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Brainstorming Digital Goals and Creating the Engagement Value Scale Ron Person, Sitecore Business Optimization Services Executive Summary This guide describes a step-by-step process for brainstorming digital goals to achieve your strategic objectives. The guide then leads you through how to develop your Engagement Value Scale that is necessary for Experience Analytics. 2 Understanding Engagement Values Your Strategic objectives determine your Engagement Values. The marketing effort with the highest Engagement Value should be the goal that moves the visitor toward your strategic objective. If you pick the wrong sets of goals to represent a strategic objective or you put an incorrect Engagement Value on the goals, then you will optimize your website in the wrong direction and you won't reach your strategic objectives. "What you put Engagement Value on is what you optimize for!" For example, if the marketing objective that supports your strategic objective is to increase the number of Marketing Qualified Leads (MQL), then a goal where a visitor requests a demonstration would surely be high value and might be assigned 100 points. All other goals that support accomplishing that MQL should correlate to that. Placing an incorrect Engagement Value on a goal can optimize your marketing in the wrong direction. For example, watching a video shows engagement, but it does not move visitors closer to the end goal of becoming an MQL. Placing a high value on the video would optimize your website for moving visitors to the video. This might not optimize your website for creating Marketing Qualified Leads, your website's highest purpose. In most cases, Engagement Value is created at digital goals where people have an interaction or transaction with a marketing effort. The Engagement Value of these touches is related to the level or depth of three things common to human relationships. Those three things are, 1. Two-way communication 2. Trust building 3. Commitment Some websites have few transaction points. For example, informational and non-profit websites primarily have one-way communication, visitors prefer to remain anonymous and not assume even a low-level of risk, and there are few conversion points. On sites like these "Interaction Points" involving one-way transfer of information and no shared risk may be used. In every case, goals that are assigned Engagement Values must meet these requirements, • • Each Engagement Value is relative to the visitor's level of communication, trust, and commitment. All goals with Engagement Value points must move the visitor toward the Strategic objectives. What Do Engagement Values Look Like? This figure shows the Engagement Value Scale for a B2B business that has a long sales cycle with a marketing objective of capturing Marketing Qualified Leads. From bottom to top each level of the Engagement Value Scale should move a visitor toward achieving your marketing objective. The value of each level should be proportional to how much that level contributes to the visitor reaching the marketing objective. 100 • Request demonstration 50 • Request Pricing • Instant Sales Chat 25 • Sign up for Webinar 10 • Sign up for newsletter 5 • Watch video 0 Different objectives will determine the goals on your Engagement Value Scale. For example, if you are an informational non-profit with activism as one of your key objectives, then some of your top goals might be volunteering and donations. If you are a government entity your goals might include self-service and more participation in the governing process. An Overview of Creating Engagement Values To create Engagement Values you must use the defined process that follows and its specific stages. If you do not follow these stages there is a very real possibility that you will select invalid goals and set the initial Engagement Values incorrectly. If you incorrectly set Engagement Values you may optimize your marketing for the wrong goals. Creating Your Website's Engagement Values Terminology Before we dive into the process, it’s important to understand the basic concepts and terminology used in Engagement Value. A Goal is a point on the website where conversion or completion occurs for a marketing effort. An Engagement Value is an integer numeric value assigned to a goal. The numeric value of the Engagement Value correlates with the success of your strategic objectives. An Engagement Value Scale shows the goals and their Engagement Values for goals that relate to or drive the accomplishment of a marketing objective that drives a strategic objective. 4 A Strategic Theme is the distinctive thrust or focus that defines an organization's strategy. Successful companies have only two or three complimentary strategic themes. A Strategic Objective is an overarching end result that must be accomplished for an organization to be successful at its strategic theme. The strategic objective is usually composed of multiple crossfunctional objectives such as financial, marketing, customer, human resources, IT, etc. A Marketing Objective is a strategic objective within the domain of marketing. Accomplishing the marketing objective will help the organization succeed at its strategic objectives. A KPI is a Key Performance Indicator. An organization may have hundreds of performance measures or indicators, but the Key Performance Indicators are those critical few performance indicators that are critical to success. Prerequisites Prerequisites for this process are: • • Clear strategic objectives and marketing objectives for your organization. Although clear definitions produce better results, even if you do not have well-defined organizational strategic and marketing objectives this guide can help a team of experienced marketers identify website goals and