Manage episode 523772736 series 3672693
Content that actually resonates starts with telling the whole truth about what you can and cannot do right now. In this conversation, Trevor Grimes sits down with Tylor Jones, Director of Digital Acquisition at SIB Fixed Cost Reduction and 3X demand gen leader, to talk through category busting content, flopped campaigns, and building something that really matters.
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Tylor shares the long journey from 35 years of fixed cost reduction data to Spend Brain, a niche LLM that lets you “have a conversation with your spend,” plus how he borrows the B2C playbook, spends $100,000 a month on Meta, and uses UGC videos to make a complex offer feel simple.
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They walk through painful PLG and FBA reimbursement flops, the almond milk story, Reddit threads, cults, The Wandering Home Podcast, and why most teams under $20 million should stop chasing podcasts and ebooks and move the needle with honest structure, clear distribution, and real communities.
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👤 Guest Bio — Tylor Jones
Elder Emo, 3X demand gen leader, and self-described Gandalf of growth marketing, Tylor Jones is Director of Digital Acquisition at SIB Fixed Cost Reduction, a private equity–backed cost reduction and spend management firm. He builds and scales modern demand generation engines across high-growth B2B SaaS and B2B e-commerce, owning pipeline targets, budget, multichannel strategy, and executive-level reporting.
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Tylor also leads growth marketing for Getida, the largest FBA reimbursements auditor on the globe, and helps drive 3X inbound and 2X marketing-sourced pipeline. Outside of work, he co-hosts The Wandering Home Podcast, where a former pastor and a secular friend talk church, cults, and everything in between.
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📌 What We Cover
- Content that actually resonates vs. content that just talks: why “stop mimicking and start making content that actually matters” is the starting point for both personal brand and company brand.
- Productizing fixed cost reduction into Spend Brain: how 35 years of enterprise spend data, an in-house AI and LLM, and “a conversation with your spend” turned a gray-hat-feeling service into extreme clarity for $100M+ businesses.
- Category busting content and the almond milk example: putting yourself “next to milk in the refrigerator” even when you don’t have to be there, fighting for that position, and using competitors’ categories as the comparison point.
- Borrowing the B2C playbook for B2B: why Tylor spends around $100,000 a month on Meta, runs UGC videos, blends product led and sales led motions, and treats category creation like a busy experiment instead of a static play.
- Two big flops and what they changed: a 10-video PLG onboarding series nobody watched, and an Amazon FBA reimbursement launch with a great deck, landing page, and CGO video—but weak distribution and wrong message order.
- UGC talent vs. “just use your webcam”: how Billo actors, stable spokespeople, consistent lighting, strong audio, and screen-cap product tours set the quality standard brands can’t drop below—while BDRs still use lo-fi 1:1 video in outreach.
- PLG, support, and that missing 70%: what happens when only ~30% of signups become paying customers, why interactive tours and in-product video libraries matter, and how support teams and qualifying questions help move people before the fish is off the hook.
- Reddit, Quora, and communities vs. brand-only content: using fp&a threads, Amazon seller conversations, and community posts to show up where people already care, plus how that helps Chat GPT recommend Spend Brain as an emerging platform.
- The Wandering Home Podcast and side projects: turning church hurt, cult stories from Hamilton, Alabama, and long-form conversations into a book, shirts, Reddit content, and 3–4K monthly website visitors without chasing a “perfect” funnel.
- The under-$20M hill to die on: why most teams with small marketing orgs and under $20 million in revenue should focus on structural things that move the needle—distribution, pipeline, communities—before they start a company podcast or crank out ebook after ebook.
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🔗 Resources Mentioned
- SIB Fixed Cost Reduction – market leading provider of cost reduction and spend management services; more at aboutsib.com
- Spend Brain – SIB’s AI and LLM-powered spend platform that lets you “have a conversation with your spend”
- Getida – FBA reimbursements auditor for Amazon sellers and FBA shipments
- “Crossing the Chasm” – product marketing book on early adopters, the middle hump, and crossing the gap
- The Wandering Home Podcast – Tylor’s side project with a former pastor; also referenced as the wandering home dot com
- The Ramp (Hamilton, Alabama) – church / cult story mentioned around TikTok, Bible network, and viral clips
- Chris Walker and Refine Labs – category and almond milk story, plus the early webcam-to-agency path
- Riverside – recording tool they use for the podcast
- Reddit and Quora – communities Tylor uses for fp&a, Amazon FBA, and AI spend intelligence conversations
- Asana, Figma, Slack – PLG product examples used to talk about onboarding, interactive tours, and product usage
- ZoomInfo and Lucia – data platforms in the PLG story around signups and paid conversions
- Pendo – product tool for in-app tours and triggered video popups
- Meta – where Tylor spends about $100,000 a month on B2C-style campaigns for B2B offers
- Chat GPT / GPT – LLMs and AI models compared to Spend Brain and used as a referral channel
- Sammy Kershaw – “Queen of My Double Wide Trailer” – where “Charlie Daniels of the torque wrench” inspired the “Charlie Daniels of demand gen” line
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21 episodes