Monday, June 29, 2026

How to Build and Use an AI Sales Coach That Closes Deals

How to Build and Use an AI Sales Coach That Closes Deals

Marketers are being asked to drive revenue. But most marketers have never been trained to sell. Furthermore, many marketers have an aversion to selling.

According to Gartner, salespeople—including marketers—who use AI to help their sales initiatives are 3.7 times more likely to meet their quotas.

Marketers have been largely focused on using AI to do more with content. But the smartest marketers are applying it to sales and lead generation efforts like customer journey mapping and ideal customer profile (ICP) configuration.

AI can make a big difference as a revenue-driving partner. It can help you with:

  • Objection handling: Marketing often hears objections before sales when getting people into the funnel, and AI can help identify and overcome objections
  • Discovery prep: Marketing is responsible for handing marketing-qualified leads (MQLs) off to sales, or sometimes even helping identify sales-qualified leads (SQLs); you can use AI to understand who you're talking to during the sales process
  • Proposal language: AI can help you clarify your product/solution packages, terms and conditions, etc.
  • Follow-up sequences: AI can help you see both the minutia of each email need as well as a 30,000 foot view of how the entire campaign should work

Building Your Sales Bot

Choose Your Platform

You can use any platform to build your sales bot. It may depend on your comfort with the tool, what you have access to within your company, or some other criteria. The only requirement to build a custom bot will be to use the paid version of your platform, so there will be an associated cost.

Using ChatGPT as an example, here's how to get started.

  • Log into ChatGPT and click on Explore GPTs. Custom GPTs are bots that have a specific job, such as building your sales bot to help with sales.
  • Click Create. This gets you started; it's that easy.
  • Now you need to prepare your bot for its sales role. Go into the create section, and here you can enter something along the lines of "Make a creative" or "Make a sales bot."
  • Click into Configure. This is where you'll get into the nitty gritty of creating your bot.
  • Name your bot and give it a description. Use a fun name that makes it feel like you're talking with a friend.
  • For instructions, answer these five questions.
    • Who is your bot? Give it a name, give it a role, and make sure it has some sort of personality.
    • Who does your bot serve? Who is your ICP? Who do you not love to work with? The more specific you can get, the better your outputs will be.
    • What is your bot's job? Give specific sales tasks it should handle (especially if it's tasks you hate—tell it that).
    • How should your bot sound? You want your bot to sound like you, especially in a sales situation—your tone, your phrases, your energy.
    • What should your bot never do? Make sure you include your boundaries, your guardrails, and things you never want it to do.
  • The tool will come up with conversation starters on its own.
  • In the knowledge section, upload any relevant files you have: sales playbooks, past proposals, pricing or spec sheets, etc. You might want to create a source of truth document that includes anything marketing and sales related that helps your bot understand you that you can easily keep updated.
  • Recommended model is subjective, so choose what works best for you—the latest model is likely best if you're just getting started and don't have a specific model preference.

You can come back to edit your bot at any time—including your instructions and documentation to make sure those stay up-to-date.

Foundational Documents to Create a Custom Sales Bot

You don't need to have all of these documents before you create your sales bot, but they are foundational to build a well-rounded custom bot.

  • Sales playbook: your sales processes, strategies, best practices
  • Product/service offers and packages: the details of what you're selling
  • ICP: who you're selling to, and who you don't want to work with
  • Sales scripts or templates: how you engage with your prospects
  • Financial minimums: the minimum amount you're willing to work for
  • Boundary language: phrases you want to flag that you won't do (e.g., contract terms that are too long for your schedule, using a discount to close a deal)
  • Motivation anchor: why you do this work

If you don't already have these documents, you can use your bot to help you build them. Use the following sample prompt to get started.

Sample prompt: I'm setting up a custom sales bot, and I need your help building my foundation. I don't have a formal sales playbook yet. Can you interview me, one question at a time, to help me define:

  • My ideal client profile
  • My offers and pricing
  • My financial minimums
  • My boundary language
  • My sales process

Start with the first question.

Setting Guardrails for Your Sales Bot

It is critical that your bot knows your guardrails—the things you never want it to do. Things like:

  • Never recommend discounting to close a deal
  • Never assume a lead is ready to buy without qualifying first
  • Never use urgency language that feels manipulative or pushy
  • Never skip asking about budget, timeline, or decision-makers

You also want to tell your bot what to always do, such as:

  • Always bring the conversation back to the prospect's problem
  • Always suggest a clear next step at the end of every interaction
  • Always protect the user's pricing floor
  • Always reframe objections before responding to them

Generic AI practices will give you generic outputs or answers. If you train your AI specifically, it will give you the answers you need.

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If you need help with your email, web site, video, or other presentation to promote your company, product, or service, please give me a call at 330-815-1803 or email me at john@x2media.us

Until next month. . . .remember. "you don't get a 2nd chance to make a 1st impression." Always make it a good one!!


Thursday, May 28, 2026

From Coverage to Conversion: Measuring PR’s Impact on Pipeline and Revenue

From Coverage to Conversion: Measuring PR’s Impact on Pipeline and Revenue

Landing a story in a key publication builds credibility, shapes perception, and generates awareness. Valuable? Absolutely. But many teams struggle to measure and communicate PR's business impact, causing questions from leadership about the return on your PR efforts.