develop an Engagement Value Scale. Use of the Sitecore Customer Engagement Platform. The goal of this guide is to walk you through the process related to creating an Engagement Value Scale, without focusing on the specifics of how this is configured in Sitecore. Five Steps The five steps to creating an Engagement Value Scale are, 1. Strategic Themes 2. Strategic and Marketing Objectives 3. Digital Goals 4. Engagement Value Scale 5. Key Performance Indicators 5 1. Identifying Strategic Themes In this first step you will identify the two or three strategic themes that identify at what your organization wants to succeed. These are the two or three themes by which your organization should be known. To develop an effective system you can use to track and improve your cross-channel online marketing performance, you need to follow a chain that begins with your organization's strategic themes and objectives and ends with implementing an Engagement Value Scale. The starting point for this chain is your organization's strategic themes. Once you know those you can identify the marketing objectives your company needs to succeed at its themes. Your marketing objectives will in turn determine your Engagement Points, the Engagement Value Scale, and related Key Performance Indicators. Every marketer must understand their company’s marketing objectives — how marketing contributes to the organization's success. To understand the marketing objectives they must know their company's strategic themes and the objectives required to make that theme successful. Strategic themes are broad statements of how the company expects to succeed and how it wants to be perceived by customers. Every successful company operates with one or two strategic themes. Companies that have more than three themes usually fail because they are not focused in their use of resources or in the minds of their customers. When you think of the most successful companies you usually have an image of what makes them unique in their industry. 6 There are a limited number of strategic themes used in organizations no matter their business model or whether they are profit or non-profit. The following table lists some of the 15 strategic themes and some USA-based companies that operate with one or more themes: Theme Highest Quality Leading Edge Products Company Lexus BMW Intel Apple Total Solution Sitecore IBM Operational Excellence Dell General Electric Lowest Cost Wal-Mart Dell McDonalds Starbucks Build the Franchise Customer Intimacy Land’s End Customer Value Wal-Mart System Lock-in Microsoft Oracle Corporate Citizenship P&G Vodafone Whole Foods Description Products or services are recognized as having the highest quality. Products are the most innovative and advanced in their industry or segment. Provide everything needed by the customer. In the case of IBM this is hardware, software, consulting, and support. Manufacturing, operations and distribution are vastly superior to competitors. Initial cost of purchase is the lowest. Increase the number of outlets to meet the customer at every possible location. Know the customer's needs so well you can make recommendations to them they will appreciate. The sum of total benefits for the customer beats all competitors. Once you start with this company’s products or services it is very difficult to switch to a competitor. Stand-out as the leader in corporate and social responsibility in legal, ethical, environmental and community areas. You don't have to be on the executive planning committee to identify most organization's strategic themes. Some mid-level managers have effectively identified their organization's strategic themes by interviewing key cross-functional vice-presidents. This interview process is also an excellent way to increase communication and raise awareness between marketing and other functions. Write down the two or three strategic themes you feel your organization wants to achieve. This is an excellent exercise to conduct with a group of experienced managers. There should be no more than three themes. Themes should not contradict each other, for example, Leading Edge and Lowest Cost is a pair of themes that would be difficult to execute together. 7 2. Identifying Strategic and Marketing Objectives In this step you will dive into your organization's strategic themes and identify the strategic objectives and marketing objectives needed to make that theme succeed. Although there are a limited number of strategic themes, there are thousands of ways of executing each strategy. To create a strategic theme an organization must reach or build strategic objectives. It is the execution of these strategic objectives that make a strategic theme successful. The strategic objectives executed by marketing are known as marketing objectives. (Importantly, history shows it is not the best strategy that wins, but the one who executes the best.) For example, one strategic theme is "Leading Edge", being a company with products and services that is always a thought leader and technology leader. In this case, marketing's objective would be to build demand for leading edge products, create discontent with old products, and build an image of the Next New Thing. A marketing objective here might be, Increase visitors with an "early adopter" persona by 25% in the next quarter. Not all marketing objectives directly drive the success of organizational strategy. A marketing objective may reinforce the strategy in the minds of the targeted audience. For example, if a strategic theme is "Build the Franchise" then the marketing objective might be to, Increase awareness of our products and services by 12% in new geographic regions before we enter. Other strategies might have different marketing objectives such as, Increase by 25% the rate of visitors in the X niche