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Seven Ideas to Stop Marketing Wastage
>>by DemandROMI published on TheWiseMarketer.com
In any organisation, marketing is one of the most difficult
functions, largely because there's so much to do and so little time,
according to Guy Powell of DemandROMI, who warns that wastage in
marketing campaigns has become a key 'pain point' during the recession,
and suggests seven ideas to stop it happening.
There are, Powell says, many marketing chiefs and departments who
simply don't have the tools or data to answer the most critical of
marketing effectiveness questions: "how much extra revenue did the
latest campaign bring in?"
To help counter this problem, Powell suggests seven key ideas:
- Account for your costs
Determine how much you're spending on each marketing activity, and put
in place a cost tracking system that can relate all direct and indirect
costs to specific campaigns. For B2B marketers this includes the costs
that the sales team, support and the channel spends to promote the
product or brand in the marketplace. For B2C marketers, this means
capturing the specifics of each campaign plan into a single spreadsheet
or database, showing where and how each dollar is being spent for each
week of each quarter or year. Remember to track creative development,
production, and insertion costs, and compare actual execution costs to
planned purchases.
- Track your activities
Just as you need to track costs, you also need to keep track of what
activities took place and when. How were online ad impressions and
clicks purchased, and what media channels were used? What activities
were done through partners or through your own sales team? With a good
tracking system in place, you can start to look at ways to analyse this
data to support strategic and tactical marketing decisions.
- Understand your consumer
If you understand how your consumers process media, make purchase
decisions and consume products in your category or market, you can be
certain that you are measuring the right factors rather than simply
measuring a few things that are most easily calculated. For B2B
marketers it's very easy to measure the sales cycle, but it's much more
important to measure the purchase cycle. And B2C marketers must
understand how brand awareness and consideration translate at some
point in the future into purchase and consumption.
- Track results
Marketing results take place at two levels. Interim results, such as
web visits, engagement, leads developed, brand awareness and
consideration, as well as units and monetary value sold at the point of
sale. Interim results should mirror how consumers act in the
marketplace and should not be a reflection of your internal
organisation. If you track results with the consumer at the central
focus of your metrics you will be much more successful than if your
metrics only reflect your own organisation. For point of sale data, in
many industries, this means purchasing syndicated data (e.g. Nielsen,
IRI or others). Put this data into a time series to see how or if your
marketing activities drive incremental changes in the results at any
point in the future. Don't forget to include your competitors' actions,
their pricing, and their channel, advertising and product activities.
- Choose your analytical method carefully
Depending on your environment and the availability of data, determine
the kinds of analytical tools you could use to start connecting the
dots between marketing inputs and outputs. Statistical modeling is
certainly one approach to develop a robust marketing mix model, while
other options can include split cell testing or agent-based modeling.
Even something as simple as tracking the direct response from marketing
activities can lead to some very useful insights.
- Question your results, and then act on them
Make certain that your results truly represent how your consumers
responded to your marketing campaign, by using control groups to weed
out changing consumer trends, external factors, competitors' actions,
and changes in the sales channel. If this is done correctly, the
results will be robust and you will be able to make significantly
better marketing decisions. However, if you're still not comfortable
with your results, you should start with an in-market test (or some
other form of market research) to revalidate your conclusions.
- Look for areas of improvement
Once you start to make better decisions based on the first six ideas,
you will quickly see the value of improved data sources, and it will
make sense to invest further in more detailed information to make
better and better decisions. Marketing risks will consequently be
lowered, while forecasts will tend to be more accurate.
According to Powell, "There are two sure signs that you have begun to
institute a culture of marketing effectiveness. The first - and
probably the easiest - is whether or not you have a specific line item
in the budget called 'marketing measurement' or 'marketing metrics'.
Without this, you're always going to be wishing you had money and time
to measure your results properly - and you will probably be among the
first victims of budget cuts when times are hard."
Marketers need tracking and management systems just as much as any
other department in the company, so when money is invested in marketing
it's also worth investing both time and money in this kind of results
tracking to validate each campaign and provide ongoing proof of ROI for
senior management.
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Pete Clark |
| About the author: |
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Peter Clark is the Research Director of Wise Research Ltd.
and the publisher of:
Loyalty marketing... for real facts, figures, research, case studies, best practices, practical how-to's,
technologies & examples, The Loyalty Guide III is the world's most complete report (900+ pages) that
covers it all. Costing less than the average conference ticket, details of the report's contents, chapter samples,
pricing, and ordering details are online now at
www.TheLoyaltyGuide.com.
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