Growth Newsletter #212
Today, I cover a failed marketing campaign.
There will be takeaway lessons and an example of how they could have executed it much better.
Also, greetings from LA!
Let's dive in đŠŁ
â Neal
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This week's tactics
A cautionary advertising tale (with lessons)
Insight inspired by Yuriy Zaremba.
This is a funny cautionary tale.
In most of the US, youâre likely to see accident lawyers, churches, McDonaldâs, and realtors plastered on the countless billboards that fill major cities and highways.
In San Francisco, however, itâs almost all startups selling to other startups.
This is a funny, cautionary tale of one of those campaigns, with a few actionable nuggetsâincluding an example of how they could have done it so much better.
Hereâs the billboard in question:

Say you drove past and saw this.
(Although tbh I donât think itâs particularly noticeable)
What would you likely remember to google when you get to your destination?
For many, itâs likely âai sdr.â
Which funny enough, is actually the name of one of the advertiserâs competitors.
The advertiser is called Qualified. And Piper, is the product.
AiSDR got an uptick in traffic and closed at least 2 deals from their competitorâs ad.
Here are some actionable takeaways
#1. Considering being clever with naming:
Choosing a name and/or domain that matches the keyword the majority of people will search can pay dividends.
This reminds me of this famous Thai restaurant in New York:
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#2. Use Google Ads to target essential keywords
If you are running ads where itâs likely people wonât act on it immediately (billboards, radio, podcasts, TV, or print), make sure you use Google Ads to bid on the keywords theyâll likely use to find it later.
For example, they probably wonât google âQualified Piper AI SDR.â
Instead, theyâre likely to google âai sdr.â
People are remarkably good at forgetting everything but essential details.
And you donât want a competitor with better SEO to get it instead.
#3. Make an ad that people can act on immediately
This ad is a FAR better version:

Here's why it's so good:
- It communicates so much in just six words
- People can immediately act (call the number)
- Itâs incredibly intriguing to try out
- It leverages a familiar interface (iOS call notification) to shortcut understanding
- The phone number is simple to type in
- People can try the product within seconds of seeing the ad
- Itâs absurdly simple and noticeable, with a ton of whitespace.
Hereâs a snippet from Lennyâs Newsletter where he compiled a quote about this billboard:

I bet thatâs infinitely more benefit than Qualified got from theirs.
Particularly since Qualifiedâs version increased the visibility of their competitor.
Stay creative folks.
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â Neal & Justin, and the DC team.