The measurement challenge for PR is unique, requiring specialized solutions. Unlike direct ad clicks, PR influences prospects across multiple touchpoints over extended periods. So why not co-opt digital ad tracking and apply it to PR?

Modern attribution systems can track many of these touchpoints as part of the complete customer journey, integrating communications interactions with all other marketing and sales activities. This unified approach is a much better way to show how PR works with your other channels to influence prospects from initial awareness through final conversion and beyond.

The new opportunity for PR teams doesn't require abandoning what works—it builds on it.

Turning Earned Media Into a Revenue Asset

Turning earned media into a revenue asset is one of the most significant opportunities we've seen in the evolution of PR measurement in decades.

While other marketing disciplines have consistently developed sophisticated attribution models, PR is now experiencing its own measurement revolution, with new technologies and methodologies that finally make comprehensive business impact measurement achievable.

This transformation moves PR from an awareness-focused activity to a measurable business driver with demonstrable ROI.

Coverage remains essential, but what if it could do all that and more? By layering in amplification and measurement, PR teams can extend the reach and impact of every win. This approach transforms coverage from a moment in time into a measurable driver of leads, pipeline, and revenue.

Amplify Your Coverage

It sounds simple but amplifying your coverage is the critical step PR teams often miss. Once you get media coverage, there's real opportunity to put that coverage—and the implied endorsement that comes with it—directly in front of your target audiences.

This systematic amplification can include LinkedIn sponsored content, email campaigns, promoting your coverage to your target audience, and strategic retargeting. Amplifying coverage:

  • Reaches the right audiences not just once, but repeatedly with a clear call to action
  • Becomes part of paid, owned, and retargeting ecosystems
  • Continues influencing buyers long after initial publication
  • Extends the PR lifespan, increases its reach, and creates the touchpoints that make downstream measurement possible

Attribute Responsibly

Measure what can be measured without false precision. There's not always a clean, trackable digital trail with PR or any top of funnel marketing. Conversations happen offline, buyers remember brands, they see multiple touchpoints, and decisions unfold over time.

Track PR by connecting touchpoints to buyer behavior, pipeline influence, and revenue using modeling and lift analysis to understand impact where direct attribution is not possible. You can pay a service to do this. But you can also do a 'light' version using Google Analytics 4 or through manual pipeline correlation.

Integrate PR, Marketing, and Sales Outcomes

Integrating outcomes isn't a new concept but it's integral to creating an effective, trackable PR pipeline.

PR delivers the most value when it is integrated into how marketing and sales actually operate. It's critical to align PR activity with marketing campaigns and demand programs, sales enablement and buyer education, and revenue goals and pipeline accountability.

This is how you support your PR activities with growth and put yourself in the funnel that proves ROI.

Integrated Optimization

Integrated optimization is the key to growing ROI through PR success.

Once PR activity is amplified and at least partially attributable, performance data becomes actionable. Now we can attribute which stories, outlets, and messages drove engagement; where amplified coverage influences buyer behavior; and how PR performs relative to other demand channels.

These insights allow teams to continuously refine strategy instead of repeating what feels effective.

The New Blueprint: Move PR From Awareness to Impact

This evolution isn't about discarding classic PR; it's about enhancing it with new tools and strategies to solve the attribution puzzle. By integrating measurement and amplification, PR becomes a more powerful engine for both awareness and business results.

So now the question becomes how you actually do this. Here are the steps forward-thinking organizations take to make attribution work for them.

1. Track Everything From Day One

Every media win should be connected to a unique landing page, resource, or offer with tracking built in. UTM links, GA4, and CRM/CDP attribution are now essential tools in the PR toolkit. This allows for deeper engagement analysis, moving beyond media impressions to tangible conversion metrics like website traffic, shopping cart revenue, orders, or sign-ups.

2. Visibility Isn't Value Without Data

Reach alone isn't enough. The true impact of PR is what happens next: demos booked, leads captured, deals accelerated. Data transforms PR from a nice-to-have into a must-have. Industry research consistently shows that prospects exposed to credible, third-party content progress faster and convert at higher rates than those who are not.

3. Enable Sales, Not Just Awareness

Content that can be repurposed into sales enablement, retargeting, or nurture campaigns delivers measurable impact where it matters most: moving prospects through the funnel and supporting revenue teams. Amplified PR, when integrated into sales touchpoints, can increase engagement and trust at key decision moments.

4. Make Coverage Actionable

Turn media coverage into a lead magnet by linking to calculators, guides, or consultations. Make it easy for engaged readers to take action with your brand so you can capture qualified leads that would otherwise never enter your funnel.

5. Integrate With Your Tech Stack

PR measurement isn't a silo. Integrate your efforts with marketing and sales dashboards so PR is part of the same growth conversations—and the same revenue attribution. When PR is tied to revenue, every campaign is designed with business outcomes in mind, making PR a key strategic partner to sales, marketing, and business development.

