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THE CMO’S AGENDA, 2016: FACING THE FACTS ON WHAT’S EFFECTIVE AND WHAT NEEDS FIXING February 2016 Andrew Moravick, Senior Research Associate, Marketing Effectiveness & Strategy Report Highlights p2 Acquiring new customers remains the top pressure among marketers, but what’s changed for 2016? p4 Learn how Best-inClass marketers average a 66% higher return on marketing investment (ROMI). p8 Best-in-Class marketing organizations are 95% more likely to make aiding their organizations’ HR efforts an integral part of their overall marketing activities. A new year, a new laundry list of marketing pressures, initiatives, “next-big-thing” temptations, derailing expectations, and everchanging situations. In this dizzying, disorienting world of modern marketing, CMOs and other marketing leaders must still find a way to orient themselves and align their marketing efforts in the right direction to move their businesses forward. In this report, Aberdeen’s findings will help to map out and make sense of modern marketing trends and identify where CMOs and other marketing leaders have the greatest opportunities for competitive differentiation. p12 Discover the impact of data/analytics solutions on lead management. 2 The CMO’s Agenda, 2016: Facing the Facts on What’s Effective and What Needs Fixing Setting the Marketing Scene for 2016 For all the talk being talked on modern marketing sophistication, there’s still a lot of walk left to be walked. For better or worse in marketing, pressures often dictate priorities. When Aberdeen surveyed 223 marketing professionals between September and October of 2015, the top pressures identified have painted a rather interesting picture of what CMOs and other marketing leaders are focusing on. In Figure 1, we see these pressures plotted out pretty clearly, but collectively, these data points reflect how CMOs believe they must operate in 2016 (but not necessarily how they should). Figure 1: What’s Keeping CMOs Up at Night? The Top Marketing Pressures of 2016: Outright, it’s clear that new customer acquisition is the most common pressure reported by 56% of marketers. With a 41% disparity between the fourth highest pressure of retaining existing customers (15%), however, there’s already an explicit inefficiency with what marketing leaders are setting out to do. When customer acquisition takes priority, but customer retention is not prioritized in tandem, acquisition efforts must also make up for any www.aberdeen.com The CMO’s Agenda, 2016: Facing the Facts on What’s Effective and What Needs Fixing 3 inevitable customer attrition that may occur. On paper, the math might work out well enough that customers acquired does make up for losses in customers retained. However, when paired with the additional pressure of executing marketing initiatives with limited resources, this environment of marketing pressures becomes rather unhealthy. Marketing becomes a tightrope walk across two towering expectations of business results and wellmanaged resources. It's easy to imagine a CEO or board member telling a CMO, “Great new customer wins this year Jennifer, but if you do the same next year with half the budget and headcount, we’ll see twice the returns.” Some CMOs might concede, but smart CMOs are standing their ground against such business cases and proposing even more beneficial alternatives. For example, Aberdeen’s report, The State of Marketing Technology 2016: Controlling the Chaos (December 2015), showed that the top source of competitive advantage cited by marketers is the personnel on their marketing teams. Thus, accepting headcount cuts isn’t a good option. The report also showed that Best-in-Class marketing organizations (see sidebar) generally tend to drive more marketing returns from more strategic investments — both of time and money. Particularly, it’s noted that Best-inClass marketers dedicate 10% more of their time to manage and maintain their marketing systems, compared to All Others (22% vs 20%). Yet they also have 2.2-times the aptitude for tracking specific marketing objectives in order to optimize their results over time, compared to All Others (56% vs. 25%). The result? Bestin-Class marketers average a 66% higher return on marketing investment (ROMI), compared to their peers (74% vs 45%). Aberdeen's Maturity Class Framework Aberdeen's research defines Best-inClass performance by benchmarking organizations against several key performance metrics. In this case, three metrics were used: • • • Percentage of company revenue attributed to marketing campaigns: Best-inClass: 50.7% vs. All Others: 24.4% Year-over-year improvement (decrease) in customer acquisition cost: Best-in-Class: 10.8% vs. All Others: -0.8% Year-over-year improvement (increase) in customer retention rates: Best-in-Class: 3.9% vs. All Others: 0.8%: By looking at organizational performance, we then break the survey respondents into three maturity classes, as described below: • • • Best-in-Class: top 20% of performers Industry Average: middle 50% of performers Laggard: bottom 30% of performers Sometimes, a fourth maturity class, All Others, is used to describe Industry Average & Laggard combined. www.aberdeen.com 4 Best-in-Class