The State and Drivers of Data Marketing

What matters most is the optimization of the customer experience, relevance and (perceived) customer value as a driver of business value. Data-driven marketing certainly is not (just) about advertising and programmatic ad buying as some believe. Nor is it just about campaigns. On the contrary: if done well, data-driven marketing is part of digital marketing transformations whereby connecting around the customer across the customer life cycle is key.

Very succinct vision of what data-driven marketing is, it's all about the customer experience.  The advent of "big data" was nothing more than gathering extra data about the customers.  Gathering data is only the first step of the process, albeit a time-consuming one.  The good news is after the hard work of gathering the data has been completed, the harder part starts.  Once you have data, making sense of the data and creating actionable outcomes to enhance the customer experience becomes the goal.  This is very hard work.  It takes plenty of analysis and insight to reach this goal.  But the companies who will do this the best will be the ones that succeed in the digital age.

Among the key takeaways of the data-driven marketing report by the GlobalDMA:
  • 77% of marketers are confident in the data-driven approach and 74% expect to increase data marketing budgets this year.
  • Data efforts by far focus on offers, messages and content (marketing) first (69% of respondents). Second ranks a data-driven strategy or data-driven product development. Customer experience optimization unfortunately only ranks third with 49% of respondents.
  • Among the key drivers of increased data marketing: first of all a need to be more customer-centric (reported by 53% of respondents). Maximizing efficiency and return ranks second followed by gaining more knowledge of customers and prospects.

I believe the first step in the process is understanding where the puck is going to be and skate in that direction.  Marketers are understanding this data revolution is coming and they are saying the right things in surveys.  The real question will be how to get there.  It's easy to identify problems, it's hard to implement solutions.  The marketers who will show they are adept at change will thrive in this new paradigm.  

Customer analytics is something I have focused my entire career.  In the casino industry we have had the optimal opt-in mechanism for many years and have collected amazing amounts of data about our customers behavior.  We have used this to create targeted marketing campaigns to our customers, so I believe in the direction the entire industry is taking.  Always start with the customer.  It will lead to creating better experiences and more profitable results.

 
Source: http://www.i-scoop.eu/infographics/data-dr...

The Dangers of Data-Driven Marketing

Marketing has gone digital, and we can now measure our efforts like never before. As a result, marketers have fallen in love with data. Head over heels in love—to the point where we want data to drive our marketing, instead of people, like you and me. I think this has gone too far.

I'm a big proponent of data-driven marketing, in this article Ezra Fishman uses semantics to say this is bad, but what he is trying to get is there is a need to go beyond just the data.  As I wrote in Data + Insight = Action, data all by itself cannot create actionable outcomes.  

Data-informed marketing
Instead of focusing on data alone, data-informed marketing considers data as just one factor in making decisions. We then combine relevant data, past experiences, intuition, and qualitative input to make the best decisions we can.
Instead of poring over data hoping to find answers, we develop a theory and a hypothesis first, then test it out. We force ourselves to make more gut calls, but we validate those choices with data wherever possible so that our gut gets smarter with time.

This is what I was trying to articulate in my article.  To be an excellent data-driven marketing organizations takes a little bit of "science" and a little bit of "art" to determine the best course of action.  When a data scientist is driving your organization, there are years of experience being unused to help him understand even further what the data is saying.  

Most times when a data scientist is off on their own, it takes an inordinate amount of time to come up with a conclusion, mostly because they lack the context of how the business is generating the data.  How the strategy manipulates the data.  How a customer being underserved may be an intentional outcome.

The ease of measurement trap
When we let data drive our marketing, we all too often optimize for things that are easy to measure, not necessarily what matters most.
Some results are very easy to measure. Others are significantly harder. Click-through rate on an email? Easy. Brand feelings evoked by a well-designed landing page? Hard. Conversion rate of visitors who touch your pricing page? Easy. Word-of-mouth generated from a delightful video campaign? Hard.

Right on!  Of course the organizations that take the easy way out are ones that I would not consider to be data-driven.  KPI's are a great item, but they can be deadly.  There are usually so many moving parts that make up the business and the data being generated.  This can cause business KPI's to look fine, yet drilling down into the performance from a customer perspective may show some very scary trends that would cause alarm.  However, a non data-driven company will continue with their strategy because of the KPI's (hello RIM/Blackberry).  

