Posts tagged: Marketing

Defining Measurable Value for Multi Channel Marketing Automation

Guest Blog

By David Potter, Vice President, Professional Services, Distribion, Inc.

One of the basic assumptions this blog makes is that its readers are marketers who are interested in improving their multi channel marketing results through almost any means possible.  Another is that there is a place for technology in almost any distributed marketing organization – that it in any situation where there is a centralized corporate marketing department and one or more field or local marketing and sales organizations that use marketing materials created by corporate marketing to reach local prospects and customers.

But is that an accurate assumption?  Can technology really help any company sell more products, do more with fewer resources, and control costs? Maybe — maybe not.  In general, I think that the answer is a qualified “yes”.  Individual situations vary, of course, but  the one constant I see in nearly every organization that Distribion works with is the pressure to improve results and manage to a bottom line.  It seems that every year, it has gotten harder, taken more time, and required more information to get the budget approved.

And when the budget is for marketing operations activities, such as a marketing automation solution, digital asset management system, or distributed marketing platform, the questions about value, return on investment, and spending priorities get even more pointed and difficult.

So how do you decide if there is a technology solution out there that will deliver the results you need?  Or make a business case for spending on marketing automation tools?  Over the last six months, I’ve looked at that question from several viewpoints, and talked to a number of people on both the buyer and vendor side of the process.  What I’ve found is that management is increasingly asking for realistic projections of the cost savings, performance improvements, and revenue you can realize by adding the technology you want to buy.  Of course, management also wants to know how the technology you want to purchase will help you close more sales.

Our professional services team has worked with many clients on very specific assessments that identify the specific results they can achieve by automating and streamlining complex multi-channel distributed marketing processes.  If you’re among them, and you’d like to follow the format we’ve worked out, click here to request access to the flip book.

Technology can deliver results in many companies, especially those in regulated industries such as financial services, insurance, and health care where compliance is important, and in those with a distributed sales organization where corporate marketing wants to empower local sales and marketing while maintaining control of brand and regulatory standards.  If that sounds like your organization, and you’re still struggling with manual marketing processes for approvals, content delivery, updates, training, and localization or personalization for collateral, email, and other marketing assets, then you might want to take a hard look at a multi channel marketing automation platform as you’re working on your 2012 budget.

Blog Credit: The Distributed Marketing Blog

 

Four Avoidable Marketing Metrics Mistakes

A lot of marketers wanted to emulate TV’s Mad Men: creative geniuses who build brands and marketing empires.

Instead, became math men spending their days with statistics and spreadsheets filled with complex formulas for measuring every message and justifying spending.  In fact, half of CMO’s say that justifying spending through metrics takes more than 30% of marketing staff time, and another 20% say it occupies nearly half of their time.

The sheer amount of data available to marketers today (much of it free) would have overwhelmed Don Draper and his peers. Unfortunately, it’s pretty overwhelming to modern marketers, too. Even more unfortunately, much of the data is absolutely meaningless and irrelevant to management unless it’s put into a context that makes sense — and it’s all too easy to focus on available metrics instead of defining goals and program measurement criteria that deliver data in a context that matters.

Is all that effort impressing management?  No.  CEO’s aren’t impressed at all with the accountability they get for marketing spending.

According to the VisionEdge Marketing Performance Measurement & Management Survey, 2010, only a third (33%) of CEO’s think that marketing does a good job of documenting its contribution to revenue and performance, while about half (47%) say that marketing programs made a difference but the contribution wasn’t measured — and 20% say that marketing programs probably had some impact even though contribution wasn’t measured.  Ouch.

What’s the problem?  Marketers and CEO’s aren’t speaking the same language when it comes to marketing metrics.  There’s no common vocabulary when one part of the team is proud of  its retweet and follow rates and the other wants to know how much a Twitter follower is worth in dollars and cents.  Chances are that the mechanisms to track the data that CEO’s really want (specific links between marketing spending and revenue) aren’t part of the hours and hours of reporting and analyzing that marketers are doing.

Common Marketing  Metrics Mistakes

To communicate marketing successes in terms that make sense to management, avoid these four common marketing metrics mistakes.

  1. Vanity metrics:  What’s a “vanity metric”?  They’re those “feel good” metrics that focus on quantity, not quality.  One easy way to spot them is that vanity metrics measure activity instead of results. Press release impressions, Facebook “likes”,  names gathered at trade shows (lead quantity instead of lead quality),  Twitter followers and other easy-to-measure statistics without context can be vanity metrics.  Or, if put into the right context, the same data can be part of a  useful model that helps take you where you want to go.  It all depends on how you design your program goals.
  2. Soft vs. hard metrics:  Marketers think in soft metrics: impressions, organic search rankings, reach, clicks, likes, open rates, etc. This data is easy to collect and report, hard to align with business goals — and meaningless to management in a post-recession business climate. CEO’s and CFO’s think in hard metrics: YoY revenue growth, profit & loss, forecast accuracy. For them it’s about transactional data that aligns directly with business goals. Tracking and measuring the wrong metrics confuses the issue – and hurts marketing credibility.
  3. Marketing jargon:  Management doesn’t care about the open rate of the last email campaign, or how many page views your press release got – and it really doesn’t care about how many ”plus 1′s” your social media campaign got.  What it cares about is customer behavior, revenue, costs, and return on marketing investment (ROMI).  Defining a common vocabulary, then translating marketing jargon into business terms that management understands is the key to budget approval and CEO confidence.
  4. Out-of-context #’s:  There are hundreds of marketing metrics to choose from, and sometimes the most useless are the defaults that popular analytics programs publish.  For example, if you look at Google Analytics, one of the default metrics is “% exits”.  Everybody exits a page sooner or later — and the fact that they exit your site from one page versus another is useless information unless there is a context, strategy, and process around that number.  Analytics expert Tyson Kirksey of Vertical Nerve says the exit rate is useless information for most marketers.  (It may be highly relevant if the page they’re exiting is a shopping cart and they’re leaving without a purchase, of course.)  Bounce rate is another metric that’s usually presented out of context.  For instance, on a blog like this one, the bounce rate doesn’t really matter if the goal is to attract readers to blog posts — most people go to a blog, read the article they came to read, and leave.  Sometimes they come to browse (especially from sharing sites like StumbleUpon, Reddit, and Twitter), take a quick look, and move along.  Does it matter?  Maybe, maybe not — Kirksey says it all depends on the goal you had for the blog post or page in the first place, so you need context before the metric is useful.

