Here's what B2B marketers can learn from Klaviyo's B2C focus
Bonus issue đ my fave product releases from K:SYD 2026
đŹIn this issue:
I was invited to K:SYD 2026 to check out their product releases
Klaviyoâs product serves B2C brands, but Klaviyo itself sells to businesses, not consumers, so I learned a lot from how they approach their product launches
My top insights from the new Sugar high! report, a collab between Klaviyo and James Hurman covering the relationship between discounting and company growth
Hola Mehketeers,
Surprise! Iâm back so soon thanks to Klaviyo sponsoring this issue đ€©Klaviyo, the autonomous CRM built for B2C brands, brings customers together each year at K:SYD to share ideas and learn from the best in customer experience.
You know Iâm a B2B gal through and through, so I took notes of all the bits that most applied to us and Iâm going to take you through them!
Social isnât just for posting
One of the major product announcements was launching early access to Klaviyo Social, a slate of tools specific for engaging with customers on social channels.
The cool thing to me is that this answers a question I donât think weâve seen many B2B brands tackle: How can you drive customers from interacting with you on social to being a contact in your CRM?
Sure, weâve seen âclick the link to get your PDFâ campaigns, but really the goal there is to drive downloads of a report youâve invested into, without setting up a nurture for that cohort of people.
Where Klaviyo is taking it to the next level is using agents to conversationally engage with customers on social channels, gathering context about what theyâre interested in, and then converting them into CRM contacts (with permission to email them!) with all of that context converted over.
No more raging at the sales person who created a contact and didnât tag which products theyâre interested inâŠ
Hereâs an example of what that looks like:
The brand posts on social with a âcomment X for moreâ caption (where more could be a piece of content, a link, a discount/offer, etc.)
A prospect sees this and leaves the comment
The K:Social agent opens a DM with that prospect, provides them the advertised benefit, and asks proactive follow up questions to find out information like which product category theyâre most interested in, whatâs relevant to them, and of course consent to add them to the marketing list
The agent then creates the CRM contact, complete with the demographic information collected in the chat (e.g. birthday or gender) and product interest
The agent also links the contact with their social account, including follower count so you can start building out an influencer list of genuine customers who love the product
In addition to social, Klaviyo is also adding WhatsApp as a channel. Long time Mehketeers know I think itâs an under-used channel, especially WhatsApp Communities.
How could you implement this? Itâs a really simple thought experiment, how could you design your posts to drive conversation in DMs, with yourself? We already know that personal accounts perform a lot better than company accounts, and social selling has proven how effective it is. Bring these two things together, maybe starting with your founder/CEOâs account if youâre already managing their posts, is a quick way to start and test ideas.
CRMs could be doing so much more
No one really loves their CRM right?
But people in the crowd were cheering for the updates Klaviyo were announcing, and I totally get why. Theyâre so simple but so obvious!
When your CRM is also connected to your customer support tools (in this case, Customer Agent and Customer Hub, which are both part of K:Service,) they talk to each other in really smart ways.
For example, if a customer has an open support ticket â for a refund, complaint, or dispute â then theyâre automatically paused from receiving marketing emails. That way theyâre not receiving requests to give a five star review for an item that arrived broken.
Simple, but huge impact for customer experience.
What can B2B take from this? Take some time to consider your unenroll and exclusion criteria for certain lifecycle stages. For example, if a contract is out for signing, maybe donât send that new offer with a free upgrade via email blast.
Also! Check out my video breaking down my favourite features.
The customer lifecycle is so much more than conversion, onboarding, and renewals
Speaking of lifecycle stages (what a segue, I didnât even plan that one,) B2B could learn a lot from B2C in how broken down this gets. Thereâs a reference Iâve made a few times across several Mehdeeka issues to the lifecycle stages used by realestate.com.au (or Domain, I canât remember, and I never got a copy of the presentation) where the first lifecycle stage is âdaydreaming of one day owning a home.â
While people might not be daydreaming of your streamlined, out-of-the-box solution for turning big data into actionable insights, thereâs more than just lead, MQL, SQL, SAO, closed won/lost, and renewal.