marketers average a 66% higher return on marketing investment (ROMI), compared to their peers (74% vs 45%). The CMO’s Agenda, 2016: Facing the Facts on What’s Effective and What Needs Fixing The critical takeaway here is that in response to a high-pressure and unstable marketing environment, savvy CMOs are establishing stability, competency, and quality in their marketing efforts as a foundation. Then, from this position of strength, they’re building out marketing plans that incrementally grow marketing’s performance by building on what’s already working. These marketers first secure measurable marketing effectiveness, and then they work toward efficiency, but without sacrificing performance. The Marketing Competency Reality Check When it comes to marketing performance, however, it’s critical for marketers to know what efforts are actually effective, and where they need to improve. Aberdeen uncovered that overall, the average marketer is responsible for seventeen individual marketing activities. Those activities roll up into eight overarching marketing initiatives under the purview of a CMO or comparable marketing leader. Of note, for example, while 63% of all marketers report a responsibility for managing leads, in Figure 2 below, we see that only 38% of all marketers are actually effective (reporting a 4 for “effective” or 5 for “very effective” on a 1-5 scale) at the related competency of managing, scoring, and prioritizing leads based on behavioral and demographic data. Essentially, of the 63% of marketers managing leads, 62% of that cohort are just going through the motions ineffectively. This is the kind of “doing stuff just to do stuff” that CMOs need to clear out in 2016. www.aberdeen.com The CMO’s Agenda, 2016: Facing the Facts on What’s Effective and What Needs Fixing 5 Figure 2: What Are Marketers Doing… Both Effectively and Ineffectively? Although Figure 2 could be taken as a bit of a downer — after all, for six out of the eight competencies shown, marketers have a below par (under 50%) level of effectiveness — there is hope. Paired with the context of Best-in-Class marketers, there are clear opportunities for not only attainable, but also impactful improvement. For one, looking at the wide margin in the ability to measurably connect marketing efforts to revenue between Best-in-Class marketers and the average level of effectiveness for all marketers, www.aberdeen.com The CMO’s Agenda, 2016: Facing the Facts on What’s Effective and What Needs Fixing 6 The average marketer has the same chances of converting a netnew visitor into a closed-won deal as an average golfer has of hitting a hole-in-one! the data suggests that this competency is strongly correlated to Best-in-Class marketing performance. Marketers who find themselves chasing the Best-in-Class can make significant strides forward by more effectively connecting their efforts to revenue. With such effective revenue attribution, a CMO can also justify otherwise costly or time-consuming marketing technologies or processes that eclipse expenses with revenue outputs. For retaining or even promoting talented marketing team members, this kind of revenue attribution also helps to make a clear business case and cut down on negotiation or approval time. Speaking of revenue, it’s also worth highlighting how marketers are performing within the specific stages of the lead-to-revenue cycle overall. When CMOs have such a benchmarked breakdown as shown in Table 1, they can identify where exactly their marketing strategies are performing well, and where it is necessary to make improvements. Table 1: Marketing Performance in the Lead-to-Revenue Cycle Lead-to-Revenue Stage Conversion Rates (n=223) Unknown visitor to marketing response Marketing response to marketing qualified lead (MQL) MQL to sales actioned lead (SAL) SAL to opportunity Opportunity to closed-won deal Best-in-Class 3.96% 21.38% Average Marketers 3.54% 20.36% 38.51% 35.92% 30.89% 33.57% 30.08% 28.88% Source: Aberdeen Group, January 2016 Table 1 highlights that, for average marketers, the marketingcontrolled stages are the strongest, which, assumedly, means that’s where these marketers invest most of their time and effort. For the Best-in-Class, however, the elevated performance levels continue on into the more sales-controlled phases of the lead-towww.aberdeen.com The CMO’s Agenda, 2016: Facing the Facts on What’s Effective and What Needs Fixing 7 revenue cycle — after a marketing qualified lead (MQL) has been actioned by sales, qualified as an opportunity, and closed as a won deal. In other words, the perceived “handoff” from marketing to sales is becoming less and less of an actual release, and more of a joint “hand-holding” session. Best-in-Class marketers don’t give up on their buyers when they’re in sales’ hands, and they don’t leave sales empty-handed when it comes to managing their buyers. Firstly, this is because 92% of Best-in-Class marketing organizations report that supporting the sales team is an integral part of their marketing strategy. Secondly, the ability to optimize and enhance every stage of the lead-to-revenue cycle can make a sizable difference on marketing’s ability to source and drive revenue for the organization. As Table 2 shows, overall, marketing’s performance in the lead-to-revenue cycle still has a long way to go, so every little bit counts. When the average marketer has the same chances of converting a net-new visitor to a closed-won deal as an average golfer has of hitting a hole-inone, we’re not exactly looking at professional-grade performance. 