profile over the next six months. Identify the three top marketing messages for revenue and focus those messages on existing customers. Increase the cross-sell rate by 8% and the up-sale rate by 10% for the X product line sold into the Y audience segment. In order to identify and understand your marketing objectives, you may want to create a table where you can identify strategic themes, their definition, strategic objectives, and the associated marketing objectives. Identify your top one to three marketing objectives for each of your strategic themes. Make them specific and keep in mind that these are objectives you want to drive with your cross-channel online marketing. The following is an example of such a table, Strategic Theme Customer Intimacy Definition Know customers’ needs before they do Strategic Objective Increase Revenue Marketing Objective Increase Lead conversion Get Customer Email Permission 8 3. Brainstorming and Identifying Digital Goals In this third step you will brainstorm goals on your website, such as a registration, that might contribute to the success of each marketing objective. The goals you brainstorm here will be reevaluated in later steps. As you look at the marketing objectives you identified in the previous section, you should be asking yourself what you can do in your online marketing efforts and on your website to make those marketing objectives succeed. Do you need a detailed registration form? Would more interaction help? What online marketing effort or action will move visitors toward your marketing objectives? These website interactions with your visitors are usually referred to as "goals" in websites. Goals could be a registration, completing a survey, requesting a free offer, chatting online, and so on. Not every visitor action or response is important, but some goals on your website are related to or drive the success of your marketing objective. When you think of marketing objectives and goals remember that they may change over time, so keep your focus at the highest level. Start with high level marketing objectives and identify the goals that either drive them or are critically related. After you brainstorm a list of goals that contribute to your marketing objective you should step back and examine your list with these questions, • • • Which goals are most related to overall success? Which goals are the most important for each marketing objective? What goals do you not have that would help you reach your objectives? In many cases goals may drive success in more than one marketing objective. Even if a goal contributes to more than one marketing objective, write the goal next to the objective it relates to. Remember, these are potential goals. In further steps you will use processes to identify which goals are most important and what their Engagement Value will be. In order to identify and track what goals contribute to each marketing objective, you may want to create a table where you can list the marketing objectives and their goals. In this example table the Rank column can be used to identify the top goals for each marketing objective. The following table is an example of such a table, Potential Goals Form Marketing Objectives Increase Lead conversion Get Customer Email Permission Online Goals Schedule Demonstration Request for quote Survey completion Newsletter Signup Rank 1 2 1 2 9 4. Creating an Engagement Value Scale You can use different methods for creating an Engagement Value Scale for your organization. In any method it is critical to get buy-in from key stakeholders. Innumerable studies have shown that without buy-in from key stakeholders and endorsement from key communicators performance improvement efforts usually fail. Two Ways: People and Brainstorming, or People and Analysis There are two primary methods of creating your Engagement Value Scale. The first method uses structured facilitation with a team of experienced marketers to guesstimate the Engagement Value Scale. The second method works well if you have a significant amount of data that you can use to determine which goals have a high correlation with your objectives. Creating an Engagement Value Scale, like the one shown on page 7, takes about half of a day of work for a cross-functional team of experienced marketers. You should follow the initial development of the scale with a time for reflection and examination that may stretch over one or more weeks. Building Your Team Whichever method you use to develop the Engagement Value Scale you should involve the most important stakeholders. You need their buy-in, their communication to others, and most importantly their cross-functional experience in selecting and weighting the most important goals. The team you bring together should have six to ten people who are highly experienced in marketing or online marketing. (The experience factor is there so they respond from the pain and exultation they have felt, not just from anecdotes they have read.) It should include people from all marketing functions, from the CMO to campaign managers and content editors to marketing analysts. Many studies have shown that cross-functional teams develop more and better ideas than homogenous groups. Team members should be stakeholders. You need them to buy in to Engagement Value metrics, understand how and why it works, and act as evangelists for optimizing marketing. Some examples of team members might be, • • • • • • • • CMO or CMO representative Customer engagement/brand manager Email manager Social media manager Paid manager SEO analyst Analytics analyst or manager E-Commerce manager If you use the brainstorming method of developing the Engagement Value Scale the team will be selecting goals and assigning Engagement Values. If you use the analysis method the team will be checking hypothesis and results. 