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Dig In developed a clever B2B lead generation tactic by filtering their main customer email list to identify those using work domains (excluding gmail.com, etc.). They then offered these individuals free food in exchange for a referral to their company's catering decision-maker.
Use Facebook or LinkedIn ads to target decision-makers in a specific city and industry, inviting them to an exclusive, curated dinner. This "high school party" concept positions you as a thought leader and gives you a captive audience for a low all-in cost, generating high-quality leads.
Dig In discovered its catering service for offices acted as a powerful acquisition channel. Employees would try the food for the first time catered at work, then become individual paying customers, demonstrating an effective B2B-to-B2C marketing flywheel.
Go beyond an Ideal Customer Profile (ICP) by creating a documented list of specific individuals, by name, you want to be introduced to. This shifts prospecting from an abstract exercise targeting companies to a tangible, actionable plan targeting people.
Eliminate the mental effort for your customers when asking for referrals. Use tools like LinkedIn Sales Navigator to find specific, relevant connections they have. Present this curated list and ask for introductions to those individuals. This proactive approach significantly increases the likelihood of receiving high-quality referrals.
Nathan May built a $1M ARR business with a private, invite-only newsletter for just a few hundred key decision-makers. Instead of mass marketing, he manually invited high-value targets via LinkedIn, using social proof (mentioning their peers) to build trust and generate high-ticket sales.
Instead of automatically disqualifying leads with generic email addresses, track their behavior. A user with a Gmail address who clicks a link about "what to look for when hiring" is showing strong buying signals, making them a qualified lead worth a salesperson's time.
Unlike typical B2B marketing which targets corporate domains, LinkedIn newsletters are delivered to the primary email address on a user's profile. This is often a long-held personal email, providing marketers a rare opportunity to access a highly-guarded inbox that is difficult to reach through other channels.
Instead of cold outreach, identify where employees of your target companies gather—like triathlons or industry events. Set up a booth and let them experience your product firsthand. This creates organic buzz and personal testimonials that travel back inside the organization, generating warmer leads than a direct sales approach.
If your business relies heavily on referrals from centers of influence (e.g., consultants, agencies), reframe your entire business model. Your true customer is the referral partner. Build a 'customer journey' specifically for them, focused on making it easy and profitable for them to send you well-framed, high-quality leads.
The idea of "peak newsletter" ignores the massive, untapped B2B market. Most businesses still don't use newsletters for top-of-funnel marketing. Following HubSpot's model with The Hustle, companies can acquire their ideal customers cheaply via email and nurture them, a far more efficient strategy than expensive direct lead generation.