
The role of marketing in the experience economy
Marketing often plays a highly circumscribed role of marketing communications in companies. Few marketing organizations are meaningfully involved in formulating
corporate strategy, designing offerings and managing partnerships, let alone
It is a well known
fact, that marketing organizations and functions in most companies can expect to
undergo great changes in the years to come. Areas such as accountability,
assuming responsibility for more strategic and revenue and profit generating
projects, competence transformation from a mere focus at marketing
communications to also adapt competence about marketing automation technology,
and how to utilize technology to effectively drive marketing efforts.
But how does the role of marketing organizations fit into the experience
economy, and what can a chief marketing officer do to earn more influence?
Lets take a look at
four decisive factors.
1. Earn credibility through customer expertise
Marketers often complain about the lack of authority
and lack of influence. The simple fact is - nobody will give you a seat at the
table; you have to earn it. And the best way to gain power is through
knowing your customers better than anyone else in the organization.
Customer expertise
will provide marketers with the courage of conviction they need in order to promote
their point of view to other parts of the organization. Remember that you
cannot outsource customer understanding to market research vendors. You have to
get in front of customers and get inside their lives. If you do not understand
the customers, their buying process - you will not know how to align your
marketing and communications efforts to provide for an optimal experience.
2. Focus on the customer experience
Too many marketing organizations limit themselves to
the products and services that they make, without realizing that
it is the total customer experience that matters most in differentiating
yourself and delighting customers.
Focusing on the customer experience requires marketers to think holistically

Focusing on the customer experience requires marketers to think holistically
about every single customer touch point and every stage in the customer
lifecycle. It also demands a total quality approach to designing and improving
the customer experience.
It is the Chief Marketing Officer's responsibility to ensure that every employee
in the firm understands how he or she has an impact on the customer experience. And it should
be the responsibility of marketing to orchestrate the customer experience
across all channels, partners, business units and stages in the customer buying
cycle.
3. Think in process terms
Marketing has traditionally thought of its activities in terms of the infamous
four P's (product, price, promotion and place). This is a functional
view of marketing activities, and it fosters the mistaken impression that
marketing functions are independent silos. Instead, marketing activities should
be conceptualized as a set of logically related value-creation processes.
Drawing insights
from the business process reengineering literature, I believe that marketing needs
to be organized around processes, not functions. These value-creation processes
include the processes for understanding, defining, realizing, delivering,
capturing, communicating and sustaining value. Each process has a set of
activities and deliverables, and these processes together constitute the new
work of marketers.
On a more practical
side, marketers must look at the marketing communication processes from a
customer point of view. How well does the flow of a direct marketing activity
work? Is the response handling process thoroughly tested before launch? Do you
have systems and processes in place to handle all customer response events, and
have these systems and processes been tested to document, that you are ready to
reap the benefits of your revenue generating activities?
4. Create an ROI (ROMI) culture
Marketing must conform to the adage, ."If you can't measure it, you can't
manage it."

."If you can't measure it, you can't
manage it."
.
Chief Marketing
Officers need to promote a return on investment mind-set that should permeate
every marketing initiative. Marketing initiatives need to be derived from
marketing objectives, and marketing initiatives need to be evaluated on a set
of objective metrics.
In simple terms, marketers need to define where they want to go (objectives),
how they will get there (strategy), what it will take to get there (resources),
and how they know if they get there (metrics). Creating an ROI culture does not
mean every marketing initiative has to be quantified in terms of incremental
revenue. Marketers can rely on intermediate metrics that follow customers
through the "hierarchy of effects"-from creating awareness to
changing perceptions, to creating demand, to enhancing loyalty and retention.
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