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    January 26, 2010

    Reengineering Marketing Operations at Work

    My avid readers (both of you? (<:} ) have probably noticed that I haven’t posted much in the past few months. A group of us on Twitter noticed that as we accelerated our tweeting, our blog posts tended to decrease. Well, that was my excuse last year anyway.

    I’ve actually been rethinking how to reinvent this blog. As proof that even a Marketing Operations champion is resistant to change, I’ve tended to write lots of long, deep posts and republished my articles here. Simultaneously, my social media guru friends have been reminding me that best practice in blogging means easier digestibility, more consistent posting, greater interactivity and lots of links so readers can drill down as desired.

    Of course, I’m well aware of these best practices, having advised my clients of same for years. So it’s high time I tried to follow them myself!

    So starting Monday, February 1, expect to see a new Marketing Operations at Work! Shorter, crisper posts. More opportunity for you to share your thinking rather than just be influenced by mine. Links, links and more links for you to follow, if interested, or ignore, if not.

    I will try to post several times a week but at least once a week. No more 2–3 month gaps.

    So if you ever thought about posting a comment here but were intimidated by my loquaciousness, hopefully you’ll feel encouraged and welcome to post from now on.

    You’re all welcome to post comments here. The sound of my voice gets old. I want to hear from you. (Except you spammers. Please go away. I will never approve one of your BS ads).

    Gary

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    January 11, 2010

    Think Like Your Customer: Aligning Selling to Buying Process

    Filed under: Sales Acceleration — gary @ 10:21 am

    I'm finishing up Bill Stinnett's excellent book, Think Like Your Customer, which should be required reading for anyone in Sales and Marketing, especially if you market high-value products and services.

    A glaring Marketing Operations disconnect for many companies is our tendency to over-focus on What and How we want to sell, when we really need to develop a deeper understanding of What, Why and How our customers buy. Those of us in MO need to assert leadership in aligning our company's sales process with our customers' buying process.

    The healing starts at home. Our collective lack of effectiveness in supporting one of our primary customers, Sales, surely speaks to the growing emphasis today on Sales and Marketing alignment.

    Yes, Sales and Marketing have equal roles in this often dysfunctional relationship. Yet it is incumbent on us as marketers to take responsibility for cleaning up our side of the house if we want a shot at a healthy, mutual partnership with Sales. If you've been in a long-term business relationship or a marriage, you know what I mean. Our unilateral thinking and actions impact the overall health of the system, for better or for worse.

    So how does all of this relate to Stinnett's book? I've gleaned a couple of key insights below that are especially meaningful to me. I also discuss some possible implications of these insights, which I recommend my fellow marketers and MO practitioners seriously ponder:

    1. We need to remember our customers are buying a desired outcome, not a solution. Our organizational focus should be on understanding the gap between our customers'/prospects' current state and their desired future state – the motive, the urgency, the payback, the consequences of inaction, the means to act, the perceived risks in acting.

    Implications for marketers: We can best support Sales by providing the process and means to better understand this gap. We also need to deliver collateral and marketing programs that attract prospects interested in bridging the gap. We need to continually ask ourselves some key questions to ensure that our selling process is not just aligned with the customer, but with our business goals. How well can we fill the gap for the customer and still meet our profit objectives? How can we support Sales to ensure that new sales reps are properly trained to act in accord with this customer-centric approach?

    2. We need to understand our customers' buying process and imperative to buy. Where are they in the buying process? What do they need to do next? Who else is part of the decision process? How can we enable our customer champions to take the next step in the buying process? We need to understand the motive behind the potential selling opportunity motive to support sales reps. Is the reason to buy a planned replacement, an unplanned replacement, a
    new purchase to keep up with the competition or a new purchase to get
    ahead? Is the initiative supported from the top-down or is it
    bottom-up? How does this initiative rank in terms of priority compared to other initiatives the customer might choose to fund? If we don't understand these fundamental buying factors, we won't be able to support Sales with strategic intent. We'll just be providing air cover, absent a battle.