92% of Best-in-Class marketing organizations report that supporting the sales team is an integral part of their marketing strategy. Table 2: High Reward, Low Probability — Completing the Buyer’s Journey is a Hole-in-One Lead-to-Revenue Success & Comparable Events Average marketer converting a buyer from initial interest to closed-won Best-in-Class marketer converting a buyer from initial interest to closed won An average golfer hitting a hole-in-one A pro golfer hitting a hole-in-one Getting struck by lightning Probability: 1/5,000 1/2,500 1/5,000 1/2,500 1/3,000 Source: Aberdeen Group, January 2016 www.aberdeen.com 8 The CMO’s Agenda, 2016: Facing the Facts on What’s Effective and What Needs Fixing The CMO’s Responsibility is to Make Marketing Better Best-in-Class marketing organizations are 95% more likely to make aiding their organizations’ HR efforts an integral part of their overall marketing activities, compared to All Others (31% vs. 16%). Aberdeen Definition: Recruitment marketing consists of the strategies and tactics an organization uses to find, attract, engage, and nurture talent before they apply for a job. This happenstance is also known as the pre-applicant phase of the recruiting process. Thus far in this report, we’ve explored key components of the modern marketing environment, and some humbling realities on where marketers stand in it. In short, for all the talk being talked on modern marketing sophistication, there’s still a lot of walk left to be walked. Fortunately, CMOs have a fairly clear-cut path to moving marketing forward from aspirational sophistication, to actual, attainable success and improvement. It all comes down to people, process, and technology. CMOs Get Power from Their Marketing People As noted earlier in this report, the most cited source of competitive advantage for marketers comes from the talent they themselves bring to the table. It’s why Best-in-Class marketers are 27% more likely to support their marketing teams with project management and collaboration technology (33% vs. 26%), compared to All Others. It’s why Best-in-Class marketers are also 18% more likely to operate in an environment where staffing is not a hindrance to marketing execution, compared to All Others (40% vs. 34%). And with these trends in mind, it should also come as no surprise that Best-in-Class marketing organizations are 95% more likely to make aiding their organizations’ HR efforts an integral part of their overall marketing activities, compared to All Others (31% vs. 16%). In Aberdeen’s report, Recruitment Marketing: Converting Candidates, Winning Talent (February 2016), it was shown that when HR and marketing work together for talent acquisition in the form of recruitment marketing (sidebar), these organizations average 1.5-times the year-over-year increase in revenue per fulltime equivalent (9.2% vs. 6.1%), compared to organizations without such alignment. In other words, these organizations are www.aberdeen.com The CMO’s Agenda, 2016: Facing the Facts on What’s Effective and What Needs Fixing 9 generating more revenue per employee each year than their peers. While it may have gone without saying that a CMO would of course be able to drive top marketing performance by sourcing and maintaining top marketing talent, these findings take it a step further. When the organization can also bring in top sales talent, sales performance increases, and performance in the sales-owned stages of the lead-to-revenue cycle also improves. When customer service and experience has top talent, customer retention and satisfaction rates can be improved. When other lines of business perform well too, that also provides marketing with more subjectmatter experts, internal brand advocates, or otherwise nonmarketing marketers to further expand the organization’s voice and reach. The point? Savvy CMOs are using marketing for more than just marketing. They target and attract the most valuable people — not just in leads and net-new customers, but also in talented employees across multiple lines of business. Organizations where marketing & HR are aligned for recruitment marketing average 1.5times the year-overyear increase in revenue per full-time equivalent (9.2% vs. 6.1%), compared to organizations without such alignment. Improving Marketing Processes: Where Data-Driven Marketing Gets Real Having the right people organizationally, however, is not a silverbullet secret to better marketing alone. An effective CMO must also ensure the right people are executing in the right ways. Naturally, this is where process comes in. Nevertheless, as Aberdeen’s findings in Figure 2 have shown, seemingly standard marketing processes like lead management, benchmarking marketing performance, and connecting efforts to revenue are all sore spots in terms of the average marketer’s reported effectiveness. How can CMOs change the process proclamations like “we’ve