10 Method 1: Creating by Brainstorming and Ranking Once you have completed your "homework" and have gathered a team you can use the following process. This is a divergent/ convergent process that takes two to three hours. The divergent process at the beginning generates as many ideas as possible for current and future goals. The convergent process aggregates these ideas and sorts out the best. At the end you can rank ideas by what can be done now, near term, and future. Preparing for the Meeting 1. Before the team meeting, • Distribute the homework for Step1-3. This will give all team members the same concise background. The following chart shows part of one Strategic Theme and its hierarchy. Customer Intimacy Strategic Theme Strategic Objectives Marketing Objectives Increase Lead Conversion Online Goals • • • • Increase Revenue Schedule Demonstration Request Quote Get Customer Email Permission Survey Completion Newsletter signup Distribute a note describing the purpose of the meeting, "Identify goals that drive or are highly related to the marketing objectives." Ask attendees to consider whether the goals listed are correct or whether new goals will work better. Distribute a Visual Gallery of Engagement. This is a PowerPoint presentation showing examples of many leading edge digital goals. This is firestarter for brainstorming new ideas about goals. Buy large format Post-it© notes. These are 6" X 8" and should have the adhesive along the top of the long side so you can stick them in landscape orientation on a wall or whiteboard. Make sure you have enough dark colored dry erase markers for all team members. (Dry erase are safer if someone accidentally writes on a table or wall.) Create banners to post in the meeting room. At the front of the room post a banner stating the focus of the meeting, "What digital goals that visitors act on drives success in our marketing objectives?" 11 Adjacent banners should state your marketing objectives. You want these in front of the team at all times. This is IMPORTANT to keep everyone on focus. 2. Schedule the meeting for three hours in a morning later in the week. Mornings are best for innovative thinking. Later in the week people usually have more free time. 3. Post the banners at the front of the room. 4. Begin the meeting by discussing • What Engagement Values are and their benefits • The strategic objectives Framework • How Engagement Value analytics will help optimize marketing • Show an example scale from one of the examples later in this paper Brainstorming Goals 1. Distribute a few of the large 6" X 8" Post-it notes to team members. A rule of thumb for how many Post-its each person gets is to divide 40 by the number of people on the team. 2. Remind the group of the marketing objectives. 3. Post these rules on notes at the front of the wall to make sure everyone writes their ideas on the Post-Its so they are readable. • Write the Engagement Point in 3 – 5 words. • Use BLOCK letters. • One idea per Post-it 4. Give the group five to ten minutes to brainstorm current and future goals that drive the marketing objectives. Brainstorm INDIVIDUALLY! (Research consistently shows the best ideas come from individual brainstorming that is then aggregated and reviewed by the group.) 5. Ask everyone to break into teams of three or four. Groups should discuss their ideas and pick the "best" 30% of their ideas for all marketing objectives. • Which marketing objective a Post-it is for does not matter • Do not throw away duplicates • Rewrite if necessary so there is one idea per note and notes are readable 6. Collect the 30% of Post-its. Grouping Goals 1. Arrange the first 30% of the Post-its across the bottom in a "smile". This will give you more room to rearrange notes in the open space above. 2. As you post each note, read it off. If the idea is not clear, ask for an explanation from the person who wrote it. 3. Ask the group to rearrange Post-its into pairs of similar or identical engagement. KEEP THEM IN PAIRS. Do not aggregate and throw away too early. Aggregating into large groups too early reduces flexibility and stifles diverse thinking. 4. Collect the rest of the Post-its and post them in a "smile" across the bottom. Ask the group to help you add them to existing pairs or create new groups as needed. 5. Continue grouping until you have homogenous groups. You may want to put symbols at the top of each group, as shown in the figure below, to make it easier to talk about a group. Labeling or naming a group too early can reduce new ideas. 12 6. Review notes to make sure that groups are small and all contain a homogenous idea, such as variations on "Detailed Registration", "Free Trial Download", or "Online Chat." 7. Identify each group by writing a label on a Post-it at the top of the group, for example, • Detailed Registration • Order Completion • Free Trial Download • View 70% Webinar • Schedule Appointment 8. Remove the Post-it notes from the group leaving only labels. Attributing Goals to Marketing Objectives 1. Have the group read each marketing objective banner. 2. Move Post-it notes under the marketing objective banner to which they most highly contribute. You may need to create duplicate notes at this point. 3. Use a digital camera to record all notes under all marketing objectives. 4. Discuss which goals (notes) are the Critical Few (3 – 5) under each marketing objective. 5. Remove non-Critical notes. 6. Have the group review the Post-its for missing transaction/interaction points. 7. Photograph the final result as a record. Sorting and Weighting Goals 1. Sort the Post-it notes under each marketing objective with the largest drivers on top. a. Judge the level of engagement by the amount of two-way communication and risk involved. Remember the stages of engagement, 1. Attraction 2. Two-way communication, 3. Building trust 4. Commitment b. Transactions that show solid commitment, such as calling for an appointment, making a donation, or talking to an expert should receive higher points. c. Discuss the relative contribution and order until you have consensus. 