With these meetups, we want to create a space where you can have discussions on a specific operations topic, and connect and learn from your peers and experts.
The topic of our first community meetup will be Automation Strategy. Joining us are Con Cirillo and Mike Jaramillo, two resident HubSpotters that have made their careers in the field of Automation. They love talking, thinking, and strategizing about it. Here’s what you need to know about them:
Con’s a Senior Customer Experience Strategist who specializes in reducing friction and applying force at every step in the flywheel using – you guessed it – automation. He has started his career at HubSpot in conversational marketing and has grown to become one of our main automation thought-leaders. Oh, and besides that, he’s an excellent conversationalist.
What you need to know about Mike is that he knows SaaS like no other. Before joining HubSpot’s Automation Team, he worked on other marketing automation platforms like Infusionsoft and ActiveCampaign as a product manager. With all that experience and product expertise he doesn't just talk about automation, he lives and breathes it.
So if you’re interested in automation, and want to discuss it with your peers, don’t hesitate to join the conversation on April 27, 11 AM (EST). It’s the ideal place to share your thoughts, get feedback on your ideas, and gather insights.
Here are some discussion starters:
How are you leveraging automation to support your strategic goals?
What is one strategy that you’re doubling down on, or backing away from?
What do you think is an overrated/underrated trend in automation?
What kind of challenges does automation cause companies to face?
Shocks I want to come but it will be 11pm here and my bedtime. 🙁
No worries! If you have any questions or topics you'd like to see discussed, just post them here. I'll be sure to record the session and share it here 🙂
Question for the event, how are you measuring the success of different branches of your workflows? The tool is very powerful, but we're having trouble understanding which branches are working better than others in order to drive decision making. Thanks and looking forward to it!