always done it this way,” or “this worked at my last company, so it’ll work here” that lead to such underwhelming www.aberdeen.com 10 The CMO’s Agenda, 2016: Facing the Facts on What’s Effective and What Needs Fixing levels of effectiveness? The difference is in data. With the rise of data-driven marketing, and the complementary marketing technology solutions that support it, marketers (even the most creative, un-scientific ones), can measurably apply the scientific method to their marketing processes. In this way, marketing processes become a series of tested experiments that can be measured, optimized and most importantly, duplicated in a predictable fashion. Aberdeen’s report, The Data on Data-Driven Marketing: Where Data & Analytics Make a Difference (January 2016), showed that Best-inClass marketers are 56% more likely to use analytics and data visualization platforms, compared to All Others (51.5% vs. 33%). When these solutions are applied to tracking and optimizing marketing processes, like lead management, for example, marketers can empirically identify where leads are breaking down in the buyer’s journey, what criteria comprises the most likely-tobuy lead profiles, and what actions most significantly impact sales-readiness. In this way, lead generation, lead scoring, and lead routing can all be empirically tested and improved over time. Related Research: The Data on DataDriven Marketing: Where Data & Analytics Make a Difference; January 2016 Process development and deployment is a powerful tool in a CMO’s arsenal. Yet, while process implementations may have been a shoot-from-the-hip art of experience in the past, it is now becoming a highly targeted, and especially precise science of data in the modern landscape. As intimidating as this may sound, it’s actually fairly good news. In these internal, controllable, and basic applications of data & analytics for marketing, CMOs can develop a high-value competency for data & analytics with a low level of risk and complexity. By applying data-driven marketing to produce measurable process improvements, CMOs can change the game from the underwhelming performance and unpredictable marketing results of old. www.aberdeen.com The CMO’s Agenda, 2016: Facing the Facts on What’s Effective and What Needs Fixing 11 Amplifying People and Processes with Technology — Best-in-Class CMOs Crank It Up to 11 In effective marketing content and effective marketing research alike, form should often suit function. In that regard, it’s worth noting why people and processes were highlighted prior to this introduction to technology. Namely, because effective people and process management competencies are vital to have in place before leaning on technology. It is never wise to rely on technology alone to solve specific business challenges. With that said, now let’s look at how marketers are actually driving improvement with marketing technology in Figure 3. Figure 3: What Happens When the Right Marketing Technology Addresses the Right Problem? In Figure 2, between the 32% of average marketers who are effective at earning positive social media mentions, word-of- www.aberdeen.com 12 Marketers using project management technology report an 18% higher level of effectiveness at benchmarking and improving upon marketing performance (52% vs. 44%). The CMO’s Agenda, 2016: Facing the Facts on What’s Effective and What Needs Fixing mouth referrals, and media coverage, and the 36% of Best-inClass who were effective at this competency, the social sphere, overall, seems to be a significant weak spot for all marketers. When social media management technology is used, however, as shown in Figure 3, the needle starts moving in the right direction. When marketing technology is applied to solve specific marketing problems, there’s clear progress. For marketers who struggle at benchmarking and improving upon marketing performance, the application of project management technology allows marketers to better track and manage everything that’s going on. Thus, we see marketers using project management technology reporting an 18% higher level of effectiveness at benchmarking and improving upon marketing performance (52% vs. 44%). Similarly, while only 38% of all marketers reported being effective at managing, scoring, and prioritizing leads based on behavioral and demographic data, when a data/analytics solution is used, the level of effectiveness rises to 55%. Essentially, these data/analytics users achieve a 45% higher level of effectiveness (55% vs. 38%) because these solutions allow marketers to make better sense of how the data actually applies to the lead management process and put that insight into action. Then, of course, there’s the issue of managing the right amount of marketing technologies. Aberdeen’s findings have uncovered that, for the majority of marketers (50% and above), there are only five marketing-specific technologies that are regularly used. For the Best-in-Class, that number only slightly increases to seven. The problem, as noted by the meager 47% of marketers who are effective at increasing productivity with integrated marketing technologies, is that only so many solutions can be used productively at a time. Figure 3 shows, however, that