    Implications for marketers: The programs we establish, the campaigns we develop, the tools we create need to be geared toward helping Sales help our customers to buy. Does Sales believe our marketing programs, campaigns and sales tools contribute to gaining greater access to qualified prospects? Reaching "hidden" decision makers? Equipping customer champions to sell on our behalf? Is there significant tension for the customer to buy? Our credibility with Sales is at stake. Our sales reps need to trust that the leads we provide are legitimate qualified opportunities. They'll have much greater respect for us and the quality of our leads if we take the responsibility to nurture prospects until they are truly ready to buy. This means, when the customer has demonstrated that they know what they are buying, why they are buying and how they are going to buy it. The last thing we want to do is waste our sales resources on a sourcing decision ("Who will I buy from?") when we (and/or our prospect) don't have a strong handle on the why, what and how.

    It really comes down to aligning our internal sales and marketing process (with our internal customer, Sales) with our customer buying process. This is a fruitful area for Marketing Operations to focus. Our contributions can make a real difference in our organization's ability to:

    • Attract and win the right prospects and customers
    • Nimbly and appropriately respond to sales opportunities, based on a sound understanding of where prospects are in their buying cycles
    • Optimize our sales resources to focus on high-touch, ready-to-buy opportunities
    • Empower our customer champions to be highly effective advocates of our value proposition
    • Mobilize our marketing resources – programs, campaigns, collateral – where they will have the greatest impact

    Gary

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    Talking Marketing Ops at EBIG

    Filed under: Marketing Operations Big Picture, NoRepost — gary @ 10:21 am

    In addition to our webinar, I’ll be speaking about Marketing Operations before the Sales & Marketing SIG of the East Bay IT Group (EBIG) this Thursday, November 16 at 6:30 p.m. For more information, visit http://www.ebig.org/sig/sig.aspx? SIGid=27&EventID=806&old=.

    Gary

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    Looking back on Henry Stewart NY 2007

    Filed under: Marketing Operations Community, NoRepost — gary @ 10:21 am

    Well, I didn’t have any takers go out on the limb by sharing their thoughts on the Henry Stewart Conference in advance of my post, so here we go. One of the speakers at the conference brought a boxful of T-shirts that I think just about says it all. They read: (Front) I Went to MOM training (Back) And All I Got was this DAM T-Shirt. Yes, MOM or MO or EMM or MRM or MEE (Marketing Efficiency & Effectiveness, the latest Henry Stewart attempt at a name for the track) is the poor ugly stepsister of Digital Asset Management. And it’s a DAM shame. We all know that the long-term adoption of DAM will be stunted without a strong MO function in organizations. DAM solves a piece of the problem. MO embraces all the compelling challenges marketing faces in enterprise today: * Sales process acceleration/funnel management * Marketing scalability * Customer profiitability/customer experience management * Strategy and change facilitation * Return on marketing We can talk about blogs, Web 2.0, 1 to 1 marketing, mobile marketing, wikis, podcasts and all those other sexy marketing topics until we’re blue-in-the-face, but if we don’t deal with the fundamental infrastructure of our marketing departments and build an effective ecosystem of support for our initiatives, marketing’s impact and stature in organization’s will continue to be disappointing in most companies. And industry events like Henry Stewart are (or should be) an important rallying point to bring the community together. The Henry Stewart series of events could be the impetus to mobilize the marketing ops community but has, frankly, largely failed to accomplish this objective since it was launched several years ago. Yes, the program tracks have improved year-over year, as has the quality of the speakers. But the MO attendees were once again dwarfed by the DAM folks by 6–7x or more. The number of MO VP and Director titles at the event could be counted on one person’s appendages (and most high-level MO folks came because they were selected as speakers or panelists). The show is still much more a showcase for a sea of marketing technology solutions than a beacon of what MO can be in the enterprise. The Henry Stewart folks are great people and we’re working with other leaders in the community to help them improve the MO side of the conference. Separating MO from DAM is an especially DAM good idea. Moving the LA event to Silicon Valley is another one. Bottomline, we need to get MO folks at tech companies more involved if this industry event is going to effectively serve its purpose. Otherwise, we might see another event company with more clout than Henry Stewart jump in to the fray. Gary

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    Marketing 2.0 Author in San Francisco This Week

    Filed under: Marketing Operations Community, NoRepost — gary @ 10:21 am

    Bernie Borges of Find and Convert, author of the upcoming book, Marketing 2.0: Bridging the Gap Between Seller and Buyer on the Social Web, will be in San Francisco this week at the Inbound Marketing Summit. Bernie is a great guy and has encyclopedic knowledge on all things Web 2.0. He’s so smart that he actually had the vision to include a chapter on Marketing Operations, contributed by yours truly, in his book.