The local optimization trap
The local optimization trap typically rears its head when we try to optimize a specific part of the marketing funnel. We face this challenge routinely at Wistia when we try increase the conversion rate of new visitors. In isolation, improving the signup rate is a relatively straightforward optimization problem that can be "solved" with basic testing.
The problem is, we don't just want visitors to sign up for our Free Plan. We want them to sign up for our Free Plan, then use their account, then tell others how great Wistia is, then eventually purchase one of our paid plans (and along the way generate more and more positive feelings toward our brand).

This can be combined with the previous bullet.  When analytics is only seen from a high level, simple statements like "we need to increase the number of signups, which will flow down at the same rate as we currently have, will increase conversion."  Nothing could be further from the truth.  To increase anything there needs to be an additional action.  This action may include advertising to a different group of individuals or giving an incentive that will increase signups.  The issue with this thinking is these aren't the same individuals that are converting in your current funnel.  The proper strategy is to figure out the converters and try and target customers like them, which may actually decrease the size of the funnel if done right.

The data quality trap
We are rarely as critical of our data as we ought to be. Consider, for example, A/B tests, which have become the gold standard for marketing experimentation. In theory, these tests should produce repeatable and accurate results, since website visitors are assigned randomly to each page variant.
In practice, however, there are lots of ways even the simplest A/B tests can produce misleading results. If your website traffic is anything like ours, visitors come from a variety of sources: organic, direct, referral, paid search, and beyond. If one of those sources converts at a much higher rate than others, it's easy to get skewed results by treating your traffic as a single, uniform audience.

One should rarely just take the conversion or redemption results from the A/B test without digging into the data.  Making sure all segments are driving the results is key.  Don't take for granted the customers that were randomly selected for each group ended up being totally random.  Ensure there was proper representation from each segment of the business and identify any other changes that could be tested based on different behaviors within the segments.

Data vigilance
As marketers, we should continue to explore new and better ways to harness the power of data, but we also must remain vigilant about becoming overly reliant on data.
Data can be a tremendous source of insight. Harness that. But don't pretend it's something more. And definitely don't put it in charge of your marketing team.

This reminds me when I was a product manager and we would receive these RFP's to determine if we were the right company to supply them with our product.  Sometimes the requirements were such that we wondered if the company wanted humans to continue to work for them.  I would comically refer to some of these as automated manager.  It seemed companies wanted to press a button and have a system do everything for them.  This is the trap Fishman is referring.  Humans have great insight.  Humans are the "art" in the equation to actionable outcomes.  This is equally important as the "science".

Source: http://wistia.com/blog/data-informed-marke...

Shoot for the Stars! 4 Ways to Bring It with Your Marketing Automation Platform

...marketing automation is an all-in-one marketing powerhouse, allowing you to generate leads, follow up with consumers, and even demonstrate return on investment. Think of your marketing automation platform like it’s a video game. Lead scoring and personalized email campaigns are just the first level. As you move up through the levels, you access more gold coins, superpowers, and additional lives until you are a powerhouse marketing machine! Below are four ways to move on to the next plane of marketing automation…and you don’t even have to battle the boss to win the game!

Many companies who purchase a marketing automation platform are doing it with a few use cases in mind, but embracing your marketing automation platform can change the way you do business.  Because these platforms can take in data, segment, manipulate and target communications, while also writing out to databases, these tools can enhance many business practices in the organization.  

Your marketing automation platform allows a change in thought process of what a communication is.  For instance, you might have an email marketing team, a mobile team, a social media team.  Well all of these are channels of communication and your marketing automation platform can manage a lot of the content being driven through these channels, while maintaining a consistent message to the customer.

3. Real-time Personalization

Imagine this for a moment: what if everyone who visited your website received a personalized experience? Let’s say you serve a number of different industries. Using a marketing automation platform, you can set up your website so that when someone in the manufacturing industry visits, she sees a different set of content, calls-to-action, and web copy than a visitor in, say, the finance industry. Each visitor has different needs—period. So, giving each individual a targeted experience, whether that’s providing him an industry-specific case study or inviting him to an industry-specific event, makes the information more relevant and encourages conversion.

Most organizations would never consider using their "email marketing system" they just purchase to delver personalized content to their website in real-time, isn't marketing automation an outbound tool?  Not necessarily.  Because marketing automation tools can listen for events and trigger a realtime campaign for 1, and then deliver results through web services, it allows for ultimate customization, even for inbound.

