For those who migrated off Jira, how big of a problem did ScriptRunner end up being?
We're evaluating a few Jira dc alternatives right now and have been sitting through a bunch of vendor demos. Most of the conversations around issue migration sound pretty reasonable. The part I'm struggling to get a straight answer on is scriptrunner.
Our Jira instance has been around for years, so we've accumulated quite a bit of automation. Some of it is clearly business-critical.
A few vendors have said things like "we'll help rebuild the logic" or "it depends on the script," but nobody has really explained what that process actually looks like.
For anyone who has migrated away from Jira dc or cleaned up a large scriptrunner setup:
- Did you try to convert scripts one by one?
- Were you able to migrate most of your ScriptRunner rules? About how long did it take?
- If you've already been through this, was it worth it in the end?
I'm trying to understand where the real effort went. The demos make it sound manageable, but I'm guessing the reality is a bit messier.
Do B2B SaaS companies actually work with KOLs/influencers?
Hey everyone,
This is something I’ve been genuinely curious about for a while.
I’ve worked quite a bit on influencer/KOL collaborations on the B2C side, and it’s a pretty standard play there. But I almost never hear people talk about this kind of strategy in B2B.
Do B2B SaaS companies actually partner with KOLs or influencers? If you do, what does that even look like in practice? Is it more like LinkedIn influencers, industry experts, or something else entirely?
And does it WORK?
Would love to hear if anyone has seen or run campaigns like this, or if it’s just not a thing in B2B :)
Does promoting a Reddit post affect how Google or AI evaluate it?
Let's say I make a post and then promote it to drive more visibility. Would the fact that the post was promoted affect how google, search engines, or AI (chatgpt, gemini, etc.) evaluate the content?
More specifically:
- Does google know that a reddit post was promoted through ads?
- If it does, would that make the content less trustworthy or less likely to rank in search results?
- Could a promoted post be considered "paid exposure" and therefore be less likely to be cited or referenced by search engines and ai?
- Or do these systems mainly care about the content itself and the engagement it generates (comments, discussion quality, upvotes, etc.) regardless of whether the initial traffic came from promotion?
Curious if anyone here has experience or insights on how this works.
How do you learn to write copy that actually hits customer pain points?
As someone who recently moved into B2B marketing, I’m struggling with writing copy that actually hits the customer’s pain points.
English isn’t my first language. The interesting part is that I usually understand the customer’s problems pretty well, but when it comes to turning those insights into words, I often fall short, especially in short-form content like social posts, ad copy, or hooks.
My manager often tells me that my angles feel too generic, too soft, or that they don’t really get to the core pain point.
Has anyone else dealt with this? How did you get better at identifying and articulating pain points in a way that immediately resonates with customers?
Any advice, exercises, frameworks, or resources would be greatly appreciated.