Outbound isn't dead, it just needs to evolve with the shifting buying landscape.
Outbound sequencing tools have made it that easy to carpet bomb your market with spam.
When used irresponsibly, you turn off prospects, burn through domains (I've done this personally), and waste resources that could've been used for greater return.
Rethinking The Outbound Sales Email for Today's Market
Ensure that outreach is tailored towards the stage of the buyer's journey.
Give (a lot of value) only outbound emails
"Give only" emails for people who are not at the decision/purchase stage of the journey.
We publish the "Warm Sales Insights" weekly newsletter where we present companies in buy-mode for SaaS products similar to yours (e.g., your competitors).
We're giving away free warm leads exhibiting buying intent in the form of a weekly newsletter. It gives the rep an entry point to start a conversation.
Trigger-based outreach.
People write in for more or sign up for our actual product to get more warm leads.
The best part is that this newsletter is a cold outbound evergreen email campaign targeted to salespeople. The "newsletter" base grows weekly as we auto-subscribe more salespeople to it from our email database.
We can reach a wide audience who then become familiar with our brand over time.
Helps to bridge the mental shortcut of associating Warmly with warm leads, especially when they come to the site.
âĄïž Find out about what warm outbound is and how you can close more deals by contacting prospects who have interacted with your website.
Social proof notification outbound emails
For our Zoom nametags product, we created something we lovingly termed "intra-company adoption" emails, alerting other company people that the Warmly nametags have been approved in their organizations.
We contextualized the email with each send by updating the "number of people in your organization" using Warmly's nametags.
Social proof!
This doesn't feel like spam, has high click-through rates and low unsubscribes, and leads to an increasing density of folks signing up for our nametags product within an organization.
We did this to solve what Andrew Chen, a16z General Partner, refers to as the "The Cold Start" problem, which is the challenge new platforms or services face when starting from scratch and attracting an initial user base.
The email is so natural and doesn't feel like an outbound campaign, yet it attracts more users onto our platform.
Once the number of users within a company meets a threshold, our product-led sales team steps in and we begin to upsell.
Outbound emails that amplify the partner tool ecosystem
We use our intent data to discover whether prospects are using partner tools in our ecosystem like Hubspot, Salesforce, ZoomInfo, Apollo, Outreach, etc.
Then we send a contextual email that specifies how Warmly can help the prospects' team amplify the power of their existing techstack.
You'll notice that we have a fair number of links as well that route back to our website.
When a prospect lands on our website from an outbound email, we're able to automatically ID them using Warmly. The rep is alerted via slack, then has the opportunity to start a conversation with the prospect right on our site via the Warmly chat widget.
Again, we've automated this sequence to fire so reps don't have to manually send anything.
Hands free prospecting!
Bottom-of-funnel outbound sales emails
Once we find that an account is surging đ„ or in buy mode (thanks to the intent data we've collected on our paltform), we shift from "give only" emails to more sales-focused ones.
We love to use tools like sendspark to embed personalized videos that add a human touch to the outreach. The dynamic thumbnail of a real human invites you in.
Notice in the email below we use "competitor intent," referring to when the prospect is researching a competitor. You can trigger an alert for the sales team to reach out when this happens (but in our we do it automatically).
We use 6sense third party data to understand when competitors are being researched by our target accounts.
Often times we'll multi-thread the conversation, which means targeting people not just in the buying committee, but champions, users and other internal stakeholders as well.
In the case below we trigger the outbound email to the junior sales reps because everyone has the potential to influence the buying decision and we want as many internal champions as we can get!
They could bring it up with their manager if they like how we've outreached them (yes this happens a lot).
Omnichannel outbound
Right, we don't just use email. We take an omnichannel approach to outbound and diversify across email, LinkedIn, chat, phone, sms, and others.
For LinkedIn especially we like to combine our intent data with LinkedIn automation tools like Salesflow, which allows us to trigger a LinkedIn sequence based on intent.
Below is a connection request campaign to buying committee members for high intent accounts that have expressed interest in our product.
We know people are busy so we try to convey as much relevant information in as few words as possible. In addition to personalized videos we like to use product tours/demo environments using tools like Tourial or TestBox.
We've found that buyers don't love the traditional sales process of a string of meetings before seeing how the product works.
Sophisticated buyers typically have a solution in mind from speaking with friends/colleagues and want one more confirmation that it works the way they expected.
If you're slow to show them, they might just go with a competitor who was able to move faster.
So we try to give them the product experience right when they're ready.
Wrapping up
As of November 2023, we've grown MRR at 30% MoM this past year. It gets harder every month because the way the math works but at the same time easier because these incremental improvements we've made to our outbound have built us long-term brand equity that compounds over time.
The Interplay of Love and Business: Insights from a Professional Matchmaker
Time to read
Alan Zhao
When in need of entrepreneurial guidance, I donât seek wisdom from my mentors or investors. Rather, I turn to my mother, Rachel Greenwald, a professional matchmaker who has successfully orchestrated 850 marriages over the past two decades. Envision a delightful blend of "Fiddler on the Roof" and Harvard Business School. Given such an inspirational figure for a mother, it's hardly surprising that my initial business venture revolved around a âTinder for co-founders.â
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The parallels between dating and starting a business are more significant than one might imagine. In both arenas, the crux is to foster authentic connections. Be it pursuing a romantic interest or sealing a deal, here are five insights from my matchmaker mother to help your business thrive and endure.
1. Navigating Co-founder RelationshipsÂ
The statistics surrounding co-founder relationships are rather dismal, with nearly half disintegrating within four years. The primary lesson from my mother in identifying an ideal partnership involved asking insightful questions. When conducting reference checks for potential co-founders, she suggested bypassing former colleagues and opting for their siblings instead. Her rationale was that Silicon Valley is brimming with talented engineers. Our business's success would hinge not on exceptional coding capabilities, but on the individual's intrinsic nature. And who could provide a more accurate depiction of this than siblings who've shared memorable childhood experiences?
2. Engaging Investors
In my early attempts at raising seed funding for my company, I played up our team's impressive credentials, including Forbes 30u30, TechStars, Y Combinator, and Google alumni. The approach, however, fell flat. My mother then shared that fruitful conversations in dating aren't necessarily about sharing facts but about expressing authenticity. This is where the power of vulnerability comes into play. She advised being candid with investors about the challenges of raising funds in a pandemic-stricken world through Zoom. I shifted my narrative from our achievements to our setbacks, and the approach resonated with Harry Stebbings, managing partner at 20VC, who decided to invest:
3. Understanding Your Product
When users log onto Zoom, they rarely contemplate the interface or the placement of buttons. Their thoughts are consumed by the anticipation of connecting with someone new and making a positive impression, hoping to form a lucrative relationship. The most adept product designers focus less on granular details and more on the user's emotional journey. While consulting on our flagship product's design, my mother emphasized the significance of making the user feel acknowledged. She urged us to concentrate on how the user would feel navigating the product, and that insight guided our design process. Our approach to new features now begins with outlining the intended user experience. The result? A user experience that resonates. As Maya Angelou observed, âPeople will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.â
4. Approaching Your Sales Prospect
Much like the early stages of romance, you aim to make a favorable impression, armed with preparation. How can one achieve this while juggling back-to-back sales meetings? Drawing inspiration from the pre-date briefings my mother provides her clients, my company developed a tool that functions as a business meeting precursor over Zoom. Our dashboard gathers crucial information about the individual you're scheduled to meet, such as their LinkedIn profile, company, title, mutual connections, and even your email history with them. Warmly serves as a silent assistant, providing reminders of your shared interests, and facilitating effortless conversation and connection. Interestingly, some of our users have also employed our tool for their virtual first dates!
5. Growing Your Business
What motivates people to go on first dates? It isn't to dazzle their date to the greatest extent, treat them to an extravagant dinner, or aim for a first kiss. Ideally, the goal is to establish a relationship that is mutually beneficial. The most valuable insight I've gleaned from âbusiness datingâ is the importance of laying a solid foundation for long-term relationships. For instance, my former supervisor at Google, whom I worked tirelessly for, became one of Warmly's initial angel investors. A college friend undertook a covert operation to acquire our domain name, Warmly.ai. I met Elizabeth Weil, managing partner at Scribble Ventures while seeking running companions in Palo Alto. She not only became our initial investor but our families even vacation together. Oftentimes, new acquaintances may not turn out as expected, yet they can lead to something even better.
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You can never predict whether the person you're meeting will become your future co-founder, employee, or even the future partner of your best friend. The key, much like in dating, is to prioritize building a relationship. With that foundation, every other aspect will be exponentially more fruitful. Thanks Mom.
