HubSpot: A Killer Marketing Platform For The Modern Marketer
March 05, 2015

HubSpot: A Killer Marketing Platform For The Modern Marketer

Anonymous | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User

Overall Satisfaction with HubSpot

We are using HubSpot to host our site, build our site, manage our blog, landing pages, calls to action, SEO, and social media. Basically, all online marketing is done via HubSpot.
  • FAST and EASY: I am no web programmer, and don't register domains or set up sites frequently. But when I decided on a whim to finally do this, it was literally just a couple hours between grabbing the domain at GoDaddy and building the site in HubSpot on a Saturday morning.
  • Hubspot CMS: The HubSpot content management system is actually fun to use. It's a pretty effortless way to create pages, with lots of options for page layout and formatting controls. And as powerful/flexible as they are, I've found the user interface more intuitive than my experiences with WordPress and Drupal.
  • Hosting: I like the fact that I don't need to worry about where the site lives, uploading updates, managing the server.
  • Blogging tools: It's super-easy to set up a blog (or several blogs), and insert related modules (recent posts, tags, etc.) throughout the site. Furthermore the authoring tool includes automatic suggestions/notifications, such as "article body missing images" and "meta description missing keywords" to help optimize the blog for readers and search engines. And, HubSpot takes care of all the "plumbing" - feedburner, social media sharing buttons, etc.
  • Analytics: I used to be a Google Analytics junkie, but find HubSpot's analytics both easier to work with, and more actionable and informative. Whether it's looking at traffic sources and volume, page popularity or dynamics of keyword rankings, blog analytics or clickthrough rates on lead follow-up emails, they're all there, just a click away.
  • Forms: It is so easy to add all sorts of forms, without hooking up your own back end for the leads database.
  • Integrated email and lead nurturing tools, integration with Salesforce.com and other CRM tools, landing pages.
  • Easily insert widgets: Whether it's adding Twitter feeds, photo galleries from my SmugMug photo site, SlideShare presentations, or a ton of other widgets - it's easy to pimp out your HubSpot-based site.
  • And the biggie: INTEGRATION! All the tools are nicely connected, woven together and talk to each other. For example: Once you enter your social media accounts (Twitter, Facebook, etc.), new blog posts trigger notifications on those accounts (rather than you having to post to Twitter etc. manually).
  • Once you enter the keywords relevant to your business (or pick them from the keyword tool), it will automatically notify you of conversations/posts/tweets/etc going on RIGHT NOW on those topics, so you can participate in the blogosphere.
  • The forms, leads database, email tools and lead nurturing are all integrated, eliminating the need to string together several plug-ins, databases, and workflows.
  • Content creation - whether on a web site page, a landing page, a blog post, lead nurturing emails, etc. - features a consistent UI.
  • HubSpot's analytics are monitoring all aspects of the site, everything from what drive traffic, to what your visitors are clicking on, what's generating leads, nurturing campaign clickthrough rates, etc.
  • Tools like Page Grader or Link Grader provide actionable intelligence on what to improve, and you're just a click away from going right to what needs fixing.
  • Ease of use
  • Breadth of features
  • More sophisticated analytics - closer to what I can do with Salesforce.com
  • Clearly see what online activities are working
  • Ability to manage entire site and blog
  • Lead gen campaign execution
  • Marketo,Pardot
I used Marketo in the past. Way too complicated. You basically need a full time person operating it. With HubSpot, I can have my entire team use it. And, Marketo is more of a campaign tool. HubSpot is an entire marketing platform. It's what Salesforce.com is for sales.
HubSpot works. It has no equal. It's proven. I've used it at five companies now.
I've adopted HubSpot at four startups now. Sure, you can weave together half a dozen technologies – content management, analytics, hosting, SEO tools, campaign management, etc. And with a bit of effort get it all to work. But, you risk spending too much time connecting disparate systems, customizing, and inevitably running into limitations – and every second of that will take away from doing what you actually want to do - build your business.

HubSpot Marketing Hub Feature Ratings

WYSIWYG email editor
9
Dynamic content
8
Ability to test dynamic content
9
Landing pages
10
A/B testing
8
Mobile optimization
10
Email deliverability reporting
10
List management
10
Lead nurturing automation
10
Lead scoring and grading
8
Data quality management
8
Automated sales alerts and tasks
9
Calendaring
9
Event/webinar marketing
9
Social sharing and campaigns
9
Social profile integration
9
Dashboards
9
Standard reports
10
Custom reports
9
API
8
Role-based workflow & approvals
9
Customizability
9
Integration with Salesforce.com
8
Integration with Microsoft Dynamics CRM
Not Rated
Integration with SugarCRM
Not Rated