
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


What if your toughest sales calls turned into the stories that fill your pipeline?
Omar Majthoub didn’t begin his career in a boardroom. He started on the phones, making cold calls and learning what people actually care about and what makes them disengage. That hands-on experience still shapes how he leads marketing today: clear, simple messages rooted in real conversations.
On this episode of The Marketing Umbrella Podcast, Omar talks about the shift from dialing strangers to building campaigns that feel more like guidance than a pitch. He explains how paying attention to the questions people ask can reveal patterns that shape better content and keep marketing and sales on the same page. Whether you're a solo marketer or leading a team, he keeps coming back to one idea: good strategy starts with understanding people, not chasing trends.
This conversation gets into the practical side of how his team at Bith works: defining the right customer, making clean handoffs between sales and marketing, and tracking simple metrics that show whether something’s working or not. Omar also shares how he’s learned to cut out busywork, focus on the right channels, and stay close to customers, not just dashboards.
Here are the key takeaways from the conversation:
Closing thought: "You have to market yourself before you market the product."
Listen to the full conversation here:
Connect with Omar:
Please leave us an honest rating on Spotify, YouTube, or Apple Podcasts.
By Itamar ShafirWhat if your toughest sales calls turned into the stories that fill your pipeline?
Omar Majthoub didn’t begin his career in a boardroom. He started on the phones, making cold calls and learning what people actually care about and what makes them disengage. That hands-on experience still shapes how he leads marketing today: clear, simple messages rooted in real conversations.
On this episode of The Marketing Umbrella Podcast, Omar talks about the shift from dialing strangers to building campaigns that feel more like guidance than a pitch. He explains how paying attention to the questions people ask can reveal patterns that shape better content and keep marketing and sales on the same page. Whether you're a solo marketer or leading a team, he keeps coming back to one idea: good strategy starts with understanding people, not chasing trends.
This conversation gets into the practical side of how his team at Bith works: defining the right customer, making clean handoffs between sales and marketing, and tracking simple metrics that show whether something’s working or not. Omar also shares how he’s learned to cut out busywork, focus on the right channels, and stay close to customers, not just dashboards.
Here are the key takeaways from the conversation:
Closing thought: "You have to market yourself before you market the product."
Listen to the full conversation here:
Connect with Omar:
Please leave us an honest rating on Spotify, YouTube, or Apple Podcasts.