Onsite Tales of Sitka
Time to read
Maximus Greenwald
When I was brought onto the team in May as an intern, I was thrilled to learn weâd be having a work trip to Sitka, AK. I had been to Alaska a number of times for cold-weather training while in the military, so the irony of going back as a civilian with a company named Warmly was particularly delightful!
DAY 1
Getting out of the tiny airport was the easiest flight experience ever, and we were greeted with fresh, crisp air and beautiful, green mountains behind a charming town. Half of our team was staying in a localâs house, with the other half at the Sitka Fine Arts Camp, our work HQ for the trip. We drove a mile from the airport, along the waterâs edge, and onto the campus, with wooden buildings, tall trees with frequent bald eagles, and a stream running through it!
We had our first formal meeting down at a rocky beach where we made sâmores, had many first face-to-face chats, and drew pictures of the future on the backs of paper plates. We had our first Sitka creative moment -- no one had pens to draw, so we charred the tips of our wooden marshmallow skewers. Definitely a great first in-person bonding activity.
It started to drizzle, which we learned was pretty standard throughout the day, so we wrapped up the evening by explaining our cave-art-like drawings. Burning them makes them come true, right?
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DAY 2
After breakfast at the fine arts camp, we had our opening work meeting in our vaulted ceiling, wooden office space, the only downside to which was the echo! We ended the meeting with a brainstorming session, led by Max, on what we were interested in finding out from Warmlyâs launch with the Zoom App store, and what methods we could use for measurement. We were able to shake off some angst about the launch and have comforting side convos about what we were thinking and feeling.
At the end of the workday, Shep led a Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion session where we moved throughout the room according to our own identity perceptions. It was fun to watch as we walked who was going to each identity based on the prompts, and people vacillating between several.
DAY 3
We found a cool Gazebo, above the campus stream, where we could take our Sitka team pic. We crammed all of our virtual and physical people into it, snapped the picture, and (like any good tech startup) jetted up to the office to start work.
In the afternoon, Carina and Glen held a chalkboarding session (on a real chalkboard!) about a specific product development. We each took 10 minutes to think up our most viral version of this (secret) product, shared with each other, and then voted. This was a really fun session because it displayed not just our own personal interests, but also what we each thought others would be attracted to.
DAY 4
We started the morning with an intimate meditation session - only three of us showed. I donât actually know how to meditate, but I followed Max and Jimâs lead, and in no time I was doing a really poor job of not getting lost in my thoughts. When I opened my eyes, Max and Jim were staring at me, kindly not interrupting what they assumed was me meditating.
The highlight of work today was a Zoom meeting with one of our investors and experts, James Currier, GP at NfX. Itâs always exciting to hear thoughts from a leader in your industry, and especially when theyâre talking right to you about your company, tying in decades-old relevant anecdotes!
We also had our âWarmiteâ graduation, where all the new employees became full-fledged members. Totally corny and totally fun. I enjoyed getting random pieces of info about each person for the slide show, like this super cute one of Jim and his wife!
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DAY 5
Today was boating in the Sitka Sound! We rented a couple small boats and took groups either sightseeing or fishing. (If you know how to fish, please join our team so that we catch more fish on our next trip!) Whales were amazing to see, but otters were the cutest and most entertaining of the wildlife. Several people found out their tolerance levels for boats on the ocean. Trooper awards go out to Glen Lipka and Nicole Creshon.
DAY 6
A cool thing that started happening toward the end of the trip was random people in Sitka coming up to us and asking what Warmly is, because they had seen us walking around in our bright purple hoodies throughout the week?
Our last activity night was really fun. The Lipka fam guided us in a musical rhythm and tone session. It was fun to see how talented the kids were, even though they got skunked in Bugout chess by me and Max.
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DAY 7
Several of us took a last drive, into the mountains of Sitka, and then boarded our plane. The only thing many of us may not miss is the slightly ever-present and not entirely irrational fear (exhilaration for some) of a bear being around a corner or tree. Weâre unanimously looking forward to the next offsite trip!
During my time at Warmly, I've had the great privilege of working with an incredible team of engineers. They are the people driving the technical engine of the company. And we have all learned a lot from each other.
Our culture and how we operate have been shaped by the mistakes we've made and learned from in the past. Below are 9 standout tenets:
1. We donât repaint the Taj Mahal.
We focus on outcome, not output. It is crucial that we avoid the engineering build trap of building for the sake of building. We never want to throw time and effort into the machine without a firm strategy. Everything we release at Warmly had been prioritized for highest business impact. Our job is to build the next Taj Mahal, not recoat it with another layer of paint.
2. We don't prescribe solutions.
When collaborating on product ideas, leadership does not prescribe a specific solution but paints a clear picture of the problem or opportunity and then brings the engineers into the meetings with customers. That way, by the time the tickets are reviewed, everyone is on the same page. Leadership decides the âwhyâ. Product and engineering collaboratively decide the âwhatâ. Engineering decides the âhowâ.
3. We don't burn ourselves out.
Using hard work to solve all our problems is a crutch for real innovation. Itâs also a depleting resource that may not have the intended long-term effect. There's a saying that startups don't die, they commit suicide. Trying to sustain hard work for long periods with no end in sight leads to burnout, frustration, and eventually churn. We take care of our mental health and are always thinking of creative ways to do more with less. We set a very high bar during hiring so everyone on the team is already efficient, can self-organize, and is intrinsically motivated.
4. We don't micromanage.
While newer engineers at Warmly are encouraged to over-communicate changes and run them by tech leads, senior engineers maintain and âownâ parts of the code base and have more discretion. This allows our engineers to preserve personal autonomy and flexibility, while also controlling against the codebase descending into chaos.
5. We don't expect conformity.
Consistency is a value in and of itself. Being able to agree on how things are generally done frees up mental space to focus on creating great product. That said, technical culture here is less a doctrine than a living document. Different engineers will have different feelings about PR best practices or how much testing should be done. While we have some overarching broad strokes that we try to reinforce, even that is ever-evolving because each person that joins the team brings something new.
6. We donât evolve for the sake of evolving.
Though we take pride in our tech stack, we never want to focus all our innovation tokens on technological innovation. Anything we do is in service of pushing the long-term success of the business. When we bring in a new technology, itâs because of the impact it would have on our customers. We consider how well new tech integrates, how much lift it will give us, or whatâs the cost of maintenance. We optimize globally, not locally. Weâre always evolving, but never for the sake of evolving.
7. We donât care who wins.
Conflict often happens from egos clashing and people wanting to be right. The theory of Energy Leadership identifies seven levels of energy in communication.
Level 1: âI lose.â
Level 2: âI win, you lose.â
Level 3: âI win, and if you win, Iâm ok.â
Level 4: âYou win, then Iâll win.â
Level 5: âWe both win.â
Level 6: âThe whole company wins.â
Level 7: âWinning and losing is an illusion.â
At the highest level of energy, winning and losing is an illusion. It shouldnât matter who is right. There are 11 paths, and 9 of them are going to work out, so just pick one and go.
At Warmly, we prioritize a common scoreboard, rather than every department competing with each other. It doesnât matter how many goals an individual scores if the team doesnât win. We either all win or we don't win at all. The moment we start to think itâs Engineering versus Product, weâve already lost.
8. We donât avoid conflict. (i.e. You want TACOs, not NACHOs.)
Warmly came up with this acronym to describe our structure: Totally Aligned Committed OrganizationâTACO for short. Everyone needs to be emotionally bought into the success of the company and are not just clocking in and out. Part of that is creating a safe environment that allows questions and a healthy amount of pushback. This is especially important on an âA-player onlyâ team where new engineers might be afraid to ask âWhereâs this thingâ or âHow do I do that?â because nobody wants to be seen as incompetent. When you have a psychologically safe environment it allows for productive conflict, and only through conflict can you get to commitment. Then whatever decision is made, either individuals agree or they feel, âI may not agree with this decision, but I trust the process. Iâve said my piece, everything was considered. Let's give this a shot.â
9. We donât let underperformance slide.
The other part of commitment is accountability. We make sure that there is clarity on the team goals. âWhat does success look like, what does failure look like, and what happens if we donât hit success.â It might be, we try this new thing out and if we donât see X result by this date, we take it out, or do Y. We put it in writing, publicly, so thereâs no ambiguity when goals arenât being hit. This way members of the team can hold themselves and one another accountable respectfully, while having high expectations for one anotherâs performance. When weâre worried about letting our teammates down, weâre more willing to step up our performance.
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If this sounds interesting to you, shoot me an email ([email protected]). I'd love to hear your thoughts.
How Warmly shortened Gainsightâs sales cycle by 15%
Time to read
Maximus Greenwald
Overview
As the leading Customer Success platform provider, Gainsight has employees all over the world, supporting customer-centric businesses with key business issues such as customer success, product experience, and revenue optimization to name a few. Their mission to help others build deep and lasting relationships and bring a human element back into this digital space resonates strongly with our own purpose.
