To cut through the 'white noise' of feature-focused B2B marketing, Monday.com centers its strategy on an emotional differentiator: creating a product that people genuinely love to use. This insight, derived from customer testimonials, allows for a more resonant and memorable brand narrative that challenges industry norms.
Delight isn't just for consumers. Technical B2B companies embed emotional goals into their product values. For instance, Snowflake aims to make users feel like a "superhero," highlighting the B2H (Business-to-Human) principle: end users, even in enterprise settings, have emotional needs.
The need for emotional connection isn't limited to consumer products. All software is used by humans whose expectations are set by the best B2C experiences. Even enterprise products must honor user emotions to succeed, a concept termed 'Business to Human'.
The ultimate PLG companies are consumer brands like shampoo, which sell on brand affinity, not commoditized features. As software becomes more commoditized, B2B companies must similarly build a strong brand theme that inspires users to associate with them, creating a more durable moat than features alone.
Instead of comparing to competitors, compare your product to the ideal human interaction. Google Meet aimed to be like a real conversation, not just better than Zoom. This 'humanization' framework pushes teams to think beyond features and focus on a more intuitive, emotionally resonant experience.
Monday.com's seemingly risky campaign featuring singing llamas felt logical internally because it stemmed from a core product truth: a 'llama farm' widget within the software. This demonstrates that audacious creative ideas can be de-risked and justified when they are authentic extensions of the product experience, not just arbitrary concepts.
Instead of contributing to the AI hype, Monday.com's campaign acknowledged the market's collective feeling of being overwhelmed by AI buzz but underwhelmed by its tangible benefits. This human-centric approach resonated by focusing on the user's emotional state rather than just listing technological capabilities.
In a crowded market, brand is defined by the product experience, not marketing campaigns. Every interaction must evoke the intended brand feeling (e.g., "lovable"). This transforms brand into a core product responsibility and creates a powerful, defensible moat that activates word-of-mouth and differentiates you from competitors.
B2B marketers default to polished case studies, underestimating the power of raw, authentic customer reviews. Reviews provide an emotional connection and a sense of "realness" that resonates with buyers who are still people, not just faceless stakeholders.
The first step to humanizing a brand is not internal brainstorming, but conducting deep-dive interviews with recent customers. The goal is to understand precisely what problem they were solving and why they chose your solution over others, grounding your brand messaging in real-world validation.
Move beyond listing features and benefits. The most powerful brands connect with customers by selling the emotional result of using the product. For example, Swishables sells 'confidence' for a meeting after coffee, not just 'liquid mouthwash.' This emotional connection is the ultimate brand moat.