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Ever-Changing Rules: New Era Challenges For CMOs
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| Guest post by: Jeff Ogden |
Article Overview: With shorter tenures than ever, CMOs face new challenges in a world growing more and more complex over time.
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Free Download - Marketing Made Simple TV is looking for a few good sponsors By Jeff Ogden |
Ever-Changing Rules: New Era Challenges For CMOs
by Jeff Ogden, President of the B2B Lead Generation consultancy, Find New Customers
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Chief Marketer magazine had an interesting post about the changing
world of the Chief Marketing Officer. I liked it because it explores the
rapidly changing world of B2B marketing today.
Lots of CMOs read this blog, so I want to share it here, as it does a
great job of exploring new roles and challenges. Click the title above
to go to the permalink original article.
Here’s the post by Patrick O’Halloran, former chief executive officer of Entiera. Hope you find it helpful.
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The average tenure for a chief marketing officer in the current
economic climate is about 24 months. Today’s challenges demand that the
CMO be a “test and learn” person relying on a strong infrastructure of
data, tools and analytics. By conquering and exploiting these new
challenges, CMOs can hopefully beat the averages in terms keeping their
jobs and ride the next wave of increasingly complex challenges.
Once, it was enough to meet the following criteria:
Traditional Challenge 1:- Build an integrated and complete view of your customers and prospects.
Building a comprehensive, dedicated marketing database is critical to
executing solid marketing programs, plans and campaigns. Also critical
is a complete customer interaction history, plus supplemental data to
indicate future behavior. Delving into third party data attributes,
demographic and psychographic data has allowed companies to drastically
improve their view, treatments and interactions.
Traditional Challenge 2: – Truly understand your customers, prospects and suspects.
After assembling the appropriate data about their customers, marketing
executives’ next job was to make sense of it all. They employed
behavioral segmentation to flush out clusters or segments of similar
customers to be appended with third party data and profiled. By
creatively naming these segments, CMOs gained momentum increasing or
decreasing their various sub-groups of customers.
Traditional Challenge 3: – Move beyond ”socialistic marketing” or “spray and pray.”
Once the segmentation is complete, the goal is primarily to use this
data and information to improve interactions: replacing the same message
sent to all customers with tailored direct mail, e-mails, phone
scripts, etc., to the different segments. Predictive models add another
layer of accuracy in matching and finding best customers.
Traditional Challenge 4: – Present a single company face to the customer.
No matter what channel customers emerge from, they should feel
valued, with their preferences, interests and total history (including
purchases and customer service ) all understood. To collect and store
customers’ transaction history at each touchpoint, sales, marketing and
customer service executives had to talk periodically so that the right
hand knew what the left hand was doing.
Now, marketers need to shift their focus to a new set of increasingly
complex challenges, and their success will be a good indicator of their
company’s ability to thrive in the upcoming years.
New Challenge 1: – Understand true marketing costs to get more value for your dollar.
At a micro level, understanding the ROI of a single marketing promotion
or campaign is important, but it is also essential to see the forest for
the trees and understand that the cost of the forest is not the price
of each tree added together. A macro view of marketing costs helps CMOs
understand the true cost of all the technology needed to run marketing,
and then consider new advances such as software as a service (SaaS),
which can dramatically reduce costs while providing bundled
functionality.
New Challenge 2: – Integrate your off-line data with your on-line data.
It seems like every day there is another new and powerful channel to
communicate with customers. First there was the Internet, then texting,
and now Twitter – - what next? The challenges these new channels
represent are magnified by the fact that things happen in warp speed as
opposed to the “boring” traditional channels such as direct mail,
outbound telemarketing and even email. Again, to effectively market to
suspects, prospects, and customers, a company has to be able to create a
complete view of their constituents.
New Challenge 3: – Supplement batch, outbound campaigns with the new wave of campaigns.
Traditional batch outbound campaigns are still very popular;
particularly email campaigns where the costs are extremely low as
compared to direct mail. Companies need to master the new wave of
campaigns — including inbound driven, event-driven, online, and
multi-channel — and combine them for maximum effect.
New Challenge 4: – Use a multi-channel marketing thrust to allocate scarce marketing dollars to the most appropriate, highest return channels.
John Wannamaker’s quote is as relevant today: “I know half of my
marketing dollars are wasted … I just don’t know which half!” Marketers
today need to know which channels are more effective or less wasteful
in terms of marketing spend. How this is accomplished can dramatically
improve an overall marketing program.
New Challenge 5: – Continue on the “Customer Centricity” journey by focusing on relevant and appropriate metrics.
CMOs need to access industry-relevant metrics that provide a compass for
future journeys, campaigns, and programs. Metrics need to be stated in
terms of the customer, readily accessible at very frequent intervals, or
in real time, e.g., “average revenue per customer” and “revenue per
customer segment.” Most metrics can be anchored around three main
goals: customer acquisition, customer development (cross sell/up sell),
and customer loyalty (churn/retention). By laying out plans based on
customer segments, CMOs can use these metrics for course corrections.
The bottom line? If chief marketing officers can move beyond
historical, traditional challenges and capitalize on the new wave of
challenges, they can change the game with a greater level of precision,
measurement and customer access — and take their company to the next
level of marketing while claiming greater share of customers’ wallets.
Patrick O’Halloran is the former chief executive officer of Entiera.
Article Tags: b2b lead generation, btob lead generation, chief marketing officer, CMO, find new customers, ideal customer profiles, lead generation companies, sales lead generation
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About the Author: Jeff Ogden RSS for Jeff's articles - Visit Jeff's website President of the B2B lead generation company Find New Customers. Also the host of the B2B marketing show, Mad Marketing TV. We help companies rapidly grow revenue by transforming the ways they attract, engage and win new customers. With 8 out of 10 companies saying the lack of quality sales leads is their biggest problem, they need help. SiriusDecisions also found that fewer than 1 out of 10 companies that implement lead management software went beyond the basics. They need help. We help companies implement world class lead generation programs. Companies need quality sales leads, so they need sales lead generation programs including social media marketing. They need to implement lead nurturing programs. We are considered one of the best leads generation companies in business today. Click here to visit Jeff's website 7 Keys to Lead Nurturing 7 Keys to B2B Marketing Succes Definitive Guide Making Quota How to Find New Customers |
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