4. Go Mobile

Mobilization is becoming increasingly necessary. According to Nielsen, the average consumer spends more time online via mobile devices than she does via a desktop or laptop computer. And the majority of that time is spent on apps—not the mobile web. All-in-all, companies need to go mobile, but without the right tools, it can be difficult. Not only do you need a strategy, but you also need to work with much more data. But with the data from marketing automation platforms combined with mobilization strategies, companies can effectively implement mobile campaigns, whether that means a native app or an optimized page.

I'll continue to harp about the mobile strategy.  This is a channel that needs to be targeted to customer behavior, however it will be the ultimate channel when used properly.  The marketing automation tool can listen for cues, such as geo location and deliver a customized mobile experience for the customer, whether that be in-app content or push notifications, the marketing automation tool should be at the center of your mobile strategy.  

Source: http://blog.marketo.com/2015/05/shoot-for-...

5 Mistakes You're Making That Are Killing Your Marketing Campaigns

In a past article from Juntae DeLane, he brings up very good succinct points about pitfalls of marketing campaigns.

1. Lack of Audience Understanding

Having a greater understanding of your audience should be the first step when developing a campaign strategy. Some entrepreneurs will produce evergreen campaigns with no specific targets hoping that new targets will emerge. Some may see a practical benefit in doing so; however, why run two campaigns to accomplish one task? Your marketing campaign will be optimized by doing research beforehand so you can make an impactful and relevant introduction to your brand.

The key to digital marketing is knowing your audience.  The more information you have about your customer the better and when using marketing automation tools, it is important to utilize this knowledge.  It is easy to lump as many individuals together and call them segments, however the more individualized your campaigns can become, the better experience the customer will have interacting with your brand or product.  

2. No Strategy

Many marketers get confused when talking about strategies and tactics.  A tactic is how you are going to do something, the strategy is what you are going to do.  They must work in tandem.  Many times marketers start with the tactics, "we are going to send an email to all of our customers who abandon a cart".  Why are you doing this?  You have to start with the strategy of "increase our sales from all parts of the funnel" to reach the tactic.  Otherwise, how do you know the goal?  The goal may be simplified in this case, but so many times a marketing plan is not strategic, it is a list of tactics the company is going to employ.  

Having an overarching strategy will help guide decision making.  Just because you can do something doesn't mean you should.  Focus is the key and understanding the strategy assists in that focus.  

3. Too Much Sales Pitch

I think another way to think about this is understand your customers are not stupid.  They know when they are seeing content from your company they are being sold something.  They want to understand why they need something, how will this make my life better, will I feel satisfaction with this purchase.  By trying to convince them to buy leads to buyers remorse.  The ultimate goal is to create loyal customers that will return again and again to purchase. 

4. No Tracking or Data

With all the tracking services out there, you should be able to easily track your campaign efficacy. From Google Analytics to KISS Metrics you can establish a tracking dashboard at virtually no cost.

However, what will kill your marketing campaign is if you identify the incorrect metrics.

I don't see this too much, most everyone is tracking some kind of performance.  I believe in the comment from above, what are the key metrics that drive the business.  If number of sales is your key metric, this can come at a loss because the amount of money invested to drive those increased sales is more than the revenue being generated.  Be careful to choose your metrics wisely.

5. Too Much Branding

I think everyone believes in increasing brand loyalty is key to a successful business, but this goes so much deeper than pushing the brand.  Brand loyalty comes from consistency, delivering the promise of the brand and always putting the customer first.  These don't come from a catchy slogan or advertising, this comes from hard work to deliver the best customer experiences.  The brand is all aspects of the transaction, from the customer service agent answering the phone to the ways in which a mobile app enhances the buying experience.  

Source: http://juntaedelane.com/5-mistakes-making-...

Retention is King

There are too many companies asking, “How do we acquire more users?” that should instead be asking “How do we get better at keeping the users we already have?”.
Its easy when approaching the problem of growth to think that you just need to get more users, after all that seems to be the very definition of growth. However, if you take a step back though and think about growth as the maximization of user-weeks over time, it quickly becomes apparent that focusing on retention has a much larger effect than topline growth. This is also much more of a sustainable growth mindset. Rapid user growth followed by rapid user attrition is an indicator of unsustainable growth. Strong retention of users over time is a good indicator of product-market fit, something you’re hopefully looking to achieve anyway.

Retention is the place I start everywhere I go.  Building a strong retention program is the key to success for any business.  There's the old "It's much cheaper to keep a customer happy than find new ones" saying, but it goes beyond that.  If one thinks about it logically, the bigger base of loyalty business that is retained, the more money one will make.  Retained/loyal customers have many advantages over new or dormant ones.  