Gainsight's customer facing teams realized the difficulties with developing trust and credibility as meetings increasingly shifted to Zoom. To combat these rising challenges, Gainsight introduced Warmly to its workforce and almost instantly saw positive results.
Inspiring confidence and trust
Presenting as a unified front is key to establishing yourself and team as qualified, knowledgeable professionals. Rather than showing up visually disjointed due to the mismatched backgrounds, Gainsight Admins synced all backgrounds with a click. External clients seemed more focused now they knew who they were speaking to rather than trying to match the names and titles to the faces.
Warmly removes background distractions and allows meeting hosts to set personalized shoutouts and display presentations over their shoulder. To fit brand standards, Gainsight used the Admin Portal to regulate the backgrounds and Nametag elements.
Reallocating time for action items
Instead of going through back and forth introductions and âhowâs the weatherâ chatter, Gainsight's salespeople and solution architects had access to those details in their participantsâ bios. Unlike 74% of other individuals, client-facing staff no longer needed to frantically sleuth the internet for Linkedin summaries and name pronunciation queries during the meeting.
With relevant information accessible at a glance, employees were able to reutilize those five minutes to dive deeper into action items and agenda topics, which shortened deal cycles by 15%.
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"A Warmly Nametag in every meeting is a no brainer for any organization hoping to enhance its virtual meeting experience.Warmly helps Gainsight save thousands of hours a year on wasted introduction time."-Nick Mehta, CEO
Saving time with 90% less pre-meeting prep
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Like many other companies, Gainsight's sales team spent several hours per week searching for information about who they're meeting with. Handling a large portfolio of clients can be difficult to remember details of a particular customer, especially when they've scheduled the initial or follow up call weeks ago. The team frequently had to refresh their memory by Googling or reviewing previous communications while balancing a packed schedule.
After enabling Calendar Signatures, Gainsight salespeople were able to easily access names, name pronunciations, job titles and location details all within the event invite as they leap into video calls. They were able to gather instant insights on their customers within their own calendar, reducing pre-meeting preparation time by 90% and reallocating the saved time to upselling current clients or securing new deals.
Y-Combinator vs Techstars: The inside scoop from an alum of both programs
Time to read
Val Yermakova
âShould I do an accelerator?â â almost every founder ever
Everyone asks me if they should even do an accelerator in the first place. If youâre a first-time founder, I will reply with an enthusiastic yes. As a company we've gone through them all: Techstars, Y-Combinator, Sequoiaâs Company Design Program, and On Deck. They are a lot of work and by no means a magic bullet to unicorn-hood, but if you put in the effort, you will reap copious rewards.
âShould I do more than one accelerator?â â you, after reading the above paragraph
The answer is a clear and strong, ÂŻ\_(ă)_/ÂŻ. We certainly don't regret it but it depends on your business model and what networks will be integral to your success. At Warmly, we think a lot about helping folks build stronger networks and deeper relationships (we're a free app that connects to your calendar to give you instant insights on people while you're meeting with them over Zoom).
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Y-Combinator vs Techstars
A question I get a lot from other founders is âWhich one should I do â which one is better?â. As with every normative question, the answer isit depends. Depends on what you and your company are looking for. Techstars is better at:
Cohort camaraderie
Providing work space
Growing you as a leader and person
Help pivoting and finding a real pain point
Teaching the detailed operations bits on how to run a company
Providing mentors who are responsive and invested in you
Being open to new ideas and process improvements
Access to B2B companies outside of Silicon Valley (Midwest & East Coast that trend more old school)
Y-Combinator is better at:
Connecting you with a network of lots of unicorn founders
Having a very active and helpful internal social network
Fundraising â raising bigger rounds at higher valuations
Opening doors due to brand recognition
Pushing your business to hit aggressive revenue goals
Investing in moonshots (wild and risky ideas that might be huge)
Giving you tactical and succinct advice about a slew of very relevant topics such as GTM strategy
Access to the almost any Silicon Valley startup and extension B2C growth advice
Letâs break it down
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Cohort camaraderie
âWinner: Techstars
âCaveat: We did half of Techstars in person and half remote (COVID). We did all of YC remote.
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Techstars Boulder
Techstars is a massive program with cohorts all over the world. We did the Techstars Boulder program, so I can really only speak to the experience there. I donât know much about the other Techstars programs, although I suspect they are similar-ish.
The Techstars Boulder program accepts 10 companies. With an average of 3-4 people per company, thatâs about 30-40 people you get to know. Our Boulder Slack channel has 63 people in it, including program leadership.
They hosted weekly bonding events where each week one team is responsible for planning something fun while we announce âwinsâ, âgratitudesâ, âasks for helpâ, and who is âin the ditchâ. Being in the ditch means you did something dumb like getting your GSuite suspended for your entire company for 24 hours so no one could send emails or open up a doc (yeah, I did that).
3-day offsite in the mountains packed with bonding and high quality, well run personal growth workshops (Not sure how they do this during COVID)
Weekly CXO (CXOâs are any founder whoâs not a CEO) and CEO forums where people gather and practice conflict resolution and work through emotional pains together. My cohortâs CEO and CXO forum is still going after the program! (Active during COVID)
Swag on day 1 that everyone wears at the office (hat, hoodie, t-shirt, water bottle, stickers), it makes us all feel like more of a community.
Y-Combinator
YC accepts ~200 companies. Our YC S20 Slack channel has 583 people in it, including program leadership. The 200 companies are broken up into roughly 5 groups. Our group has 110 people in the Slack channel. The groups then have sections of 5 companies each. Our section Slack has 15 people.
Weekly dinners with half of the cohort
During COVID this turned into a zoom call with a YC alum talking about their journey. I personally really enjoyed these speaker sessions and found them to be helpful to building a business. Downside is that there was no hangout time with other founders in the cohort.
After dinners, founders typically hang around to chat together
During COVID: Donut chats via Slack, otherwise no planned cohort bonding time. I enjoyed my Donut chats, although the response rate wasnât great from other cohort members.
Buy your own swag. Swag isnât important to me and I think that because of COVID YC actually is sending us a swag pack, although they ran into some shipping issues (much like the rest of the world) and we still haven't gotten it.
Fundraising
Winner: YC
For their investor network, especially in a virtual world, itâs YC. We donât have enough data on who is better at teaching how to fundraise since we werenât raising during YC. And that, is a very important skill to learn.
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Techstars Boulder
Techstars has an extensive network of investors and a lot of background in B2B SaaS companies. We intended to pitch in front of 200+ investors in person in Boulder but because of COVID this turned virtual. The Demo Day with Techstars went well â check out our polished 4 min virtual presentation (yikes, so old! several pivots ago) that Techstars helped us prepare for extensively.
Several of our Techstars mentors angel invested in us, as well as one VC firm Matchstick Ventures, a firm associated with Techstars. All of these were relationships we built in the program.
Although the money we ended up taking didnât come from inbound virtual Demo Day Techstars investors (~50 inbound), the video seemed to be quite helpful for the investors we ended up choosing. We have a hunch that we would have had more in-person investors had COVID not occurred.
The very basis by which we learned how to fundraise, came from Techstars. David Cohen, the founder of Techstars, gives a seminal lecture to founders on essentially âHow to convince most investors to ask to invest in you.â Itâs legendary.
Techstars provided the following fundraising help: (1) Multiple pitch-practice sessions in internally (2) 2 pitch-practice sessions externally live with real investors (great to get real investor feedback!), (3) Warm intros to ~10 top requested investors from their internal list
Techstarsâ internal data on investors from their Techstars Connect portal was not very helpful.
Y-Combinator
YC has an incredibly strong brand name amongst investors in the Valley. With companies like Stripe, Airbnb, DoorDash, Coinbase, Instacart, Ginkgo Bioworks, Gusto, Reddit, and more coming out of YC, that shouldnât be surprising. Investors want in on YC companies and the average valuation of a YC startup is substantially higher than a Techstars startup. YC is like a feeder high school to the ivy league investors.
In YC in June we were getting ~2 inbound investors requests per day (this increased to 4 per day after we publicly announced our Seed Round in Forbes).
YC provides âFundraising Office Hoursâ and helps prepping for and demoing on Demo Day. The partners are quite responsive. Caveat: this is hearsay from founder friends since we skipped Demo Day as we didnât need to fundraise
YC Demo Day was virtual and participants were allowed a single slide (!) and 1-minute (!) to explain their company to watching investors. We actually really appreciated this simplicity vs the traditional lengthy slide deck.
