By Claudia Sestini, Global Marketing Officer at Gain Theory
Ever since the birth of mass advertising, arguably when the first advert popped up on Americans’ TV screens in 1941, advertising and marketing has constantly had to adapt and change to suit new mediums and an increasingly savvy audience.
Whilst it’s easy to veer into debate about a marketer’s alias, one thing remains constant – marketing and marketers exist to drive growth.
The biggest headache for many marketers nowadays isn’t necessarily their job title or the hyperbole around it, it’s proving they are doing a great job at driving efficacy on their investments.
We live in a world where profitable brand growth in some sectors has declined; economic and political uncertainty has kept us bracing for the worst; and there is an all-time low in trust concerning digital mediums from both advertisers and consumers.
In this environment, many marketers are facing the same question – What’s the single most important thing I need to think about when managing the efficacy of my marketing spend?
With that question in mind, let’s start at the beginning…
With the foundation that marketing exists to drive business growth, we must consider our business strategy, goals and overall purpose. Marketing strategy has to be synchronised with business strategy.
Whilst not rocket science, I believe this is why (in some instances) marketing fails to market itself and why some organisations have recently replaced the CMO with a Chief Growth Officer’.
This shift is quite telling – in those cases it signals that the marketing function is not perceived as growth contributor or generating the required business outcomes by CEOs. Using the right language helps, of course. If your 2018 strategy is all about personalisation, storytelling, content or being data-centric, your CEO might think, “Great, but what does this mean to our bottom line?”
As Manjiry Tamhane - Gain Theory’s Global CEO - recently said at the Advertising Association’s LEAD 2018 conference in London:
As a senior marketer, being crystal clear on business strategy is imperative before embarking on any marketing strategy. This entails being clear on the answer to key business strategy elements such as:
The next question to tackle is: What are our business goals, in the long and short term?
Based on the purchase funnel, these can be broken down into two main areas:
It’s incumbent on marketers to factor in the current state of the business. In other words, are you in growth stage like Airbnb is or do you need to maintain market position like Hertz?
Many marketers find themselves data rich but insights poor. During a CMO dinner with executives from several companies including Gain Theory and the Marketing Society, one marketer asserted, “Just because you can measure, doesn’t mean you can manage.”
To help drive the right insights, marketers must understand the metrics against which they will evaluate the success. With measurement, there are two key considerations:
Marketing is not just advertising and communications. We’ve moved on from the classic 4P model for quite some time and there are many factors that impact growth and subsequently the Marketing Mix. In some companies, depending on the marketing organisation’s structure, some of these factors will lie outside of the marketing team’s control, e.g. product, placement, process of delivery. So you need to think about who you will need to bring along in the journey to ensure a successful marketing strategy, that leads to business growth: Here are some thoughts to consider:
As marketers we are constantly on a journey of reinvention in the face of consumer expectation, technology or market disruption.
What remains constant is that marketing has to be seen as the engine of growth so the choices we make along that journey, need to always come back home to the core business strategy.
And as Bowie would say "The truth of course is that there is no journey. We are arriving and departing all at the same time".