2. Write the Engagement Value point on each note in red. 13 a. A good method is to use 100 points for the highest engagement value and a value of 10 for the next to lowest. A value of 0 is used for goals you want to track, but do not want to place an Engagement Value on. (See the Considerations section below for discussions where this is valuable.) b. Use decreasing values down to the smallest interaction. 3. Review the relative value of points. A good way to estimate value is to compare the relative ratios of different transactions and interactions. For example, "Are ten newsletter registrations at 10 points each the equivalent to a 100 point donation?" Method 2: Creating Goals by Data Driven Hypothesis If you have access to a significant volume of data over time showing goal conversions and visits, you may be able to use this data-driven technique. This method also requires data from a CRM or accounting system that identifies which visitors completed a sale or final commitment. Analyze CRM or Sales Data 1. Prior to the team workshop export marketing data that includes the conversions at each website goal you hypothesize relates to or drives a marketing objective. Include in the marketing data the visitor identifier such as email address and last name. 2. Export from your CRM or accounting system data showing successfully completed sales if that is your success goal. Include in the export data the visitor identifier such that you can match the closed account with the marketing data from step 1. Or, in the marketing data identify the website goal that signifies success for the objective. For example, if the marketing objective is to increase marketing qualified Leads, you might identify the Thank You page after scheduling a sales appointment as the goal indicating success. 3. Run a correlation analysis between the success goal from either the sales data (if that is your success goal) or from the marketing data. The correlation values will give you a relative weighting of each goal’s contribution toward achieving the marketing objective. If you assign 100 to the highest goal under each marketing objective you can adjust the other points underneath to their relative value. Create a Map Showing How Goals Drive Objectives In this process the team will use its experience to verify the results from the correlation and to decide which goals are the Critical Few. 1. With the cross-functional team, review the marketing objectives. 2. Identify which goals are most related to or drive marketing objectives. 3. Post the marketing objectives on banners at the top of a wall and put the goals determined by the correlation under each objective. Use Post-it notes under each marketing objective. Reevaluate the Engagement Value Scale 1. Display the results from the correlation analysis. 2. Open up the meeting for what will very probably be some interesting discussion. 3. Reevaluate, renumber, and re-sort as necessary. 14 Selecting Valid Goals and Engagement Values One intuitive approach to whether you have set your Engagement Values correctly is to look at the ratios between Engagement Values under the same marketing objectives. For example, if a simple registration is worth 10 points and a call for a sales appointment is worth 100 points, does that mean the outcome will be the same for 10 registrations as it is for one sales appointment? Does that feel reasonable? Remember that using Engagement Values optimizes marketing for those goals where you have set Engagement Values. This means that if you place Engagement Value on the wrong goals you will optimize your marketing to improve those incorrect goals. This happens most frequently when marketers set Engagement Value on page search, logins, viewing a page, or watching a generic video. Be sure to select the correct points around a goal when creating an Engagement Value. For example, imagine you want to test visitors’ interest level by presenting them with an offer for a "Free Sample;" however, after clicking the button visitors learn they must pay $4.95 for shipping and handling. You use this charge of $4.95 and their entry of a credit card number as a test of their resolution and commitment. If you put the Engagement Value points on clicking the "Free Sample" button you will receive a lot of invalid data because you are getting responses from visitors who thought they would get a free value. Instead, if you put the Engagement Value at the completion of the credit card process you will get a valid response showing the number of visitors who have resolution and commitment to your product. You will face this same issue of where to put the Engagement Value points when you create a newsletter or whitepaper registration form. If you put the Engagement Value points on the sign-up page then visitors will earn value even if they bail out of the sign-up page. Instead put the Engagement Value points on the sign-up confirmation or Thank You page so you are sure the action you want has been completed. 15 Implementing an Engagement Value Scale Strategizing and planning are necessary and great intellectual exercise, but without execution they are worthless. You must know how to best implement your plan on using Engagement Values. The best practices you'll read here are taken from real world experience that produced pain, insight, and now foresight. Entering Engagement Values After creating your Engagement Value Scale you can enter Engagement Values for goals by selecting the appropriate Engagement Value from the drop-down in the Create a New Goal option. 16