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Grow as a person and leader
Winner: Techstars
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Techstars Boulder
Techstars invests in your brain and well-being. I already mentioned the emotional support CXO/CEO groups, which are lead by a mental health pro, who is in the office everyday for 1:1 chats at any time. Our pro was Keith Gruen, who just launched his own YouTube channel.
Additionally, they provide you a free leadership coach that you meet with weekly. My coach was instrumental in helping me work through and gain the skills to manage some the really challenging things I went through during the program. In addition to this, a lot of their curriculum is structured around being a better team leader, in addition to tactical business building advice.
Y-Combinator
No mental health support or leadership coaching that Iâm aware of. Maybe there is one, but it wasnât made known to me nor did I proactively ask for one. However, you search for âmental healthâ in Bookface (YCâs internal social network), you find a good number of posts where founders are speaking honestly to each other about this sort of thing.
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Internal social network
Winner: YC
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Techstars Boulder
Techstars has an extensive internal network that thousands of people are on. Itâs pretty good and has tons of resources to help founders build a company.
Thereâs an ad hoc mailing list that people can reach out to when relevant (itâs call Amplify). The rule of thumb is that for every Amplify request you have, you get 10 people with theirs. They are usually akin to âhelp like/share/comment on my new launchâ.
Y-Combinator
Because YC is a smaller community, bonds are stronger and the internal network (Bookface) is much more active and reliable than Techstarsâ internal network. Almost every post has several replies and people are eager to help with all sorts of professional and personal favors. For example I was looking for roommates for my place in Hawaii and I posted on Bookface instead of Techstars Connect because the smaller community felt more personal and has an established norm of not always being only about business.
YC has a daily digest emailed to you of the most poppinâ posts of yesterday.
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Help pivoting and finding a true pain point
Winner: Techstars
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Techstars Boulder
We got into Techstars with an MVP for a mobile app for professional networking. By the time we started Techstars we learned that this idea wasnât going to take us anywhere so we pivoted to PushPull. Week 2 of Techstars has a thing called Mentor Madness, where you pitch your idea to 80+ mentors. After the crazy two weeks of Mentor Madness, you choose 4-6 longer term mentors who help you throughout the program and beyond. The Madness weeks are grueling but incredibly enlightening. We pitched our PushPull idea and got expert feedback on the reality of building a business like this. We met with our chosen mentors weekly and got incredible insights that would have taken us a very long time to get ourselves. Because of Mentor Madness we ended up pivoting and finding a pain point that got us real paying customers by the end of the program. We wrote our first line of code in the middle of March and, by the end of April, showed up to Demo Day with 19 customers and raised $2M+. This was only possible because of the insights we got.
We had also had a Weekly Ops Review with Techstars, and this had a very clear and effective structure to discuss our business goals and how well we did on the goals from last week. Everyone made a slide deck using the template and had 5 minutes to share their updates. At the end there would be a brief Q&A where other founders would comment and typically ask insightful & helpful questions.
Y-Combinator
By the time we started YC, we knew what we were building, or so we thought. Our idea seemed good enough and we were never really challenged on it. We had traction and a tiny amount of revenue after all. Because of this, we didnât proactively ask for help on figuring out a pain point. That being said, I spoke to a few founders (via Donut chats) who were in the very early stages (like what we were in at the start of Techstars) and they said they still felt really lost and like they werenât getting the help or support in finding a pain point.
With YC you have a weekly check-in meeting. Every week it alternates between a group (5 companies) check-in with your YC Partner and one without the partner. The goal of those meetings is to check in on how you did last week and what you want to do this week. Those meetings didnât have strong structure and overall didnât feel very productive or helpful. The ones without the Partner were truly unstructured, albeit, a nice social time.
Investing in moonshots & wild ideas
Winner: YC
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Techstars Boulder
Techstars leans more heavily towards companies with proven business models and it seems to take less risks on wild ideas.
Y-Combinator
YC seems to have a much higher risk tolerance and so do the founders they accept. YC casts their net wide with a cohort of 500+ people and accepts in competitive companies (there were at least 3 Zoom competitors in our batch) and relatively high-risk (compared to SaaS) biotech or hardware companies. The average YC founder comes from the tech scene already, so they are primed to be extraordinarily scrappy and have bold visions. YC founders are also much younger on average, and donât have families or mortgages, so they are willing to lose it all.
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Office Space
Winner: Techstars
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Techstars Boulder
Free office space where 10 companies work and laugh together
Not available during COVID, obviously
Y-Combinator
No office space, although I think not during COVID the YC HQ has couches and hangout areas for socializing after the weekly dinners.
Help getting media mentions
Winner: YC
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Techstars Boulder
Their press announcement led to a few more article mentions (google "techstars boulder class of 2020 colorado")
Techstars gave us 120 personal intros to customers in Techstars Network
They tweeted/facebooked our Forbes seed round announcement
Y-Combinator
Getting media and PR may seem like a ânice to haveâ, but trust me, itâs key. Proper marketing, especially in a saturated market like sales enablement tools (our startup) can make or break an aspiring unicorn.
They have a partner devoted to press and PR (Kat Manalac) and she spent time with us reviewing and offering suggestions for our press release that was very helpful in our pitch to multiple outlets. Though their connections to TechCrunch declined to profile us <sad violin music plays>, Kat's wordsmithing was critical towards getting Forbes excited about us (the Forbes intro came through our investors).
Our Bookface post (internal YC network) was read by 1000+ and led to multiple customers
They tweeted/facebooked our Forbes seed round announcement
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En ConclusiĂłn
Ultimately the choice is yours. But if you're drowning in decision paralysis then one way to think about it is as a mindset:
If you are a baby bird that just hatched out of your cushy and stable 9-5 job and know little of the world of entrepreneurship, go for the program that will support you more (Techstars)
If you are an older bird who knows what they are doing but just needs more access, go for the better brand recognition program (YC)
And while picking an accelerator is important, the reality is if your business sucks then neither accelerator will make you a unicorn.
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May the odds be ever in your favor,
Val
Cofounder @ Warmly YC S20 & Techstars Boulder '20
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Oh yeah, and who are we?
Warmly's App helps you build rapport with everyone you meet     Â
Warmly is a free app that helps you create deeper relationships with the people who matter most. By simply connecting your calendar, Warmly gives you instant insights & context on everyone you meet, directly in Zoom & Google Hangouts.
How Slack Can Boost Your Sales Team's Conversion Rate
Time to read
Keegan Otter
As explained in prior articles we are going through a sales and marketing evolution. Buyers are moving faster than ever. Sales teams can use slack to stay ahead of the competition.
One way to achieve this is through effective communication and immediate action on leads. Today, many leading companies, including Hubspot, Drift, Stripe, AllSend, Webflow, and Salesforce-acquired Troops.ai, are leveraging the potential of Slack to enhance their sales communications. They send instantaneous notifications to their sales reps via Slack, keeping their teams alert and responsive. Especially when the average digital attention span is eight seconds, you want to immediately respond to buyer interest.
Essential Role of Slack Notifications in Revenue Operations
For revops teams, creating a system for your salespeople with relevant Slack notifications is no longer optional - itâs essential. If youâre not using this strategy, youâre missing a crucial opportunity. Using tools like Zapier, you can create low-code alerts for just about anything into Slack, a platform where your reps already live and work. The aim is to drive immediate action, keeping your team responsive and agile.
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Sample automated email from an inbound request to Warmly. The rest of the Slack message includes meta information like email, how they heard about us, and why did they decide to book with us.
The One-Channel Strategy
Some businesses prefer to channel all their alerts to one communal Slack channel. This strategy generates a sense of urgency and competition, as every member can see and respond to the same alerts. After taking action on an alert - say, someone visited your website or opened a sales collateral - reps mark the notification with a check, indicating itâs been handled. For instance, we use the #f-sales channel to sync on every sales process, including mistakes, customer successes, and lessons that we can learn.
The Individual Channel Strategy
Alternatively, some companies create individual channels for each rep. In this setup, the repâs manager or supervisor is included in the channel to ensure accountability. As an example team, our growth team has two to three members officially in charge of tasks, but weâre keen on bringing everyone into the loop, so weâll post weekly and bi-weekly updates, either in the form of long-form digests or links to projects, to share the learnings. Even though the individual channels focus on the messages of two members, the wider community is involved in the reply and comment sections.
Types of Slack Notifications for Sales
From top-of-the-funnel interactions to greenfield accounts, thereâs a wide array of potential alerts for your sales team:
Top of Funnel Interactions: If someone opens your email, thatâs an ideal moment for a cold call, so why not set a Slack alert for this?
Meeting Requests: When someone wants to set up a meeting, a timely Slack alert can streamline the scheduling process.
Active Deals: Keep your team updated on any significant activity on active deals with real-time Slack alerts.
Account Visits: When a potential lead or customer visits your website, an immediate Slack alert allows your team to quickly follow up.
