’t connect at a human level, it won’t survive the noise long enough to matter.Originality beats borrowed playbooks. Fahad warns that one of the fastest ways for B2B brands to disappear is by copying what already worked for someone else. Mad Men celebrates originality because it shows how differentiation is built through conviction, not consensus. As Fahad puts it, “They're not taking the shortcut route of copy pasting or referencing creative… they are elevating themselves and going through their own version of creative.” In a world where everyone has access to the same tools, the only sustainable advantage is saying something true in a way only you can. That’s what people remember.Quote“  Everybody has the same access to the tools now. They can do the same thing. And the playing field is more level than ever. So how do you now cut through the noise? It still goes back to the core elements of: How strong is your positioning? How strong is your creative? Are you really thinking [that] this is going to cut through the noise and is it going to move people?”Time Stamps[00:55] Meet Fahad Muhammad, Former VP of Marketing at TealBook[01:37] Why Mad Men?[04:28] Role of VP of Marketing at TealBook[05:20] Behind-the-Scenes of Mad Men[09:21] B2B Marketing Takeaways from Mad Men[32:08] The Role of AI in Marketing[42:43] How to Connect Content to Your Marketing Strategy[45:44] Advice for First-Time VPs of Marketing[47:19] Final Thoughts and TakeawaysLinksConnect with Fahad on LinkedInLearn more about TealBookAbout Remarkable!Remarkable! is created by the team at Caspian Studios, the premier B2B Podcast-as-a-Service company. Caspian creates both nonfiction and fiction series for B2B companies. If you want a fiction series check out our new offering - The Business Thriller - Hollywood style storytelling for B2B. Learn more at CaspianStudios.com. In today’s episode, you heard from Ian Faison (CEO of Caspian Studios) and Meredith Gooderham (Head of Production). Remarkable was produced this week by Jess Avellino, mixed by Scott Goodrich, and our theme song is “Solomon” by FALAK. Create something remarkable. Rise above the noise. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Is this your show?

Claim this listing to keep it up to date, reach guests who want to pitch you, and manage bookings with Guestify.

Claim this listing

More Business podcasts