Customers in retention campaigns have a well-defined pattern of behavior

These customers are perfect for targeted promotions, cross-sells and upsells.  Because of the purchasing and communication interaction behavior stored from these customers, tailoring offers specific to the needs of customers is the easiest way to convert into sales.  The less that is known about a customer, the more shotgun approach is taken and less likely to obtain real revenue.

Customers in retention campaigns have less expensive communication channels

Because the customer is known, the communication with the customer is much cheaper on a converted basis.  Even through the direct mail channel, which can be as high as $3-4 per piece depending on how elaborate it may be, the conversion rate is much higher on this type of communication.  Most communication in this channel can be near free, with email and push notifications through apps.

On the other side, acquiring new customers is very expensive.  Even if going completely online, the conversion rates are so small compared to the cost per click or action, that it makes the customer acquisition cost upside down for 2 - 3 purchases for many companies.  If the business needs to go traditional advertising routes, now the cost becomes staggering.  

Retention customers bring in the most revenue

While this varies from business to business, I doubt you will find many longterm successful organizations that don't have this phenomena.  The loyal customer is the bread and butter for the business and can be relied upon to grow revenue.  Within retention campaigns there are customers of all different types and understanding the loyal customer that can spend more money is the best opportunity for profit growth.  

It may seem counterintuitive to look for growth in your loyal customer base, but I have always thought of it like this.  The more customers that I can have in the active customer base, the more opportunity I have for growth.  Acquisition rarely can go away and there should always be a plan to acquire more customers, but that cost should decrease as the business matures.  For a very mature business, this cost should be as low as possible.  

A simple way to illustrate this is 

New Customers + Retained Customers + Reactivated Customers = Active Customer Base.

So if the business can acquire at a consistent base, lets call this 1 million customers per year and retain the majority of their customers, lets call this 10 million customers, then they can grow their active customer base by close to 1 million per year.  Now if those customers are retained and a new million come in, the growth lies in increasing the retention customers.  Otherwise, it costs too much to try to double your acquired customers, especially the more mature the company is.  Try to focus on retention first, it is truly the King.

Source: http://andrewchen.co/retention-is-king/

DIB Digital Trends Report 2015_EMEA Part 2

In part 2 of reading through the Digital Trends Report for 2015, The next part has to deal with the areas of digital related business.  The big surprise to me is how high social media engagement ranks on this list.  Multichannel campaign management is still not receiving its rightful mindshare in organizations.  At 22%, this area should be right up there with targeting and personalization, it is that important.

I find these next responses fascinating.  The difference in this year and the next 5 years, especially in the area of multichannel campaign management is perplexing to me.  This is the age of campaign management and the respondents are thinking 5 years out.  That boggles my mind.  I do like that respondents are thinking customer experience is the most important item, but that is more of a culture change compared to the other items.  All the other items support the customer experience.  The fact that customer experience is viewed as a tactic or strategy is why I think this item will be talked about for years to come.  Multichannel campaign management, personalization, big data and content marketing are items that will enhance the customer experience, so these items are all striving for the same goal, to deliver relevant content to customers to enhance their experience.

This part of the study is a little perplexing to me.  Organizations want to enhance the customer experience, but there very little is being done in the area of geo-targeting.  Only 24% have this in their 2015 plan or are already using this technology.  For brick and mortar operations, this is the most exciting technology to me.  Using this in conjunction with multichannel campaign management is the ultimate targeted marketing.  

Even if the uses of this technology are just to enhance the data about customers, organizations should be implementing this technology sooner rather than later.  The ability to understand the behaviors of your customers in store and communicate with them if they exhibit certain behaviors is no different than how a customer behaves on a website.  Digital marketers have been enhancing their strategies on customer buying funnels on the web for years now, but not enough are jumping at the opportunity to do the same thing in brick and mortar operations.  

A good sign is importance organizations are putting in the cross channel journey of their customers.  The top 2 answers are what make up a big part of the customer experience.  The clear, concise message, regardless of the channel is the key to the ultimate customer experience. 

This is probably the most concerning part of this survey.  Most companies want to make customer experience across channels their number 1 priority, however the data is still an issue with most companies.  Only 37% of the companies feel they have the ability and the infrastructure to capture and act on the data.  

In the new age of marketing, data is the first and most important step in the marketing strategy.  Without laying a data framework to capture and properly analyze, the ultimate customer experience will be nearly impossible to implement.  Companies to focus on the data as much as the culture of being customer centric.  These two items go hand in hand.