Inbound Form Fills: Instant alerts, whenever someone fills a form to request a demo, can help your team respond promptly.
Greenfield Accounts: These are companies visiting your website that are not yet in your CRM. If theyâre within your ICP, this might be a great opportunity to reach out.
You can also differentiate your Slack notifications by priority level, with distinct alerts for high-priority and less important tasks. This strategy can help your team manage their time and focus more effectively.
Crafting a Sensible Slack Notification System Using Warmly
Creating an effective notification system on Slack requires a thoughtful approach. The goal is to design a set of notifications and channels that make sense for your teamâs structure and workflow. At Warmly, we adopt the following channels to streamline our processes:
#a-inbound-request: Prospect booked a demo
#a-warmly-for-free: Prospect is trying our free version
#a-inbound-pounce-response: Prospect responded to an outbound AIÂ chat message on our website
#a-identified-user: Prospect is identified on our website
#a-identified-company: Target company is identified and active on our website
#a-[AEÂ name]-accounts: Target accounts owned by the AE is active on the website
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Balancing the Use of Slack Notifications
While Slack notifications can be incredibly useful, itâs also important not to over-rely on them. Too many notifications can create a sense of constant urgency that might result in more noise than signal. Consider using Slack for real-time, actionable items that need to be addressed within the day. Other less time-sensitive information might be better suited to a daily email or dashboard.
Remember that itâs okay to mute a Slack channel unless youâre being directly messaged. This way, youâre only getting notifications for leads that you need to take action on, rather than getting drowned in information about your coworkersâ leads. Be willing to experiment with the number and frequency of notifications, and adjust them to find a balance that keeps your team responsive without overwhelming them.
Celebrating Success on Slack
Finally, remember that Slack is not just for tasks and alerts; itâs also a fantastic tool for celebrating success. Use it to create a positive work culture by celebrating wins, big or small. This practice not only boosts morale but also encourages further success.
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Slack notifications are powerful tools in the arsenal of any sales team. Used wisely, they can significantly improve the speed and effectiveness of your teamâs communication, helping you to stay ahead in the competitive world of sales.
Press Release: Warmly Series A Announcement
Time to read
Alan Zhao
Warmly Secures $11M Series A to scale its AI fueled pipeline acceleration platform for SMBsÂ
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Delivers ready to convert prospects increasing pipeline by +200% in the first 3 months
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San Francisco, CA - October 19, 2023 -Warmly, the first AI fueled pipeline acceleration platform that harnesses the power of existing sales enablement and intent tools to automatically deliver ready to convert prospects to sales, announced an $11M Series A round led by Felicis, NFX, Zoom, F-Prime Capital, Maven Ventures and others. The Warmly platform orchestrates metadata from Salesforce, Hubspot, Slack, Outreach & Salesloft and combines them with intent data from 6sense, Clearbit and Bombora to identify, track, and connect with website visitors who are in active buy mode. This allows teams to prioritize the deals most likely to close. Warmly is purpose built to meet the growth targets and budgets of small and medium (SMB) sized B2B companies. Early adopters include New Relic, Zoom, Seamless.ai, and Sendoso.
âOrganizations spend more than $47 billion each year to drive prospects to their websites, yet 97% of visitors never fill out a form or share their information,â said Warmly cofounder Carina Boo, âThe ability to engage with these prospects in real-time, while they are actively researching on your site fast-tracks time to purchase, and thatâs what sales reps need,â said Boo.
SMBs are struggling
99% of organizations are SMBs. In this climate of layoffs, global financial pressures and budget cuts, companies of all sizes have fewer in-bound leads while needing more âat-batsâ to meet growing quotas. Large organizations can often hire more staff or buy expensive enterprise grade solutions to help. The Warmly Platform was purpose-built to automate and orchestrate the sales tech stack for SMBs, and deliver ready to convert prospects. Warmly clients have seen:Â
âWe were running multiple campaigns and werenât seeing the results we wanted,â said Jay Leano, VP Sales, Behavioral Signals. Within the first month of using Warmly we were able to double our enterprise pipeline with outbound campaigns that converted quickly on our site.â
According to Gartner, most prospects require on average 20 touches to convert to a trial or a meeting. And cold outbound conversion rates have plummeted as buyers are now inundated with sales outreach. Warmly cuts to the chase, enabling sales to start a warmer conversation with prospects directly, at the exact moment they are actively researching. Â
âThe reason to buy Warmly is to deliver more new business meetings to your reps,â said Jonathan Pogact, VP Marketing, Seamless.ai. âKnowing that someone who has engaged with our content and emails before is back again, and being able to engage with them in real-time, ensures our sales reps have higher rates of conversion. This solution is critical for any business that runs on inbound marketing and SDRs,â said Pogact.
How Warmly works: Simple, automated orchestration with easy installation:
Warmly identifies anonymous traffic and associates the âsuspectsâ to opportunities and target accounts in the CRM
Accounts are scored based on intent signals from website, CRM, Outreach, SalesLoft, 6sense and Bombora
High propensity to convert prospects visiting the site are served to sales reps instantly so they can engage and greet ideal prospects via AI chatbot real-time
If the AI Chabot is not able to secure a meeting, then Warmly automatically finds the decision makers of hot accounts and sends personalized messages on behalf of the sales reps via email and LinkedIn
By automatically aggregating data and integrating insights from various platforms, Warmly identifies which accounts to prioritize, the stage of the buyer journey, and orchestrates the most effective next step to drive trials and meetings.
âMany of the newer sales tools and strategies work in silos to solve one piece of the sales funnel challenge," explained James Currier, General Partner of NFX. "Warmly's AI driven approach and automated orchestration of these tools enables sales teams to convert leads faster.â
âOrganizations still struggle with how to increase sales productivity,â explained Max Greenwald, CEO of Warmly. âThe promise of AI is not to replace humans, itâs to enable humans to be more effective and deliver more with the same or less. Warmly has the first solution that does this today. With this new capital we will bring the vision of autonomous sales orchestration. By shifting from automation to autonomy, we can empower sales teams to navigate complex processes on autopilot and serve prospects more dynamically.â
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About Warmly
Founded in 2020 by Ex-Google and Forbes 30 under 30 honorees, Warmly is the first AI fueled pipeline acceleration platform that harnesses the power of existing sales enablement and intent tools to automatically identify high propensity website visitors and alert them to sales for real-time engagement. Itâs the first such solution purpose built to meet the business and budget needs of SMBs.
Based in San Francisco, Warmly investors include Felicis, NFX, Zoom, F-Prime Capital, Maven Ventures, Soma Capital, YC and others. The company has grown 30% month-over-month during the last year.Â
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About Felicis
Founded in 2006, Felicis is a venture capital firm investing in companies reinventing core markets, as well as those creating frontier technologies. Felicis focuses on early-stage investments and currently manages over $3B in capital across 9 funds. The firm is an early backer of more than 47 companies valued at $1B+. More than 100 of its portfolio companies have been acquired or gone public, including Adyen (IPO), Credit Karma (acq by Intuit), Cruise (acquired by General Motors), Fitbit (IPO), Guardant Health (IPO), Meraki (acq by Cisco), Ring (acq by Amazon), and Shopify (IPO). The firm is based in Menlo Park and San Francisco in California. Learn more at www.felicis.com.
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About NFX
NFX is the worldâs largest venture firm dedicated exclusively to pre-seed and seed stage companies. The firm is based in San Francisco, CA and Herzlia, Israel, and invests in network-effects driven startups. Founded by entrepreneurs who built 10 companies with more than $10 billion in exits across multiple industries and regions, NFX is transforming how true innovators are funded. Learn more at www.nfx.com.
7 Best Drift Alternatives & Competitors in 2025
Time to read
Alan Zhao
Letâs be real here:
Drift really isnât a good fit for small and medium-sized businesses today.
I mean, the tool itself is great (if youâre looking for a purely automated passive lead collector). But with a $30k starting price tag, it's not really within reach of SMBs anymore.
But hey, itâs not 2015 anymore, either.Â
There are a number of powerful Drift alternatives & competitors available, many of them with pricing and feature sets designed to serve a non-enterprise audience.
In this guide, we will dive into seven attention-worthy alternatives to Drift. Each provides a slightly different take on conversational marketing and sales, so youâll no doubt be able to find one that matches what youâre looking for.
