How to build your first marketing strategy

Natasha Davidson, ex EMEA CMO of Coursera, delves into marketing strategies and tactics for early-stage startups, highlighting the importance of clear brand strategy, the nuances between B2B and B2C approaches, and the tools to craft a compelling value proposition. Discover the steps to build a brand narrative and use it to achieve sustained market traction.

Zara Zaman
Emerge Edtech Insights
13 min readSep 1, 2023

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Welcome to the Emerge Product-Market Fit Academy series, where we bring you practical insights and advice from accomplished operators and founders in edtech. This series is dedicated to helping early stage edtech founders navigate the challenging path to achieving product-market fit.

Meet Natasha Davidson, one of the most experienced and accomplished marketers in edtech. As vice president of global marketing at Blackboard, she led a team of 40 marketers, orchestrating strategies across diverse business lines and regions. Most recently, she was the EMEA chief marketing officer for Coursera, where she spearheaded growth initiatives spanning its enterprise, degrees, and consumer segments.

As a first-generation university graduate, she is driven by the transformative impact of education and excited about the role of edtech in shaping the world of learning and work. As a Venture Partner within the Emerge community, Natasha has swiftly become an invaluable asset to Emerge founders, mentoring them on the most effective marketing strategies for edtech. We’ll be sharing some of those strategies throughout this article.

Natasha Davidson, ex EMEA chief marketing officer at Coursera, Venture Partner at Emerge

In the whirlwind journey of an edtech startup, while the race is often towards achieving product-market fit and drafting a sales plan, many founders overlook a critical ingredient: marketing. As Natasha underscores, marketing not only shapes the brand narrative but also helps founders to frame the external articulation of why your product or service exists and how it provides value to customers. It’s the strategy for how you communicate with external stakeholders. It’s also an important learning opportunity.

“When a company is out testing for product-market fit, the feedback and signals from potential customers are essential for the development and refinement of the marketing messaging.”

By the end of this article, you’ll understand more about:

  • How to approach marketing as an early-stage startup
    Learn how to formulate a solid marketing strategy during the critical early phases of a startup. Plus, the significance of establishing trust, how to harness authentic customer testimonials and the value of deep user engagement for generating resonant content.
  • Measuring the impact of marketing efforts
    Discover the metrics to understand the impact of your marketing effort, the importance of marketing’s contribution to the sales pipeline, how to track early engagement indicators to make informed decisions, and how to manage longer B2B feedback cycles.
  • B2B versus B2C: tailoring your go-to-market approach
    Understand the nuances of B2B and B2C go-to-market strategies and how to approach resource allocation to maximise marketing efforts and differentiate your startup.
  • How to achieve brand clarity (case study)
    Natasha shares a case study from an edtech startup she has worked with. Learn how clear brand messaging, rooted in addressing a target audience’s specific needs, can transform ambiguous marketing into a compelling, clear value proposition that boosts lead conversion.

HOW TO APPROACH MARKETING AS AN EARLY-STAGE STARTUP

The initial stages of an edtech startup can be make-or-break, and a solid marketing approach is essential. A clear marketing plan can be a gamechanger, but crafting one is challenging, with many marketers oscillating between overly complex or overly simplistic strategies. The right balance is crucial for aligning with business goals. Natasha recommends Forrester’s Marketing Plan on a Page framework. It’s a tool she has used successfully in the past, to create a practical and measurable plan.

To apply the framework, answer the following questions:

  1. What are your goals?
    Reflect on your startup’s key objectives and expansion plans for the upcoming year. This should incorporate yearly sales aims, specific business or product milestones, and targets for different regions.
  2. Where do we stand now?
    Examine data on the internal and external environments of the company, including current market strategies, targeted market sectors, distribution channels, product trajectories, historical performance for products and sectors, and insights into potential buyers and existing customers.
  3. What resources do you have?
    Think about the expertise of the marketing team, your network of partners and service providers, existing marketing tech tools, and your track record in executing marketing programmes. The total marketing budget allocated for the year is important to note.
Natasha recommends Forrester’s Marketing Plan on a Page to create a practical, measurable marketing plan

This focused strategy ensures that marketing and sales teams are in sync and aligned with the business objective. However, even with the most well-thought-out plans, there is the key challenge of early startups: building trust without an established reputation. When you have no existing customers to provide testimonials, no proof of concept, how do you draw in your very first customers?