the right www.aberdeen.com The CMO’s Agenda, 2016: Facing the Facts on What’s Effective and What Needs Fixing 13 marketing technology, in this case, a marketing automation platform (MAP), even when applied to what is a marketing technology shortcoming, can make a positive change. Here, we see that MAP users report a 40% higher attainment of improved productivity through integrated marketing technologies than the average level of effectiveness among typical marketers (66% vs. 47%). While there are additional advantages to marketing automation detailed in Aberdeen’s Managing Marketing Automation Expectations: How to Win with the Right Approach (January 2016), in this case, the advantage is that a platform can actually serve to bring together multiple other marketing technologies while nonetheless improving productivity. Data/analytics users achieve a 45% higher level of effectiveness at managing, scoring, and prioritizing leads based on behavioral and demographic data (55% vs. 38%). Revisiting Aberdeen’s The State of Marketing Technology 2016: Controlling the Chaos (December 2015), the CMO’s ultimate role when it comes to technology is in taking control. Specifically, as the report found that Best-in-Class marketers are 31% more likely to have complete control of their marketing technology decisions, compared to All Others (42% vs. 32%), it falls on the CMO to make this kind of marketing technology independence possible. From there, the CMO can easily apply and integrate the right marketing technology to address the most pressing marketing challenges. Key Takeaways: The CMO’s agenda in 2016 is simple yet challenging. There is a lot of necessary level-setting, planning, and prioritizing to be done, but the basic rundown is: Balance pressures and expectations for stable, improvable marketing initiatives. While 56% of marketers worry about net-new customer acquisition, only www.aberdeen.com 14 The CMO’s Agenda, 2016: Facing the Facts on What’s Effective and What Needs Fixing 15% are concerned with retention. The CMO must challenge short-sighted objectives and augment them with long-sighted and sustainable efforts. Identify the marketing competencies that must be improved to drive further increases in marketing performance. When the average marketer has the same chances of converting a net-new visitor to a closed-won deal as an average golfer has of hitting a hole-in-one, for example, the CMO needs to step in and plot out a path toward improvement. Maximize the value of the organization’s personnel (marketing and otherwise), to maximize marketing’s overall returns. Best-in-Class marketing organizations are 95% more likely to make aiding their organizations’ HR efforts an integral part of their overall marketing activities, compared to All Others (31% vs. 16%) because talented team members are a marketing asset no matter where they exist in the business. Make process development and implementation a science for success. Best-in-Class marketers are 56% more likely to use analytics and data visualization platforms, compared to All Others (51.5% vs. 33%) because these solutions can take documented actions and metrics, and turn them into actionable insights that can measurably improve the utility of marketing processes. Take everything up a notch with technology. Best-inClass marketers are 31% more likely to have complete control of their marketing technology decisions, compared to All Others (42% vs. 32%) because they know that the best results come from the best uses of marketing www.aberdeen.com The CMO’s Agenda, 2016: Facing the Facts on What’s Effective and What Needs Fixing 15 technology to solve marketing problems. The CMO who is master of marketing technology is the master of his or her own destiny and success. For more information on this or other research topics, please visit www.aberdeen.com. Related Research Recruitment Marketing: Converting Candidates, Winning Talent; February 2016 The Data on Data-Driven Marketing: Where Data & Analytics Make A Difference; January 2016 Managing Marketing Automation Expectations: How to Win with the Right Approach; January 2016 The State of Marketing Technology: Controlling the Chaos; December 2015 Author: Andrew Moravick, Senior Research Associate, Marketing Effectiveness & Strategy ([email protected]) About Aberdeen Group Since 1988, Aberdeen Group has published research that helps businesses worldwide improve their performance. Our analysts derive fact-based, vendor-agnostic insights from a proprietary analytical framework, which identifies Best-in-Class organizations from primary research conducted with industry practitioners. The resulting research content is used by hundreds of thousands of business professionals to drive smarter decision-making and improve business strategy. Aberdeen Group is headquartered in Boston, MA. This document is the result of primary research performed by Aberdeen Group and represents the best analysis available at the time of publication. Unless otherwise noted, the entire contents of this publication are copyrighted by Aberdeen Group and may not be reproduced, distributed, archived, or transmitted in any form or by any means without prior written consent by Aberdeen Group. www.aberdeen.com 11897