Table of Contents
7 Drift Competitors & Alternatives Worth Their Weight In Leads
1. Qualified - Best For Integrating With SalesforceÂ
2. ServiceBell - Best For Live Video Chat
3. Intercom - Best For Customer Support
4. ZoomInfo Chat - Best For A Full Stack GTM Solution
5. Signals - Best For If/Then Workflow LogicÂ
6. HubSpotChat - Best For Out-Of-The-Box Chat
7. Warmly - Best For Account-Based Orchestration
Why Consider An Alternative To Drift?Â
7 Drift Competitors & Alternatives Worth Their Weight In LeadsÂ
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1. Qualified - Best For Integrating With SalesforceÂ
Qualified brands itself as a âpipeline generation machineâ and offers a host of features (like chatbots, meeting scheduling, and some really great lead routing) to help sales teams achieve this goal.
Why Consider Qualified As An Alternative To Drift?
Qualified is at the other end of the automation-human spectrum to Drift.
Here, The focus is on orchestrating human capital to have sales reps respond on the site rather than conversations being entirely automated and passive.
Qualifiedâs âSignalsâ feature is slick. It reveals your hottest accounts (using AI-predicted purchase intent) to help reps identify which leads to prioritize.
They've got a bunch of great lead-based features (chat, video, forms) that do a fantastic job of routing leads to the right rep and mapping them over to the correct account.
Also, their reporting suite is great, with important insights into chat analytics, marketing attribution, and some brilliant leadership dashboards.
Then, thereâs Qualifiedâs integration with Salesforce, which is best-in-class, making Qualified a good option for teams deeply embedded in the Salesforce architecture.Â
Similarly, they've got great integrations with Marketo and Outreach. If you're using this tech stack (Salesforce, Marketo, and Outreach), you probably have the scale and complexity to justify using Qualified.
Where Qualified Falls Short
If youâre using any CRM other than Salesforce, then Qualified probably isnât for you.
While its Salesforce integration is strong (Qualified leadership are all former Salesforce people and have very strong partnerships with the brand), integrations with other CRM platforms are a non-starter.
Like Salesforce, Qualified takes a long time to set up and maintain, making it more of an enterprise tool.
Then thereâs the cost involvedâŠ
Qualified Pricing
Qualified is even more expensive than Drift, with its cheapest plan costing in the range of $42k a year for âthe basics.â
For more customization and strong Salesforce connectivity, youâre looking at $72k or more annually.Â
With all of this considered, Qualified is a solid platform if you've got the scale and budget for it, and to run a human-led playbook.
If not (like most companies that fall under the SMB banner), its probably not for you.
2. ServiceBell - Best For Live Video ChatÂ
ServiceBell is one of few video-focused alternatives to Drift, designed specifically for brands that run on Hubspot.
Why Consider ServiceBell As An Alternative To Drift?
ServiceBell describes itself as âbuilt for HubSpotâ and even uses a similar color scheme to align itself with that brand. But it goes beyond that, offering deep integrations with HubSpot suites of tools (CRM, CMS, marketing hub, etc.)
Its main selling point is that it's one of the only tools on the market that focuses on live video chat that sits directly on your website.
So, it's obviously much more on the âhumanâ side of the spectrum than is Drift.
Where ServiceBell Falls Short
There is, of course, an obvious drawback with the whole live video thing: someone has to be around to be on the other end of the call.
You donât want them sitting around all day waiting for an opportunity to jump on a video call. Your timing needs to be perfect in order to capture the intent.
As Iâm writing this, there are no reps available at ServiceBell, so their chat reverts to this:
    Â
ServiceBell Pricing
ServiceBell is reasonably priced, with a free plan and paid options starting at $9k a year.
This puts them in the range of SMBs, which is kind of strange since those companies often have the budget for enough AEs to run a play like this.
3. Intercom - Best For Customer SupportÂ
Intercom has been the name in customer chat for a while now.Â
With generative artificial intelligence (like ChatGPT) blowing up the SaaS game, theyâve shifted gears a little to an AI-based chat solution.
For support-focused teams, few tools are as well equipped as Intercom.
Built primarily around their people-driven chat tool, the AI component sits at the front end of the conversation and helps answer customer queries until human intervention is required.
Intercom's AI chat tool might be a cost-effective solution for small companies with limited budget for support but who want to improve their service level.
Where Intercom Falls Short
Of course, the flip side of the focus on customer support is that Intercom doesnât offer a lot to serve the sales use case.Â
Chat is passive and reactive, not proactive (like Qualified, Warmly, and ServiceBell), meaning capturing buying intent at the right moment isnât Intercom's strong suit.
Plus, they don't offer much in the way of reporting and analytics that matter to sales teams.
Intercom Pricing
Intercomâs Starter plan comes in at just $888 a year. However, this only includes their standard AI for customer service chatbot, and you canât add any custom responses until you upgrade to the Pro or Premium plans (pricing obscured).
4. ZoomInfo Chat - Best For A Full Stack GTM SolutionÂ
Why Consider ZoomInfo Chat As An Alternative To Drift?
ZoomInfo Chat is an obvious solution if youâre already using the companyâs MarketingOS or SalesOS suites.Â
Or, of course, if youâre looking for a chatbot tool as part of a wider go-to-market strategy and you like the idea of managing everything in a single platform.
For instance, their SalesOS suite includes a conversation intelligence feature (think Gong), which can be used to fuel the human element of chat-based conversations.
Where ZoomInfo Chat Falls Short
While ZoomInfo Chat does allow for some decent âif/thenâ workflows to guide buyers through a journey, these workflows arenât quite as strong as Signals or Qualified.
Also, Chat isnât ZoomInfoâs primary tool (or even in their set of four primary âoperating systemsâ). They acquired a company called Insent back in 2021 as an extension of their core business.
That's because they've saturated their core competency (B2B data) and have had to look for other ways to keep growing NRR.
So, while they fact that Chat isn't their primary tool isn't problematic in and of itself, it does imply that feature growth for this tool might be limited, and you will be subject to a whole lot of upsell/cross-sell conversations.
ZoomInfo Chat Pricing
Unfortunately, ZoomInfo is one of those âyouâll have to talk to us firstâ companies, so we donât have any pricing details available for them.
5. Signals - Best For If/Then Workflow LogicÂ
Signals is another AI-based lead capture platform.
Attributes, behaviors, and intent signals are used to qualify visitors, and rule-based chatbot workflows drive conversations before funneling leads to a sales rep.
Signals best feature its workflows, which allows you to architect a bunch of powerful if/then logic.
Sure, this takes a bit of setting up, but once youâve got the conditional logic locked in, youâll have a great contextual conversation marketing tool.
Signals also has the ability to reveal the company of the person on your site, find the right decision-makers (based on your ICP), and add them to a pre-programmed email sequence.
Aside from that, the team at Signals is super friendly, and they've come a long way as a completely bootstrapped company.
Where Signals Falls Short
Signalsâ company data (for revealing who is on your site and for enriching that with firmographics) is all done in-house.
Other alternatives (e.g., Warmly, Qualified, and ServiceBell) partner with third-party data suppliers, such as 6sense and Clearbit, to reveal anonymous visitors and then enrich that with best-in-class data.
Signals Pricing
Signals is one of the few alternatives to Drift that allows you to pay monthly.
Plans start at $599 a month or $5988 a year (they provide a discount for annual subscriptions).
Why Consider HubSpotChat As An Alternative To Drift?
HubSpotChat is a good option for a simple, basic, out-of-the-box chat tool.
It doesnât offer the deepest functionality, but it is available for free, which is why weâve included it in our list of Drift alternatives.
Where HubSpotChat Falls Short
To be quite honest, the list of cons is a lot longer than the list of pros for this one.
HubSpotChat lacks a lot of functionality that platforms like Warmly and Qualified can support, like:
Intent identification
Company reveal
Full-cycle orchestration
Reporting and analyticsÂ
HubSpotChat Pricing
HubSpotChat is one of many free tools from HubSpot. For deeper functionality, however, youâll need to subscribe to one of their paid plans (like their MarketingHub suite).
7. Warmly - Best For Account-Based OrchestrationÂ
Warmly (yours truly) combines the best of AI-powered automation and real-life human involvement.
We call this account-based orchestrationâa more scalable, efficient, and cost-effective alternative to account-based marketing.
There are so many awesome tools out there that help with intent data and buyer signals, but all of these siloed solutions still have to be orchestrated.
Usually, this orchestration is a human job, which is super costly in both time and money, and that's before considering what's involved in maintaining that complex tech stack.
This puts effective sales orchestration largely out of reach for SMBs (so, like, 99% of organizations).
Warmly has the first sales orchestration solution that automates this process quickly and seamlessly and delivers truly ready-to-buy/try prospects to sales.
Why Consider Warmly As An Alternative To Drift?
When 35-50% of sales go to the company that responds first, speed is everything. But only 7% of companies respond within five minutes of a prospectâs form submission, and half don't even respond until five business days later.
Warmly provides the best (in our opinion) middle ground between human touch and AI automation, helping you respond to buyer intent lightning-fast and drastically improving your speed-to-lead.
