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B2B No Bull

Podkast av Liz Brohan

engelsk

Business

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Conversations about marketing communications for B2B marketers.

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20 Episoder

episode From trinkets and trash to lux and leading brands: Elevating your merch is a must. cover

From trinkets and trash to lux and leading brands: Elevating your merch is a must.

In this episode of B2B No Bull, hosts Liz Brohan and Mark Brohan dive into the surprisingly complex and rapidly evolving world of promotional merchandise with guest Sarah Johnston, founder of PromoSpark. What was once dismissed as cheap “swag” has transformed into a strategic marketing channel focused on premium quality, brand storytelling, and measurable impact. Sarah breaks down the industry’s shift from quantity to quality, emphasizing that today’s consumers expect useful, sustainable, and brand-aligned products. Cheap giveaways don’t just get discarded—they can actively harm brand perception. In contrast, well-designed, high-quality merchandise can generate thousands of impressions over time and strengthen emotional connections with customers and employees. The conversation explores how COVID-19 accelerated innovation, pushing the industry toward e-commerce, print-on-demand, and direct-to-home fulfillment. From curated “work-from-home kits” to online company stores and points-based redemption systems, merch has become more personalized, scalable, and experience-driven. Sustainability also takes center stage, evolving beyond recycled materials to include product longevity, ethical sourcing, and ESG considerations. Sarah highlights how brands must think holistically about impact—not just cost. Operationally, the industry has matured with “team selling” models that bring together specialists in design, logistics, and strategy to better serve clients. Sarah also shares her entrepreneurial journey—launching her business at 22, scaling it, and ultimately selling it—along with her passion for giving back through Free Throws for Kids, a nonprofit that has raised over $1.4 million. The bottom line: promotional merchandise is no longer an afterthought—it’s a powerful, data-driven marketing tool when done right.   Resources Mentioned 1. PromoSpark – Promotional merchandise company founded by Sarah Johnston  2. Brand partners like Yeti, Nike, and The North Face (premium merch examples)  3. E-commerce platforms for merch (print-on-demand, web stores)  4. Points-based rewards and redemption systems for engagement  5. Free Throws for Kids – Nonprofit supporting Cincinnati Children’s Hospital and Ronald McDonald House    Highlight Quotes 1. “If your merch ends up in the trash faster than your message lands—your strategy is broken.”  2. “Cheap swag doesn’t save money—it costs you your brand.”  3. “Great merch isn’t a giveaway anymore—it’s an experience, a touchpoint, and a long-term impression machine.”   Produced by: Flint Rock Art by: Brohan Productions Music licensed through: Flint Rock

14. april 2026 - 39 min
episode The State of DEIB: From Backlash to Business Alignment cover

The State of DEIB: From Backlash to Business Alignment

In this episode of B2B No Bull, hosts Liz and Mark Brohan tackle the evolving—and increasingly messy—state of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging (DEIB). Joined by transformational growth advisor Sarah Alter, former CEO of NextUp, the conversation reframes DEIB from a political flashpoint to a business imperative. Alter explains how legal challenges—first in higher education, then in corporate America—have pushed some companies to scale back, go “stealth,” or rebrand DEIB efforts around performance metrics. But she argues the core objective hasn’t changed: organizational alignment. Using examples from companies like Target, Costco, Johnson & Johnson, Coca-Cola, Delta Air Lines, Best Buy, and Nestlé, she highlights how leaders who stay focused on mission alignment, employee engagement, and innovation often see stronger business outcomes. Alter outlines two key leadership actions: 1. Tie cultural initiatives directly to measurable KPIs (retention, productivity, innovation). 2. Drive alignment from the CEO down through structured tools like BlueSpark’s Organizational Performance Survey (OPS). She also shares insights from the “Beyond Allies” program, built on the 70-20-10 learning model and emotional intelligence principles, emphasizing that culture change requires practice—not just policy. The takeaway? Alignment—not acronyms—drives results. And companies that treat employees as whole people, investing in mental health, affinity groups, and resilience, are positioning themselves for sustainable success. Resources & References Mentioned 1. NextUp – Leadership development and the “Beyond Allies” program 2. BlueSpark – Organizational Performance Survey (OPS) 3. Breakthrough T1D (formerly JDRF) 4. Orphans of the Storm – Capital campaign initiative 5. University of Chicago Booth School of Business – Mentioned in discussion of employee benefits trends   Highlight Quotes 1. “Alignment—not acronyms—is what drives business results.” 2. “If DEIB isn’t connected to KPIs like retention, productivity, and innovation, it won’t stick.” 3. “Culture change isn’t a webinar—it’s a muscle. You build it through practice, partnership, and leadership from the top.” Produced by: Flint Rock Art by: Brohan Productions Music licensed through: Flint Rock

3. mars 2026 - 38 min
episode The State of DEIB: From Backlash to Business Alignment cover

