When Tina Nacrelli sent out her first email marketing campaign for her newly launched company, she wasn't sure what to expect. It was for a live webinar by C4CM, the online education company she had recently founded. Would anyone register for an event hosted by a company they had never heard of?
Much to her surprise and excitement, the registrations started rolling in. "We were like, why are people buying from us? They don't know who we are. How is this working?" Tina recalls. "It was incredibly exciting."
It wasn’t just luck. Strong content and well-crafted, targeted emails drove C4CM’s success and profitability for over a decade.
That early win was a defining moment in Tina's unexpected journey into the world of marketing. She had begun her career as a conference producer. "I fell into a job developing conference programming for all things. I had no idea this was an industry," she explains. After landing the role through a newspaper classified ad, Tina immersed herself in developing conference programs, researching topics, and recruiting expert speakers.
Along the way, she gained exposure to the marketing side of the business. "You collaborate closely with [the marketing team]in conferences because as the producer, you know the content better than anyone, " says Tina. "And then I started understanding more and more about how marketing works. You can have the best program in the world, but if people don't hear about it, no one's going to come."
Those early lessons still guide Tina's approach today as a seasoned marketing consultant. At her firm Cold Cuts Marketing, she helps clients fine-tune their strategies across email and other channels. A key piece of advice she offers: never underestimate the importance of great content.
"It does come back to the content that you're sending," Tina stresses.”It’s not enough to get someone to open your email once. You want them to open every email you send. And that only happens if they liked what was inside the first one.” She is a strong believer in focusing on niche audiences rather than broad reach. "I'd rather be small and good than big and generic...I think it's better to have a very good reputation. It gives you deeper relationships with your clients, and they want to return."
Tina also emphasizes the need to build scalable systems and processes. Early in her career, she worked on every detail of her company's campaigns. "We were putting things in envelopes to be stamped and sent off to people," she recalls. “I’m a process fiend. Creating repeatable frameworks is a huge part of the events business. The way I approach work is you build a machine, So you don’t have to figure things out each time. This way, when things crop up or go wrong - and they will! - you’re better able to pivot to address them.”"
Today, Tina brings that blend of marketing savvy and operations expertise to her work with Metacomet, a consultancy specializing in value creation for media and events businesses. Tina and the Metacomet team often advise companies looking to boost their revenues ahead of a potential sale or merger.
"We find out what they are currently doing and learn a lot from the company itself. But then we'll also do extensive research in the industry overall, looking to see where the gaps and opportunities are," Tina explains.
While much of Metacomet's work focuses on pre-deal planning, Tina also stresses the importance of managing the post-merger integration. To her, success depends on more than synergies and cost savings. "Culture is really important. And having the cultures merge is huge!" she notes. "We often don’t think about how culture underpins our success. You know the saying, “You don't leave a company, you leave a manager”? Well, apply that to an M&A situation where the cultures clash!”
Looking ahead, Tina is excited to bring her marketing expertise to an expanding set of projects. As a consultant to Well Defined, a wellness-focused media company, she is spearheading an expansion of their newsletter portfolio. The goal is to provide highly curated content tailored to specific audience segments and their interests.
"Our approach is interesting because we have a lot of different content," says Tina. So we're not even thinking every day of the week is the same newsletter. We have a two-week calendar that alternates between topics and audiences. We want to think about what each segment of our audience wants to read about and give them that in any format they want."
Tina is also working on a new passion project called Successful Events, which will feature an online course and other resources aimed at helping organizers create impactful conferences and gatherings. "I think the content of a conference is so important that I want to see people thrive at it," she explains. "And I see more and more people going into events as a marketing tool. But then they get up there, and they just talk about themselves. As an audience member, it’s like sitting through a time-share presentation.” (If you haven’t sat through one yourself, know that’s not a good experience!)" “I felt compelled to create this course to share best practices for event and conference development for people who are now responsible for events but don’t have a background in this field. It is a specific, very niche skillset.” The course covers content development, marketing, sponsorships, and event logistics.
Whether crafting an email campaign, advising on M&A strategy, or teaching the secrets of great event programming, Tina's work is ultimately driven by a desire to bring people together. "I'm talking to them via the emails, but when you get them in a room for an event, and you're talking to them there," she reflects, “it becomes a true dialogue, and that’s exciting. It's that sense that we're all in this together. And I like that. I like bringing people together, whether in an email or in-person, to discuss our challenges and how we can think through them or solve them together."
As Tina looks to make an even greater impact in the years ahead, that people-centric philosophy will undoubtedly continue to be her north star. By combining marketing prowess with a genuine passion for human connection, she is poised to achieve her grandest visions—one thoughtful email and expertly crafted event at a time.