Our agile platform combines best-in-class intent data from 6sense, Clearbit, Bombora, and People Data Labs to help you capture every piece of intent and understand exactly when an actual human should engage.
Hereâs the big difference:
We use generative AI to automate and personalize outreach on your rep's behalf.Â
This is triggered by intent signals from the tools you already have in your tech stack (Apollo.io, HubSpot, Salesforce, Slack, Pipedrive, Outreach, SalesLoft, etc.).
The entire workflowâfrom intent being triggered to outreach being firedâis automated. This delivers more consistent coverage and messaging, plus much faster and more proactive communication with high-intent prospects.
All of these touchpoints look like they come from an AE (personalized emails, LinkedIn requests, messages, etc.) but are, in fact, automated and sent by Warmlyâs orchestration system.
You can set up AI-generated messages triggered based on known prospect data:
    Â
The chatbot will also communicate with the relevant sales rep (via Slack integration), so they can jump in and reply in real-time when appropriate.
    Â
This transition takes place seamlessly, as if they were speaking with you all along!
Warmly helps growing SMBs scale up an AI SDR army to catch interest at optimal points, only looping in sellers when an account is actually ready for a human conversation.
Warmly is designed for the SMB and lower middle market. Easy to start. Easy to use. Easy to see ROI.
That means weâre a great alternative for smaller and mid-sized organizations who see Driftâs enterprise feature set (and subsequent cost) as overkill, but it does mean that our integrations right now donât fully support the upper middle market or enterprise organizations.
At $850 a month, our most basic paid plan comes in at 30% of the price of Driftâs cheapest tier and less than 25% of the price of Qualified, a popular Drift alternative.
Plus, unlike some of the other Drift alternatives discussed here, you can get started for free on our platform without needing to chat with a salesperson.
Why Consider An Alternative To Drift?Â
Drift has been the defacto brand for sales-focused chatbots for a few years now. Theyâre regularly praised for coining the term âconversational marketingâ and for even creating the category itself.
So, why might you consider a Drift alternative in the first place?
Prohibitive Pricing
Letâs be honest:Â
Drift is not cheap.
They've shifted their focus to enterprise, and it's reflected in their pricing.
Their cheapest plan, which is billed as being for âsmall businesses,â comes in at $30k a year. They also have a $90k and a custom enterprise option, which is what theyâre really gunning for.
To be sure, this is the standard path for software companies.Â
Drift, like many others, started off servicing SMBs. Then, they gradually moved upmarket as the brand gained traction, and their size allowed them to pursue deals with a greater CAC but a much higher deal size.
Thatâs great news for them, but it does leave Drift as an immediate non-option for smaller organizations with leaner budgets.
No Human InvolvementÂ
Driftâs focus has always been on using automated conversation workflows to drive the passive collections of leads from your website over to sales.
This works well with high-volume traffic, as it becomes a numbers game. With 200,000 monthly visitors to your site, even a 1% conversion rate drives 200 new leads a month.
Clearly, this is less effective for smaller companies with a lot less traffic coming through each month. But, more importantly, a fully passive and automated approach leaves a lot of quality intent on the table by not getting a human involved.
Some alternatives to Drift (such as Warmly, Qualified, and ServiceBell) improve on the Drift model by putting a greater focus on human involvement.Â
Lack Of Proactive, Real-Time EngagementÂ
Drift doesnât really have a feature to show what people are doing on your site in real-time.
This means that you canât interact with them proactively. Drift is designed to be reactive, kicking off when a visitor engages with the chatbot and then routing that customer to sales.
An SDR Army at Fraction of The Price of DriftÂ
Drift is, without a doubt, the industry standard for on-site conversational marketing.
But with industry-standard tools come industry-standard price tags, not to mention some pretty heavy startup costs, once you consider the weeks (or months!) involved in integration and onboarding sessions.Â
With Warmly, you can begin receiving hard ROI in 20 minutes with just two steps :
Add a code snippet to the site
One-click authenticate your existing systems (Hubspot, Outreach, Apollo, Slack, LinkedIn, etc.)
Youâll immediately start improving conversion rates by revealing who is on your site, enriching that with best-in-class data, syncing that data back to your CRM, and routing hot accounts to the right rep.
Plus, with plans starting from just $850 a month (billed annually), youâll reduce your Drift bill by at ~70%.
How Warmly Helps Client-Facing Teams Build Trust Over Zoom
Time to read
Maximus Greenwald
An investment banker, a lawyer, and a consultant walk into a bar.
What do they all have in common?
Theyâre all client-facing positions that depend on building long-term relationships with customers. And for the past few years, theyâve all been working over Zoom.
While no physical travel means that client-facing professionals can squeeze more meetings into their day, itâs also led to a massive drop-off in client connections. We all know the ROI on client relationships is huge. Better relationships lead to increased customer satisfaction scores, which means more loyal clients who continue to buy your companyâs services.
The biggest issue facing client-facing team executives is enforcing standardization. How can you coach professionals under you in the companyâs way of doing business, while maintaining the individuality that helps the agent bond with clients?
Digital transformation poses a challenge, but also an opportunity. Warmly is working on tools that help executives managing investment bankers, consultants, and lawyers leverage brand logos and taglines, while also allowing creativity and nuance in forming connections.
Building Trust With Prospects Over Zoom
Creating trust is something our company has painstakingly dissected over several years of engaging and talking to thousands of business professionals. Weâve found that a sense of trust is broken down into three main factors.
1. Finding Commonality
People are naturally predisposed to run away. Thatâs because until very recently in our evolution, human beings were often prey. Our natural sense of distrust is what kept us alive. Research also shows that why we do trust hinges on another evolutionary trait: we are much more likely to trust people who are similar to us in some way.
While coaching enterprise clients on how to use our software with clients, we stress that users should display their city, the local weather, and idiosyncratic things about themselves in their Zoom name tag. That increases the chance that they will immediately find something in common on which to build that initial bond.
Maybe the consultant is Zooming in from Colorado, and the client just got back from Vail. The rapport generated by this insight tells the client: Hey, weâve had shared experiences. Iâm not going to hurt you, and helps the client let their guard down.
2. Establishing Credibility
Buyers want to know the seller knows what theyâre doing. A professional who logs onto a meeting with the prospectâs logo incorporated into their Zoom background is demonstrating that they came to the meeting prepared. Having the meeting agenda hanging over their shoulder is another way to look professional.
The impression can fail, however, if the usage varies wildly across the company. Warmlyâs enterprise license includes brand standardization tools so clients always feel like theyâre getting the same caliber of professionalism, even if theyâre dealing with someone new.
A local credit union that Warmly helped set up had never done virtual meetings with customers prior to the pandemic, and didnât realize how they were coming across. Their customer satisfaction scores dropped dramaticallyânot because they suddenly werenât good at what to do. Itâs scary to put your life savings into an institution, and the representatives were used to building these connections in person. By implementing Warmlyâs Zoom add-on, every banker showed up to client meetings with a fun and unique business card that matched their coworkers, along with a personal bio that resonates with the local customer. The standardization also creates continuity, even if a client is dealing with a different banker on any given day.
New clients also want to feel assured that the professional has a track record of success in their field. Social proof is a powerful driver of emotion, and there are multiple options in the Warmly add-on for Zoom to engender that trust.
Consulting clients have found success adding a QR code over their shoulder linking to prior case studies. You can also have the codes link to corporate social handles that showcase prior or current companies you have worked with. Why not run a ticker tape with the logos of your biggest clients or all the five-star reviews your company has had across the bottom?
Dissemination of these assets should also be easy and error-proof to avoid unnecessary slip-ups. Weâve coached an insurance company executive at a company where business was booming. They had recently hired hundreds of representatives, but many were not aware of all the valuable collateral they were able to offer clients. During a demonstration, Warmly helped them upload and instantly distribute customer presentation material that their salesmen can simply hover over their shoulders during Zoom calls whenever a customer asks for it. â
3. Forge Authenticity
A common mistake service professionals make is that they immediately try to sell a service. Services are not sold, theyâre bought. When you want to buy something, itâs because you have a sense of trust, you think theyâre professional, that they have done this for other people. More importantly, itâs because they get you. People want to feel like others truly understands them and their problems.
As a client-facing professional, you are trying to identify their problems and whether you can help, not trying to force a solution down their throat that doesnât fit. That means asking doing our pre-meeting prep on both the company and the individual youâre meeting. It also means asking questions with the intent of figuring out what problems the client has, and whether you can helpânot forcing a solution down their throats if it doesnât fit.
Spend time understanding the person youâre talking to, what they are working toward, and their goals for their business. Then see where you fit into helping them achieve those goals. Warmly also lets you take notes within Zoom, so you can stay focused on their needs.