The Bottom Line

Traditional PR is a cornerstone of credibility and brand building. But by adding measurement and amplification, communicators can transform co

verage from a moment in time into a measurable driver of leads, pipeline, and revenue.

B2B organizations must learn how to combine brand building, measurement, and amplification to maximize PR's impact in a digital-first marketplace. And maybe integrating into your organization's growth strategies will make those monthly meetings a bit more enjoyable, too.

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If you need help with your email, web site, video, or other presentation to promote your company, product, or service, please give me a call at 330-815-1803 or email me at john@x2media.us

Until next month. . . .remember. "you don't get a 2nd chance to make a 1st impression." Always make it a good one!!

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Can AI Video Creation Democratize Video Advertising?

Can AI Video Creation Democratize Video Advertising?

Great advertising moves people. It shapes perceptions, fuels brand affinity, and drives real business outcomes.

Yet TV and digital video advertising have long suffered from a glaring divide. Premium national ads can be spectacular, making you laugh, cry, or sometimes both within a single 30-second spot.

Meanwhile, local ads have earned a reputation for being less impactful. Many are memorable for the wrong reasons, with awkward visuals, unconvincing acting, or production values that struggle to hold a viewer's attention.

This divide has existed for decades. But less obvious nowadays are the strategic issues shaping how AI video is being used, and how these issues threaten to widen or narrow that divide, depending on how marketers respond.

AI Video Isn't a Silver Bullet—Yet

It's no surprise that the quality divide persists. Local businesses may stretch themselves to spend $10,000 on a single ad, while national brands often spend $500,000 or more. The difference in resources is visible from the very first frame of a video.

AI video creation seems like it should be the natural equalizer. With promises of turnkey "roll the dice" video generators and rapid content production, many small businesses assume AI will instantly level the playing field.

But the current reality is more complicated.

Most off-the-shelf AI video generators still suffer from limitations marketers are often not aware of until they're deep into the creation process. Visual inconsistencies, fluctuating character quality, continuity issues, nonsensical text, mismatched styles, and strange "uncanny valley" moments all contribute to a final product that can feel off-brand or unpolished.

These issues are rarely discussed in vendor demos, but in today's crucial critique era, they matter more than ever. Overlooked limitations have consequences that go far beyond aesthetics.

Quality Affects More Than Look and Feel

The ripple effects of low-quality or inconsistent AI-generated video are far-reaching. They impact brand perception, reputation, and ultimately credibility—three values local businesses can't afford to compromise.

When smaller brands unintentionally produce AI-powered ads that still look like low-budget ads, they reinforce the very perception they're trying to shake. Poor quality chips away at trust. In a market where consumers make snap judgments in seconds, quality can determine whether an ad drives action or gets ignored.

Which brings us to a critical question. How should marketers think about AI video's role going forward?

AI Is the Creative Equalizer—If Marketers Understand Its Role

AI is, at its core, a great equalizer. It gives small businesses the chance to produce video content that can look remarkably close to the six-figure spots of national brands. AI can produce imagery so photorealistic that audiences cannot easily differentiate it.

What's more, leading providers of audience research in the US have developed sophisticated algorithms that help inform script development, giving marketers data-driven insights into what their viewers respond to. Creative teams now have tools that combine visual generation with audience-centric strategy, which once required large research budgets.

But despite these advancements, understanding AI's capabilities is only half the story. The other half is what this means for marketers in practice.

AI eliminates many of the production barriers that historically hold small businesses back. But what it cannot do, at least not yet, is develop a resonant concept or craft a strategically sound narrative.

AI can generate imagery, but humans still generate the idea.

AI Video Takeaways for Marketers

The takeaways for marketers are clear, though nuanced.

  • AI video is capable of producing premium-quality visuals. AI video platforms are capable of delivering imagery that rivals what large brands spend thousands of dollars to produce, though ethical concerns exist.
  • The human-generated creative concept determines the success of the ad. AI tools simply prove that the potential for high-quality production exists. But they don't replace the human-led strategic thinking of the idea behind the ad.
  • Workflow speed and accessibility are fundamentally changing. With AI, marketers can iterate faster than ever before, testing multiple narratives without incurring multiple production cycles.

Together, these shifts pave the way for a new era where the size of a brand's budget matters far less than the strength of its creative thinking.

AI Video Levels the Playing Field—And Small Businesses Stand to Benefit Most

For small businesses, AI-powered video creation has the potential to genuinely turbocharge marketing efforts. Whether on social media, local TV, or emerging digital formats, brands of all sizes will finally be able to express themselves like never before, at costs they can actually afford.

AI can democratize human expression, and local businesses—long held back by the economics of traditional production—stand to benefit the most. It is revolutionizing how we write, analyze data, generate images, and create videos. And brands that embrace AI for video respectfully, strategically, and creatively will be the ones that thrive in this new landscape.

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If you need help with your email, web site, video, or other presentation to promote your company, product, or service, please give me a call at 330-815-1803 or email me at john@x2media.us

Until next month. . . .remember. "you don't get a 2nd chance to make a 1st impression." Always make it a good one!!