Natasha has seen trials, demos, and even diagnostic clinics used effectively to show off the product and, over time, to explain why your earliest adopters chose you. At first, these can even be your friends and family. Once you have the very first users, Natasha emphasises the importance of crafting testimonials from early on.

“For any customers that have chosen to trial or pilot your product, even if you haven’t gotten to the point where you have outcomes yet, creating testimonials that speak to why that customer decided to trial or pilot with you can often help you in creating additional momentum. Talking about why they chose you first, instead of talking about the outcomes that you don’t yet have can be helpful to mitigate the absence of proof points from those early customers.”

When it comes to testimonials, Natasha reminds founders that attention spans are shrinking and customers face a deluge of information each day, so the way you tell your customer stories needs to adapt accordingly. She suggests leveraging short video or audio testimonials to capture the essence of the user experience. Content should be concise and dynamic.

During her time at Blackboard and Coursera, Natasha notes that the secret to the most effective marketing strategies always came down to one thing: starting with the customer. Engage them directly. Interview them. Understand their experience with the product, identify their pain points, and find out how your offering has addressed those. In her experience, these conversations often yielded invaluable insights. This feedback can be transformed into diverse content forms, from longer thought pieces to compact testimonials. Whether it’s partnering with a user to craft a case study or having them feature on a webinar, the key lies in leveraging every customer interaction. Natasha emphasises: never underestimate the power of these interactions. They can be transformed into videos, ebooks or social media posts, all serving to pull in more users or bolster the existing brand narrative.

Transform customer interactions into compelling content such as case studies, webinars, articles, video testimonials, or social media posts

MEASURING THE IMPACT OF MARKETING EFFORTS

To ensure that marketing efforts are genuine investments, founders must prioritise measuring their marketing impact, to enable strategic decision making. For Natasha, the most important metric for any company, and especially for B2B, is marketing’s contribution to the sales pipeline. But this isn’t just about numbers; it’s about defining ‘contribution’. In teams without mutual clarity between sales and marketing teams, she’s observed how metrics can lead to confusion and contention.

“It’s important to look at what you expect marketing to do in terms of impact on the sales funnel and where you expect that impact to happen. Are you more interested in having marketing bring in qualified leads to the top of the funnel — or do you want marketing to also help with conversion of those leads across the funnel until sales starts to take over and close those deals?”

The quality, cost, and conversion rate of those leads across the funnel are other key metrics to look at when evaluating the success of marketing efforts. Founders should also know how much marketing budget it takes to bring in a quality lead. There are many other metrics that vary by tactic and channel. A startup’s website, for example, is its silent salesperson — often the initial touchpoint for potential customers. Gauging its effectiveness isn’t just about counting visitors; it’s about measuring engagement, such as the time spent on the site, bounce rates, and actions taken, such as form completions or resource downloads. For measuring this, Natasha recommends tools like SimilarWeb, a free tool founders can use to determine the effectiveness of their website in communicating with prospects and customers.

Natasha warns B2B teams that they should expect longer feedback cycles on the results of their marketing efforts.

“In many B2B businesses, marketing actions taken in Q1 might not show any return until the next quarter. That is sometimes surprising for sales teams to understand, but the reason that it takes longer in B2B is because there are many more interactions, and touch points before a buyer will show interest or be ready to take the next step in the sales cycle.”

Natasha warns B2B teams that they should expect longer feedback cycles on the results of their marketing efforts

However, these lengthy feedback loops don’t mean teams can’t look for early signals of success form their marketing efforts. Natasha recommends weaving different marketing tactics into comprehensive campaigns or programmes. By synchronising various efforts, such as social media posts, website content and even offline events, startups can better gauge their effectiveness as early indicators of an overall initiative that may take longer to show results. For instance, if you’re active on social media platforms such as LinkedIn, initial engagement metrics can offer valuable insights into whether your target audience is resonating with your content, even if sales cycles are long.

