Founder Feature: Alisha Lyndon, CEO & Founder of Momentum

Alisha Lyndon Momentum

In our latest Founder Feature, we’re talking to Alisha Lyndon, CEO and founder of Momentum.

Read the interview below to find out how Momentum help clients address their top opportunities and challenges, drive revenue, enhance brand relevance and power strategic momentum through account-based marketing.


Q: Could you tell us about your company and what you’re striving to achieve?


Momentum is a B2B growth consultancy and the pioneers of account-based marketing. 

We’re on a mission to help our clients grow their most valuable relationships, providing insight into enterprise organisations, turning that insight into a rigorous and distinct growth strategy for our clients, and developing moments or content that speak the buyer’s language to motivate action. 

We work for tech and financial service leaders such as Microsoft, Amazon and HSBC and have so far driven $90 billion in revenue for our clients.

Instead of selling a solution and disappearing, we want sales and marketing teams to always be thinking about how they can add value to their key and strategic customers. 




Q: What made you decide to take on the challenge of founding your business?


I’ve always loved building things, from self builds to businesses. I crave novelty and am addicted to change.  




Q: Who are you and what is your story? 


I’m Alisha Lyndon, CEO and founder of Momentum. I started my first company after realizing corporate life wasn’t for me and went on to build a mid-sized marketing agency, which we sold in 2009 to a trade buyer. 

The eureka moment for starting Momentum came from a chance meeting with an ex-colleague. He shared his frustrations about how his seller had a meeting with the senior customer executive and at the end of the meeting, he left a stack of brochures for the customer to look through like the old Argos catalogue. The marketeer in me was depressed to think this pile of brochures would soon be in the recycling bin and the salesperson in me was annoyed by the missed opportunity. 

But the penny dropped when I thought about it from the customer point of view — if a key supplier can’t tell you where they’re going to add value, who can? So Momentum was born with a mission to stop sales and marketing teams from talking about what they have to sell to everyone and start joining the dots for customers based on the buyer’s needs.   




Q: Tell us about some of the biggest obstacles you’ve had to overcome?


Our major obstacle has been around talent. We’ve had some bumps along the way where we’ve hired brilliant people, but they’ve undermined the culture. We’ve also had big inconsistency in how different teams behave. These are not small things to overcome and are growing pains. 

To solve this, we hired in Rhian Price, our People Director. We made this a board-level conversation and continue to make sure we are transparent to the whole business, top-down, bottom-up. By putting people first, we are now producing work that has never been bolder and our staff engagement is at its highest.



Read More: Founder Feature: Matt Hawkins, Founder of Cudo



The second challenge has been around the market. As account-based marketing has picked up speed, so has the competition. Everyone from marketing technology vendors through to marketing agencies are adding ABM on to their service line. The constant challenge we have is to stay true to the firm we are, not get led by the confusion in the market, and position our firm in a way that buyers are able to easily see the value we can bring. 




Q: What’s most exciting about your traction to date?


The most exciting thing is seeing the rise of account-based marketing and how we’ve created a movement. When I started this firm, ABM wasn’t a category. Now there are conferences on it, books about it and executive boards at multi-national firms are bringing it to the table.  




Q: How are you measuring your success? What are your metrics?


I judge our success on the impact we’re having on our clients’ businesses and shortening the gap between where we are today versus our vision. As a business, we use three critical KPIs: our employee engagement, our client satisfaction and our business profitability.  




Q: How do you manage the duality between driving new business and overseeing daily operations?


Firstly, having a strong and empowered team around me that I really trust is invaluable. They pull me in when they need to into the daily operations but otherwise, I trust them to run things so I’m able to give new business the focus it needs. Secondly, having access to data is crucial. That visibility allows me to keep a close eye on our business-wide key KPIs, so I can see if there is anything I need to turn my attention to or fires that need to be put out.




Q: What has surprised you in your journey so far?


Firstly, how ABM has taken off this past decade, I was confident it was what so many firms needed but didn’t expect this scale of adoption. It really has become the most popular form of marketing within B2B circles.

And, conversely, the number of conversations I’ve had with people telling me they were doing it in the ‘80s!




Q: What was missing from your business plan?


The plan itself. I actually had no real plan other than an idea itself, but no real plan on how to turn that into a business. But, fortunately, the idea was a good one. Within days we had our first client, so this really was a case of building the runway as we were coming in to land the plane. 

I boot-strapped the business so didn’t have any seed funding or need for a plan per se. In my head I was using the last business I owned as a blueprint for getting started.




Q: What’s one piece of advice you’d give to budding innovators taking the same journey?


Choose an action, however small, over being in motion. Set a schedule and time box how long you’ll spend planning and strategizing. Don’t spend time forever thinking about how you’ll set up a company or hold off making decisions because you don’t have all the data. Your action won’t be right all the time but you’ll be practising, and practice builds expertise. 



Find out more about Alisha Lyndon and Momentum here: www.wearemomentum.com


Bekki Barnes

With 5 years’ experience in marketing, Bekki has knowledge in both B2B and B2C marketing. Bekki has worked with a wide range of brands, including local and national organisations.

Data-Sharing Done Right: Finding the Best Business Approach

Bart Koek • 20th November 2024

To ensure data is not only available, but also accessible to those that need it, businesses recognise that it is vital to focus on collecting, sorting and governing all the data in their organisation. But what happens when data also needs to be accessed and shared across the business? That is where organisations discover a...

Nova: The Ultimate AI-Powered Martech Solution for Boosting Sales, Marketing...

Erin Lanahan • 19th November 2024

Discover how Nova, the AI-powered engine behind Launched, revolutionises Martech by automating sales and marketing tasks, enhancing personalisation, and delivering unmatched ROI. With advanced intent data integration, revenue attribution, and real-time insights, Nova empowers businesses to scale, streamline operations, and outperform competitors like 6Sense and 11x.ai. Experience the future of Martech with Nova’s transformative AI...

How E-commerce Marketers Can Win Black Friday

Sue Azari • 11th November 2024

As new global eCommerce players expand their influence across both European and US markets, traditional brands are navigating a rapidly shifting landscape. These fast-growing Asian platforms have gained traction by offering ultra-low prices, rapid product turnarounds, heavy investment in paid user acquisition, and leveraging viral social media trends to create demand almost in real-time. This...

Why microgrids are big news

Craig Tropea • 31st October 2024

As the world continues its march towards a greener future, businesses, communities, and individuals alike are all increasingly turning towards renewable energy sources to power their operations. What is most interesting, though, is how many of them are taking the pro-active position of researching, selecting, and implementing their preferred solutions without the assistance of traditional...

Is automation the silver bullet for customer retention?

Carter Busse • 22nd October 2024

CX innovation has accelerated rapidly since 2020, as business and consumer expectations evolved dramatically during the Covid-19 pandemic. Now, finding the best way to engage and respond to customers has become a top business priority and a key business challenge. Not only do customers expect the highest standard, but companies are prioritising superb CX to...

Automated Testing Tools and Their Impact on Software Quality

Natalia Yanchii • 09th October 2024

Test automation refers to using specialized software tools and frameworks to automate the execution of test cases, thereby reducing the time and effort required for manual testing. This approach ensures that automation tests run quickly and consistently, allowing development teams to identify and resolve defects more effectively. Test automation provides greater accuracy by eliminating human...