[Or, a hymn in praise of integration...]
Have you got an iPad yet? Did you buy a 3D TV just in time for the World Cup? How about a walkman? (…OK, one of those isn’t actually a must-have gadget this year)
And what about the marketing must-haves for 2010? Have you appointed a Head of Social Media? Implemented a marketing automation system? Designed a content marketing strategy?
The next big thing makes our capitalist world go round – from the consumer who believes their life will be complete with 3D TV, to the marketer who turns to the latest technique as the answer to their prayers.
Suffering from boom and bust marketing?
The danger comes when you step off the merry-go-round. You realise that football is still football whether you’re watching in black and white or 3D – and social media won’t automatically solve fundamental challenges like uniting Sales and Marketing or differentiating you from the competition.
What’s the problem with jumping to adopt new marketing techniques?
- It can excuse (or distract) from failure in older channels – hopefully the next new thing will come along before it’s time to analyse the success of the last one…
- It can make marketers chase the wrong goals – metrics become about the success of the online community rather than contribution to the sales pipeline…
- It can make us less strategic – distracting from the chance to become the voice of the customer, driving the creation and application of new propositions.
This isn’t an argument to ignore the latest marketing trends – especially not ones like social media that have such potential to reach key audiences. It’s just a plea to consider them in a more integrated way.
Paul Dunay from Avaya was talking to Brian Wallace, VP of Digital Marketing and Media for RIM, and recalls him saying that “2 years from now – if I still have a Director of Social Media – I should be fired!” Once it gets off the ground, social media isn’t a programme in itself – it needs to support the bigger goals like prospect acquisition, customer growth or co-creation of products/services. Putting it in a silo won’t help anybody achieve these core objectives.
Demand generation – integration in practice
Take a big marketing challenge like delivering sales leads. (To start with, let’s not forget that the ‘old’ channels (events, direct mail, telemarketing…) are still delivering opportunities every day.)
But suppose you believe you could be driving more demand ‘inbound’ rather than relying solely on the traditional ‘outbound’ channels? You’re faced with the temptation to kick off any number of isolated projects to attract these sales opportunities.
Take the big three – social media, marketing automation, content marketing. It would be simple to create a programme for each:
- One set of people looking to improve your reputation/presence online
- Another building nurturing/communication processes for visitors to your website
- A third group dedicated to creating content that customers and prospects will find valuable
But shouldn’t these really all be part of a single programme? Creating content that the audience wants, delivering it in a format that can be distributed across the web/used to start conversations, and then being ready to track inbound interest and provide more good content at relevant points on the prospect journey.
And integration would go further than that – it would look at the ‘old’ channels and see how they could also use the same content, qualify people into the lead nurturing funnel, and provide essential opportunities to convert initial interest into sales leads.
Seven success factors for the new integrated model
To start with, there are four pre-requisites – all about knowing what you’re going to do. But let’s assume you’ve done all of those – understood your audience, thought about the great content you can provide, identified the channels to use, and set your objectives.
The final three success factors are a bit less obvious, and more about how you do it:
- Sell the next step
It’s true that the best programmes create content and calls to action to suit the needs of the audience – but it’s also possible to subtly direct those needs and the journey the audience will take. This means stepping back from the core proposition you’re selling, and think more about selling why the prospect should stay with you for the next step of their journey.
- Don’t be afraid to involve sales: you can’t automate everything
In the rush to become more self-sufficient, Marketing is increasingly frightened of handing an ‘unready’ lead to Sales. But sometimes (especially for high value deals in the relatively small UK market) a sales conversation or meeting can be the best next step for the prospect even if they aren’t going to buy for another 9 months.
- And keep going… across all the channels that work
In one recent programme, 57% of leads handed to sales came after three or more waves of campaigning. The point is clear – seamlessly integrating multiple touchpoints (social, email, website, events, calling…) over time is the only way to uncover the true potential of a market.
So like any team of superheroes (The Avengers, the Power Rangers – select according to your generation) using tools and channels on their own will only defeat some challenges: it’s the ability to combine them seamlessly that will destroy the evil genius who is taking over the world.