Business development teams can also provide early feedback. Their interactions with prospects, testing out specific messages and strategies, can offer clues about the effectiveness of marketing activities. If prospects are recalling where they heard about the company or product, it’s a hint that marketing efforts are starting to make an impact. Thus, while certain marketing approaches may not immediately reflect their ROI, the synergy of patience, ongoing assessment, holistic marketing campaigns, and tuning into early signals can help startups bridge the gap until definitive sales results appear.

B2B VERSUS B2C: TAILORING YOUR GO-TO-MARKET APPROACH

How can startups amplify their discoverability and truly distinguish themselves amid the competition? As Natasha aptly puts it, marketing is the amplification of the early decisions founders make around product-market fit, the problem, persona, and proposition.

“A really important element for a startup is to think through the building blocks of brand strategy. What are the values? What’s your purpose? What’s your mission? What’s your vision for your product? What is that value proposition? What’s the identity and tone you want to strike? All these things allow you to create a unique positioning in the market as long as you have thought very clearly about who the customer is and what problems you’re trying to solve for them.”

In such a bustling space, it’s the authentic brands — those that resonate deeply with a clear customer profile and address specific problems — that cut through the noise. The journey isn’t linear. It’s iterative, necessitating continuous testing and adjustment, but those initial signs of clarity start to inform your go-to-market strategy.

One of the most important parts of building a brand is a strong understanding of who the specific target audience is and what is their precise problem that you are solving

When it comes to go-to-market, there are different tactics to consider. A marketing-centric approach aims to etch your product into the customer’s mind, making it the go-to solution through one-to-many communication. On the other hand, a sales-focused strategy hinges on detailed, one-to-one interactions, often relying on relationship building. Both have their place and often work in tandem — but may be better suited to certain business models.

“In a B2B organisation, there’s a marketing engine and there’s a sales engine. In the B2C space, marketing and sales are more merged into one, the lines are very blurred. In many instances you spend a lot more time trying to get an individual consumer to make their decision to buy. But once they buy, that’s your revenue. Whereas in the B2B space you have marketing trying to position the company and get individuals to think of them as their preferred partner. Then once they say, yes, I actually do want to do business with you, there’s still sometimes a long tail of negotiation and iteration on the sales side to get that prospect to really say yes and to sign. That’s where the revenue comes in. Building that momentum towards revenue can take a lot longer in a B2B space than in a B2C space.”

As for balancing inbound and outbound marketing, Natasha is unequivocal about the necessity of both, although a company’s maturity can dictate the proportionate investment in each. Young startups might lean heavily on outbound methods, constantly iterating their messaging and reacting to feedback. As they progress towards product-market fit, inbound momentum naturally builds.

Marrying the nuanced strategies of marketing and sales, Natasha turns her insight to a crucial point that startups often grapple with: allocation of resources. With the myriad channels available, from website optimisation to the vast expanse of social media, where should founders invest? It’s important to do research to understand how long it takes to see the return on investment for different marketing strategies and how certain tactics build on the success of each other.

“For example, SEO can actually take up to a year or longer for you to really see those benefits. That doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t start. It means you should think about what the building blocks are to having an effective SEO strategy. One of the critical building blocks is optimising your website. So, before you go out and spend money on SEO, it’s probably a better use of your investment to spend on website optimisation first. Thinking about: what content do I have on my site? How is that content connected to the keywords that people might be using to search for a solution like mine? Is my site easy to navigate? Is it engaging? Does it motivate and drive people to fill out that ‘contact us’ form, which is one of the most important elements of the site when you’re trying to gain traction.”

Natasha also advises founders to invest some time in building your presence across other digital marketing channels. For those in B2B, a good LinkedIn presence is indispensable, along with engaging with customers and prospects that might interact with your brand on the platform. For a B2C company, Instagram or TikTok might be the better bet, so founders should spend some time building content that performs well on those channels. Her parting wisdom for early-stage founders is to continually assess and re-evaluate their marketing strategy, so it can evolve with the company’s stage and needs.

