5 Tips on How to Survive the Madness
(This post is an
excerpt from a longer post
that originally appeared on nectafy.com
on March 7, 2014.)
This past Tuesday, in a meeting where we were discussing digital
marketing, my colleague, Mark, said, “What you knew yesterday will
not be sufficient for tomorrow.”
I thought, “Man,
that’s exactly the challenge for my clients.” As more and more companies
embrace technology-driven marketing, they discover that things change more
quickly than they can adapt. It’s exhausting. You never get to stop pedaling.
If your company is like most, the burden of staying on top of
this constant change falls on your marketing team, who already feels
overwhelmed with their existing work load and with the broadening scope of
digital marketing. If your company is smaller, and you don’t have a marketing
team yet, you’re the one trying to figure all of this out. Oh, yeah, and you’re
also trying to run your company. (My hat’s off to you.
Well, if I had a hat… but you know what I mean.)
So, to solve the
problem, you’ve started researching software and digital platforms in the hopes
that there is a singular, highly effective tool that will simplify all of your
marketing. Instead, you’ve discovered a dizzying array of software platforms
that will allow you to automate email lead nurturing, build A/B landing pages,
publish to social media channels, track the whereabouts of small rodents in
Antarctica, and at least 37 million other things.
(And, while you were
reading this, three new start-up technology companies just launched the latest,
most stunning piece of marketing technology ever invented. I’m not kidding.)
Scott Brinker, a pretty smart guy, put together this summary of marketing technology.
So, how is your company going to survive this marketing
technology mayhem?
1. Resist your instinct to research first.
When you are trying to
select marketing technology, it’s tempting to follow your first instinct, don
your super-research cape, and save the world. But not so fast, Batman. If you
fly off into the Gotham-like netherworld of marketing technology without the proper
preparation, you’re in for a super-reality check. Trust me.
2. Get specific with marketing goals.
Instead of looking for
tools that promise the world, do the tough work of deciding the key goals that
you need to reach with your marketing. And get ridiculously specific. If you
are trying to generate leads around a new product launch, specify how many
leads, what type, and a time deadline for achieving that goal. While you’re at
it, bounce your goals off of a few people outside the marketing team, for a
sanity check. You don’t want to set your goals out of reach and simply
frustrate yourself and your sales team.
3. Only use technology that moves you toward those goals in
measurable ways.
Keep your focus as you
research tools. It’s easy to become enamored with features in one tool over
another and completely lose sight of what you’re trying to accomplish to reach
your goal.
4. Track your progress.
You absolutely must
track the progress of whatever technology you use. In fact, if a piece of
marketing software doesn’t make it stupid-simple to see what’s going on and
track your progress, just pass on it. Otherwise, you’re doing your marketing
team a disservice by giving them inadequate feedback on their efforts.
While we’re talking
about data tracking, let me just add here that you don’t need to track all
types of data. You need to track the data that matters. There’s a huge
difference between the two ideologies. I know “big data” is the rage for large
corporations. If your company is huge, and have skilled analysts, by all means,
collect all the data you can. But if you’re a mid-sized company, collecting all
data instead of key data will clog your marketing productivity. Plus, if you
can’t see and understand data, you’re not gaining any advantage.
5. Stay on board with one technology for six months before
jumping ship.
Since technology
changes so quickly, it’s tempting to jump from the greatest to the latest.
Establish some boundaries on how frequently you’re allowed to try a new
technology. Commit to fully embracing a technology and really understanding how
it helps you before abandoning ship.
When you set a limit,
you free your marketing team from the unending burden of “finding a new
solution,” because you only need to go into full-on research mode a few weeks
before your test expires. If you stay focused for six months, you’ll be able to
see if a certain tool is helping or not, and the good news is that if it
doesn’t work, there’ll be brand new technology available for you to try that
didn’t exist six months before.
So, it’s your turn. What have you found helpful in dealing with
new marketing technology?
PSMJ thanks Lance Cummins for allowing us to re-publish part of his blog post.
PSMJ thanks Lance Cummins for allowing us to re-publish part of his blog post.
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