Takeaways

  • Set goals for your marketing campaigns, and measure the metrics that are relevant to that goal.  For a blog, the goal might be comments and subscribers.  For a website, it might be sales, downloads, repeat visits, or membership.
  • Use a vocabulary that top management understands — and avoid jargon.  Measure only what matters to the business.  (An audit of your marketing processes to see what can be measured – what should be measured – and how it should be reported — is a good first step in aligning marketing metrics with business goals.)
  • Review the metrics you have, and take action based on relevant data as soon as possible.  (What kind of action?  Spend more on the marketing activities that work…and change the tactics that aren’t meeting their goals.)

For more information on common marketing metrics mistakes — and tips on mastering marketing metrics — download the presentation from a recent webinar sponsored by Distribion and Vertical Nerve.  A recording of the 45 minute webinar and the presentation are available here.

Cartoon credit: This cartoon was licensed from Cartoonstock.com for this usage; all rights remain with the copyright holder. Used with permission.

Blog Credit: The Distributed Marketing Blog

Why Channel Agnostic Marketing Works

Posted by: distributedmarketing.org

No matter what industry you work in, your target audience is probably channel agnostic.  That is, they don’t put their faith in any single channel — online, offline, mobile, social.  Instead, they put their faith in human interactions that are relevant, accessible when they want information, and positive.

That’s the conclusion that Ian Michiels, chairman of the research advisory board at Gleanster and director of the Marketsphere Marketing group, reported in a recent webinar titled:  Connectivity: The Secret to Success in Distributed Marketing Environments.

Edgar Rodriguez, executive vice president of marketing and sales at Distribion, echoed the Gleanster research with his own webinar presentation last week when he reminded attendees at the Drawing the Line Online:  Professional vs. Personal Use webinar that:

  • Communication with customers isn’t a one-way street
  • Empowered customers will have their say
  • Social media is an echo chamber
  • Echoes become distorted — problems are amplified
  • Every market is a buyer’s market
  • Prospects can (and do) filter out marketing messages
  • Prospects can (and do) initiate and research purchases

Both marketing experts agree that the fragmented marketing communications landscape requires marketers to adopt a multi-channel marketing strategy that engages customers through a wide variety of mediums.  And both agree that doing that requires equal attention to back-office operations — that is, marketing management, planning, automation, strategy, and monitoring — and customer facing communications — that is, marketing engagement, messaging, creative, and relevant content (offers, pricing, timing, etc.).

What’s the common thread in back-office operations and customer-facing communication?  Identifying where to focus finite human, capital, and technology resources so that all marketing activities are optimized.  It’s not always easy — in fact, it’s a balancing act.

 

In a distributed marketing environment, corporate marketing and field or local marketing take the lead in different aspects of aligning the needs of sales and marketing.  Without the right underlying technology, that can make the balancing act even harder.  Luckily, the right technology solutions make it simple to manage brand consistency and regulatory compliance while allowing local market personalization and customization.

Insurance & Financial Advisor Magazine Features Distributed Marketing Technology

Posted by: Distributed Marketing on: June 22, 2011

The June issue of Insurance & Financial Advisor magazine includes a feature story on how 1st Global Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) Brian M. Finnigan is using technology to streamline his company’s internal communications — and why he plans to expand his use of the produce to all advisors before the end of the year.

Finnigan told the magazine that what appealed to 1st Global was the ability to empower local field sales and marketing organizations so that customers get the right information at the right time, through the marketing channel the customer wants the company to use. Role-based dashboards, seamless integration between modules, and reporting, tracking and analytics were the other primary attractions of the distributed marketing platform 1st Global selected, according to the magazine.

Web-based platform aims to erase agents’ marketing challenges appears on page 13 of the June edition of the magazine, which is available to read online or download as a PDF.

Author Jaime L. Brockway interviewed Finnigan and Edgar Rodriguez, executive vice president of marketing at Distribion, who explained the vision behind the product. “Our job is to provide the technology, and the workflow and processes, that let insurance agents do what they do best: sell.”

The feature story also includes details on how the platform works for local and field marketing, compliance, and corporate marketing. To download a copy of the June issue, with the Distribion story on Page 13, click here.

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