“It’s important to think through where are you today? What it is that you have at your disposal and what do your assets look like today? Then determine where you should invest to get those returns on marketing. SEO is one that I would probably put a little bit later on the list and instead think about the building blocks that get you to an effective SEO strategy.”

HOW TO ACHIEVE BRAND CLARITY (CASE STUDY)

In the intricate dance of marketing and positioning, the devil is in the detail. The potency of sharp messaging coupled with an efficient landing page is undeniable. However, the challenge many founders grapple with lies in articulating a distinct problem-space fit, leading to murky marketing waters. Natasha illuminated this conundrum with a real-life case study.

A founder approached Natasha for guidance. Despite securing VC funding and seemingly defining their company’s identity, they were struggling to close conversations with customers and drive them to a decision. After analysing the company’s marketing and sales materials, Natasha observed that while the solution’s features were crystal clear, its purpose — the specific problem it intended to address and for whom — was not.

Such obscurity often arises when a versatile product addresses numerous problems without specifying its primary focus. It can be tempting for founders to tell potential customers all product features and show off everything the solution can do. However, that’s an easy way to convolute the product positioning, instead of being a targeted solution to a customer’s specific problem.

To help the company, Natasha shared a tool called the Market Positioning Grid. It encompasses seven pivotal questions designed to crystallise a product’s market position.

  1. Target customer
    Who is the ultimate buyer? Who holds the decision-making power?
  2. Problem
    What’s the predominant issue that plagues the target customer? What is the core pain point that this product addresses?
  3. Market landscape
    Which market category or space does the product occupy?
  4. Solution
    How does the product serve as the panacea for the identified problem?
  5. Differentiators
    What sets this product apart from its competitors? What’s its unparalleled USP?
  6. Competitors
    Who are the competitors? If you are building in a new category, then what are the alternatives that a customer might use to solve their pain point?
  7. Product attributes
    Beyond mere differentiators, what unique space should this product command in the customer’s mind to foster engagement?
Use the Market Positioning Grid to crystallise your product’s market position

With this framework, Natasha steered the founder towards crafting a potent value proposition statement, offering clarity, depth and a compelling distinction from competitors. Positioning isn’t just about stating what your product can do. It’s about aligning your product’s capabilities with the most pressing concerns of a clearly defined audience. By anchoring messaging in the Market Positioning Grid, startups can embark on their go-to-market journey with newfound clarity and confidence.

SUMMARY

In this article, Natasha explains the importance of startups establishing a clear marketing plan from the early days, recommending Forrester’s Marketing Plan on a Page framework as a strong starting point. She covers how to address the challenges of building trust without a proven track record, sharing tactics to build early customer interest. She emphasises the need to regularly measure the impact of marketing efforts, in particular, marketing’s contribution to sales. Delving into the nuances between B2B and B2C strategies, Natasha reminds startups to customise their go-to-market approaches based on their targeted audience. She shares frameworks for crafting a well-defined brand identity, urging startups to invest wisely in foundational elements such as website optimisation before branching into broader strategies like SEO. Finally, through a case study, Natasha addresses product positioning, offering a structured tool — the Market Positioning Grid — to help founders carve out a distinct space in the market, ensuring their messaging aligns with the needs and concerns of their target audience.

Emerge is a global pre-seed fund backed by 100+ of the world’s best edtech operators. Our vision is to democratise access to opportunity — by being a catalytic partner for early-stage edtech founders. If that’s you, get in touch and submit your deck on our website.

This article is part of our Product-Market Fit Academy, where we bring you practical insights and advice from our world-leading community of Venture Partners. To keep up to date with our episodes, follow us on LinkedIn, Twitter, Medium, YouTube and Spotify. You can also subscribe to our newsletter to stay up to date with our latest insights for early-stage edtech founders.

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Zara Zaman
Emerge Edtech Insights

Head of Platform at Emerge Education | Co-founder at Edventure