The State of DEIB: From Backlash to Business Alignment

The State of DEIB: From Backlash to Business Alignment In this episode of B2B No Bull, hosts Liz and Mark Brohan tackle the evolving—and increasingly messy—state of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging (DEIB). Joined by transformational growth advisor Sarah Alter, former CEO of NextUp, the conversation reframes DEIB from a political flashpoint to a business imperative. Alter explains how legal challenges—first in higher education, then in corporate America—have pushed some companies to scale back, go “stealth,” or rebrand DEIB efforts around performance metrics. But she argues the core objective hasn’t changed: organizational alignment. Using examples from companies like Target, Costco, Johnson & Johnson, Coca-Cola, Delta Air Lines, Best Buy, and Nestlé, she highlights how leaders who stay focused on mission alignment, employee engagement, and innovation often see stronger business outcomes. Alter outlines two key leadership actions: 1. Tie cultural initiatives directly to measurable KPIs (retention, productivity, innovation). 2. Drive alignment from the CEO down through structured tools like BlueSpark’s Organizational Performance Survey (OPS). She also shares insights from the “Beyond Allies” program, built on the 70-20-10 learning model and emotional intelligence principles, emphasizing that culture change requires practice—not just policy. The takeaway? Alignment—not acronyms—drives results. And companies that treat employees as whole people, investing in mental health, affinity groups, and resilience, are positioning themselves for sustainable success. Resources & References Mentioned 1. NextUp – Leadership development and the “Beyond Allies” program 2. BlueSpark – Organizational Performance Survey (OPS) 3. Breakthrough T1D (formerly JDRF) 4. Orphans of the Storm – Capital campaign initiative 5. University of Chicago Booth School of Business – Mentioned in discussion of employee benefits trends   Highlight Quotes 1. “Alignment—not acronyms—is what drives business results.” 2. “If DEIB isn’t connected to KPIs like retention, productivity, and innovation, it won’t stick.” 3. “Culture change isn’t a webinar—it’s a muscle. You build it through practice, partnership, and leadership from the top.” Produced by: Flint Rock Art by: Brohan Productions Music licensed through: Flint Rock

3. mars 2026 - 38 min
episode Innovate Now: Because Your Competition Isn’t cover

Innovate Now: Because Your Competition Isn’t

In this episode of B2B, No Bull, hosts Liz Brohan and her brother Mark Brohan are joined by innovation veteran Richard Guha, whose 45+ year career spans four continents, multiple C-suite roles, startups, boardrooms, and classrooms. Together, they unpack a hard truth: most companies don’t struggle with innovation because they lack ideas—they struggle because they don’t understand the real problems worth solving. Richard challenges the myth that innovation is about big brainstorming sessions, flashy product launches, or chasing the latest technology. Instead, he argues innovation is a diagnostic discipline rooted in listening deeply to customers, understanding unmet needs, and applying technology as an enabler—not the driver. Through vivid examples from energy, manufacturing, CPG, software, and retail, he shows how breakthrough ideas often emerge from customer pain points, adjacent industries, and overlooked byproducts. The conversation explores why large organizations resist innovation, how culture and leadership signals can either unlock or kill new ideas, and why innovation must be team-driven and top-down. Richard also draws sharp distinctions between innovation and entrepreneurship, emphasizing that sustainable growth comes from curiosity, data, and constant engagement with the market. This episode is a masterclass in practical, human-centered innovation for B2B leaders. Resources & References Mentioned 1. ASML – Semiconductor manufacturing leader spun out of Philips 2. 3M & the McKnight Principles – A long-standing model for corporate innovation culture 3. Wayfair – Example of leadership staying close to customer insight through call-center engagement Highlight Quotes 1. “Innovation isn’t a brainstorming exercise—it’s a diagnostic process rooted in understanding real customer pain.” 2. “Technology should never drive the idea. The need comes first; technology simply enables it.” Produced by: Flint Rock Art by: Brohan Productions Music licensed through: Flint Rock

17. feb. 2026 - 43 min
episode Storytelling Still Sells: Why Marketers Need to Get Back to the Basics in the Age of AI cover

Storytelling Still Sells: Why Marketers Need to Get Back to the Basics in the Age of AI

In this solo episode of B2B, No Bull, host Liz Brohan welcomes Lindsay Young, President of 3 Aspens Marketing, for a deep dive into why storytelling still matters in B2B—especially in an AI-saturated world. Liz and Lindsay unpack how SEO-driven content and automation have slowly drained the soul from B2B marketing, replacing human insight with keyword-stuffed noise. While AI can accelerate workflows, Lindsay argues it should never replace thinking, empathy, or original insight. At its best, storytelling helps prospects see themselves in the narrative—reflecting their real pains, messy processes, and hard-won wins. The conversation explores how brands can reinvigorate storytelling through customer interviews, frontline sales insights, and original research. Lindsay shares practical advice on choosing quality over quantity, making long-form content worth the reader’s time, and repurposing “evergreen” stories across marketing, PR, and sales enablement. A standout theme is embracing the “messy middle” of customer journeys—being transparent about challenges rather than polishing everything to perfection. The episode closes with a fast-paced “Bull or Noble” segment tackling hot takes on AI, authenticity, long-form content, and whether storytelling really works in B2B (spoiler: it does). This episode is a reminder that even in a tech-driven era, great B2B marketing still starts—and ends—with humans.   🔗 Resource Links / Reference Materials 1. Harvard Business Review – Storytelling That Moves People https://hbr.org/2014/06/storytelling-that-moves-people 2. Content Marketing Institute – B2B Storytelling Best Practices https://contentmarketinginstitute.com/articles/b2b-storytelling/ 3. Edelman Trust Barometer (for credibility, research, and authenticity insights) https://www.edelman.com/trust-barometer   Highlight Quotes 1. “AI can speed up marketing—but it can’t replace thinking, empathy, or a story worth telling.” 2. “Nobody ever read a white paper that changed their life. Storytelling works when people see themselves in it.” 3. “B2B buyers aren’t afraid of complexity—they’re afraid of surprises. Show them the messy middle.” Produced by: Flint Rock Art by: Brohan Productions Music licensed through: Flint Rock

3. feb. 2026 - 34 min
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