Conclusion
We believe that a corporation should create a sense of uniformity, brand standardization, and professionalism across all their client-facing teams. Instantly matching backgrounds, coordinating release of company announcements at the same time, sharing tidbits and news about the company, creating a professional introductory experience shows the client that your company is a serious company worth working with.
We recently advised a law firm in Australia that had been struggling to create an air of professionalism in their meetings. They didnât know who was calling in from where. They didnât know what the right background or logo to use across the company. Everybody would use different things in all the wrong places. Warmly allowed them to instantly distribute the right business-branded collateral to ensure a consistent client-facing experience that led to increased customer satisfaction scores for all their legal teams and even the securing of new business because their clients enjoyed working with them virtually more so than competition.
Warmly is now working on a unique, branded in-meeting client experience to help companies recreate the professionalism of a physical board room during virtual meetings.
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50 Icebreakers for Your Next Zoom Meeting
Time to read
Maximus Greenwald
Have you ever met someone entirely new over Zoom for the very first time? Of course you have. Now, have you ever had butterflies wondering what youâre going to say to break the ice with that new contact? Yup. It happens to the best of us.
Icebreakers arenât just cheesy or silly, but rather, they can help you build interesting context around the person youâre meeting. For instance, if you ask them what they wish theyâd studied in college, and they say psychology, you can follow up with that interesting new study you saw in Scientific American. If someone admits to being a night owl and not an early bird, you can schedule a late-night follow-up email as a reference to their preference.
Context leads to rapport, and rapport leads to stronger connections -- in both business, and life. So, please ask some (gently) probing questions, and use these 50 icebreakers in your next call. (And whatever they answer, donât forget to jot a note down in Warmly, so you remember their secret skill!)
Whatâs your favorite dish that reminds you of childhood?
Whatâs your comfort food?
Are you a beach or a mountain person and why?
What is a hobby you've always wanted to pick up?
What was your first concert you went to?
Whoâs a famous person youâve met?
If you could write a book, what genre would you write it in? (ie mystery, thriller, romance, historical fiction, fantasy, non-fiction, etc?)
Whatâs a secret skill you have?
Whatâs the first thing you bought with your own money?
Whatâs your favorite place to go when you want to be alone?
What was your first job?
If you could spend an extra $100 on yourself each week, what would you do?
If you could get another degree in something now, what would you study?
What show or movie have you really enjoyed recently?
How do you like to relax?
Which actor would you want to play you in a movie?
Whatâs your beverage of choice?
What TV show or movie do you want to watch next?
What was the last place you traveled to?
Are you an early bird or a night owl?
Whatâs your best tip to not go crazy indoors?
Whatâs a funny corona meme or video you've seen?
Whatâs the first thing youâre gonna do when the quarantine is over?
What is something you got into trouble for in high school?
Whatâs the worst job you ever had?
Whatâs something you tried, but will never try again?
Whatâs one thing thatâs happened to you that has made you a stronger person?
Whatâs one thing thatâs happened to you in your life that made you feel weak?
Where is one place you feel most like yourself?
Where is your favorite place to escape to?
Who do you think has had the largest influence on the person you are today?
If you could change one thing about yourself what would it be?
If you had one day left to live, what would you do first?
What decade do you feel you most belong in?
Who are you closest to in your family? Why?
Who is the one person in this world that knows you best?
What is your favorite quality about your best friend?
When you were younger what did you think you were going to be when you grew up?
If you could identify with one fictional character (from a book, show, or movie) who would it be?
Do you easily accept compliments? Or do you hate compliments?
Is your favorite attribute about yourself physical or non-physical?
What is your favorite physical attribute about yourself?
What is your favorite non-physical attribute about yourself?
Do you believe in love at first sight?
Do you believe in soul mates?
How seriously do you take horoscopes?
Have you ever been in love? How many times?
What makes you fall in love with someone?
What does vulnerability mean to you? What has the ability to make you vulnerable?
Whatâs one thing youâre scared to ask a woman/man, but really want to?
10 Zoom Hacks to Make Virtual Meetings More Productive
Time to read
Maximus Greenwald
Can we all agree that Zoom is awkward and time-consuming? âYouâre on muteâ was one of the most used phrases in corporate America during the pandemic, right behind ânew normalâ and âunprecedented times.â
Now that Zoom is the de-facto virtual workplace for most people, so much time is wasted on inefficiencies like mute/unmute, coordinating with your virtual sales team, and scrambling to find the link to your next meeting.
If youâre consistently running five minutes behind, try these 10 Zoom hacks for making your virtual meetings more productive.
Problem #1: It only gets good at the end.
Salespeople know to always schedule the next meeting before you get off the phone with the prospect, but you donât get to that until the end of the first one. How many times have you found yourself running late to your next demo call? You know how rude it is to the second person, but donât want to mess things up with this one either. What do you do?
If you have Warmly, use the Running Late feature to customize a template for what to say when this situation comes up. With one click, you can let your next meeting know youâre running a few minutes behind, while still focusing on next steps for your first meeting.
Whether youâre meeting a prospect, coworker, or a friend, you want people to feel like you respect their time, so be professional and always apologize when things come up.
Problem #2: Youâre always late to your next meeting.
If you find yourself chronically late, the best thing to do is schedule a few minutes between virtual meetings. If thatâs not possible, try using the Warmly Zoom Appâs in-meeting countdown timer. It will pop up a huge warning when thereâs a few minutes left in your meeting, so you know to wrap it up. The best part? It also shows a âJoin Meetingâ button, so you can hop onto your next meeting straight from the previous one without having to fumble for a link.Â
Problem #3: Your conversation partner is missing.
Your teammate or a prospect is running behind. You donât know if theyâre even there. You could try pulling up their email, phone number, or Slack, but all those require multiple steps and the clock is ticking. How can you ping them quickly? With one click in the Warmly Zoom App, you can send them a Where r u? message that will notify the that the meeting is happening and even send them a Zoom link so they can get to the meeting really easily.
Problem #4: You forgot to take notes.
How often have you gotten off a string of calls and realized that you forgot to take notes for half of them? If youâre one of those people who always forgets to jot things down after a meeting, try using an app like Warmly that pops up a message after every meeting and prompts you to add a quick follow-up, action item, or reminder before moving on.
Problem #5: You always forget to unmute.
How often do you start talking, figure out youâre on mute, quickly jam the unmute button, but then have to wait for a 3-second lag until you can speak again? You can leave your audio on, but then you risk passing sirens, roommates, kids or pets disrupting the meeting. Try using Zoomâs built-in push-to-talk feature. You can keep yourself muted, and just hold down the spacebar to unmute whenever you want to speak. Just let go when youâre done and your audio will automatically turn off again. No more racing around your trackpad to hit the Mute/Unmute button.
Problem #6: Itâs too hard to coordinate your virtual sales team.
When youâre selling as a squad, looking unified can make a great impression. Your sales team can wear matching t-shirts, or better yet, match your backgrounds. Try emailing a picture to everyone on the team and have them upload it themselves. If you donât want to risk a coworker messing up or forgetting, Warmly also has a Matching Background feature where one person can upload a background and it will automatically populate for everyone else on the team.
Problem #7: Do we have a mutual connection?
In a survey we did of 1,000 business professionals, 74% have found themselves researching a person while speaking to them. If youâre looking someone up during a virtual meeting, you arenât focused on building a relationship with them. Instead of pulling up a browser, use a tool like Warmly that automatically pulls up context on the person youâre speaking to, and even their LinkedIn page, all without leaving Zoom.
Problem #8: I canât remember how I met this person.
Getting an introduction or having a professional âmeet cuteâ is a great way to start off on a warm foot. Yet what if you canât remember the mutual contact that brought you together, or what you talked about by email six months ago?
The Warmly Zoom App doubles as a personal CRMâor a superhero assistantâby automatically pulling up past email exchanges. It also makes people feel important when you remember little details about them.
Problem #9: You need a waiting room.
Too many meetings back-to-back? If you send everyone a different Zoom link, youâll go crazy trying to track down the right meeting code for all of them. Try using the same link for all your virtual meetings with Zoomâs Waiting Room feature. Youâll stay in the same call, and everyone who meets with you can join at their scheduled time. If someone shows up earlyâor youâre running lateâthe next person will be put in a virtual waiting room until you let them in.
Problem #10: Who am I talking to again?
âDo you ever wish you had an org chart in front of you when youâre talking to someone? Maybe you want to know who their boss is, so that you can ask for an introduction. Organizational charts are crucial for high-level sales.
You can look up someoneâs LinkedIn page, but knowing their title wonât always tell you who they answer to. Try a resource like The Org to see where they stand in their organization. Warmly People Insights will also provide this information right in the Zoom App so you donât have to pull up a browser on the sly.