In particular with the lead stage, thereâs the one before that which is anonymouse site visitor or someone whoâs seen your socials but not followed. Consider breaking your absolute highest ToFU content into two lifecycle stages: problem aware and problem unaware.
Klaviyo announced Composer, an AI for building out whole marketing flows, complete with assets (e.g. email), personalisation elements, and multi-branch flows that respond to the customerâs interactions (i.e., if they open the email, follow up with this.)
Itâs a genuinely impressive product for delving into the different purposes and goals of customer lifecycle stages, so much so that the person I was sitting next to (a complete stranger to me) literally said âIâm so excited for this.â
Insights from the Sugar high! report
I love all things pricing, so I was most excited for James Hurmanâs talk on discounts and unveiling the insights from the Sugar high! report. Hereâs my fave bits:
The overall takeaway is that discounting products leads to short term sales spikes, but long term it doesnât do much. When looking at which companies are growing the most, theyâre the ones who donât discount often!
47% of consumers are now categorised as value seekers and 62% of them say theyâll defer purchases until a discount, theyâve been trained by retailers to wait for a sale
AI is being used to search the internet for discounts, itâs able to search further and faster than humans, so people are finding deals they wouldnât have otherwise found, reinforcing that theyâre hunting for deals and not paying full price
Carla Penn-Kahn shared in the accompanying panel that compared to the global average, Australia has low levels of trust in AI but relatively high levels of trust in brands. Her advice for brands using AI was to be transparent around your use of it and make sure youâre consistent in your brand as the thing for people to anchor on.
How to think about this for B2B: Discounting isnât very popular in B2B because it doesnât usually convince companies past a certain size to speed up their internal approval processes. But one thing we can take from B2C is the range of incentives such as gift with purchase. Add in a freebie when contracts are signed, whether thatâs an upgrade to your product, an extra month free of charge from the subscription, or a box of merch as part of onboarding!
I love when a marketing company has good marketing
To round us out, hereâs a love letter to all the details that the Klaviyo team put into the K:SYD event! Having run Generate Summit for 3 years now, I never thought Iâd become this detail oriented towards the flourishes that make an event truly âwowâ:
The bathrooms had baskets of all your emergency essentials which is already amazing, but all the products they chose had red branding to match Klaviyoâs colour scheme, thatâs next level
Likewise, the decorations were all on brand. I really wanted to take one of the flower bunches home but I didnât stay till the very end of the event đ
From a presentation perspective, every product presentation started by repeating Klaviyoâs core slide around âwhat is Klaviyoâ making every talk cohesive, clear, and consistent in narrative
From an attendee perspective, there were very thoughtful touches such as a snack table to access at any point (including fruit from Harris Farm and chocolates from Koko Black, both Klaviyo customers!) and charging areas with every cable type on offer
I put together a video of the day so you can see all of these details in action!
And the nicest touch of all was how much Klaviyo was putting their customers front and centre rather than taking the spotlight for themselves. As mentioned, all of the snacks were provided by customers, and 90% of the merch was actually their customersâ products too! Everyone was given a Klaviyo tote bag, and then it was filled with Klaviyo customer products. Everything from Who Gives A Crap toilet paper (I am a customer, hereâs my referral code for 27% off lol) to HiSmile toothpaste, T2 tea tins, Budgy Smuggler caps, and honestly more than I can remember.
Thank you Klaviyo!
Both for letting me crash your event and for all the inspo I got from the day! If you want to see more of the announcements from the day, check out their recap blog.
Till next time,
Kayla







In addition to my B2B role, I manage a B2C account (just website and socials). We implemented ManyChat to automate initial contact with followers and it has been great to gather info on their interests. In B2B I can see the application to engage with LinkedIn contacts of company leaders. I feel in B2B there are automations with awkward messages (at least the ones I received) or that do not work at all (e.g. comment x to receive y and y never arrives), so there is definitely space for improvement.