    Bernie and I are getting together for lunch in the City on Thursday. But I have no desire to hog him. If you’re interested in joining us over lunch, let me know and I’ll forward location and time details.
    Gary
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    Marketing Operations 2.0: Podcast Interview by Bernie Borges

    In conjunction with his new book, Bernie Borges recently interviewed me about Marketing Operations 2.0. We’ve received a lot of great feedback about the value of the conversation. Check out the  podcast.

    I thought it also would be instructive to share what Bernie wrote in his blog in introducing me and the podcast. I’m sure you’ll appreciate his interpretation of the work I (and fellow Marketing Operations practitioners) perform every day to help change the MO of Marketing. Gary

    Gary Katz is CEO of Marketing Operations Partners, located in Silicon Valley. Gary has a background in PR. He developed a concept which intrigued me because it fits well with the mindset shift in my book.

    Gary authored a chapter in my book, Marketing 2.0, appropriately named Marketing Operations 2.0. Here is the definition of Marketing Operations (MO) from that chapter.

    Marketing Operations is a relatively new discipline that can be defined as a comprehensive, end-to-end operational discipline that leverages processes, technology, guidance, and metrics to run the marketing function as a profit/value center, growth driver, change catalyst and fully accountable business. MO reinforces marketing strategy and execution with a scalable and sustainable infrastructure. MO seeks to nurture a collaborative, well-aligned ecosystem, both within and outside the marketing department, to drive achievement of strategic objectives.”

    MO Delivers the Operating Plan for the Marketing Department

    When I asked Gary to translate that explanation into plain English, he used an analogy which I believe does the job. Gary says that the Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) of a business is like the driver of a car. The purpose of getting into a car is to drive to a destination. The driver is responsible for the outcome, but there are many other factors that must be in place to get there. The car’s engine must be operating well. The tires must have enough air. The wheels must be aligned to drive safely.  The roadways must offer an efficient pathway. And, the driver must have knowledge of the roadways or have a navigation system for guidance. And, the car needs periodic maintenance to stay prepared for ongoing use.

    marketing-operations-infographic

    MO builds a high performance car and makes sure there is a plan to get to the destination. Gary points out that MO is essentially like an operating plan for the CMO. He refers to his company, Marketing Operations Partners as a COO for the CMO. This explanation makes sense to me because the CMO needs an operational plan to manage all the marketing activities which include a myriad of marketing campaigns comprised of advertising, email, SEO, SEM, social media marketing, media relations, etc.

    Gary says that MO places a lot of emphasis on alignment of messaging with the rest of the company. MO helps deal with change management for the marketing function acting as a chief of staff for the CMO to guide in effective execution of all marketing activities. In other words, the CMO is like the CEO of their business. MO is the COO to the CMO.

    Accelerating the Sales Process

    In my book, Gary addresses how MO can accelerate the sales process. Here are two key points on this popular topic.

    1) Lead Flow: Nurtuing prospects who are not ready to buy today into prospects of tomorrow. A Sirius Decisions study indicates only 20% of leads get followed up by sales, 70% of which are disqualified. Shockingly, 80% of those leads buy from someone within 24 months.  The issue for any CMO is the pressure to show ROI in the face of so much waste.

    MO offers a lead process supported by a technology solution. Many companies put in place the technology (CRM systems, tracking systems, etc.) before creating the lead development and nurturing process. Can you say “cart in front of the horse?”

    2) Alignment of Sales Process with Buying Process: Since social media is meant to be a platform where conversations occur and relationships are built, new processes must be defined. Remember MO is also a mindset.  Gary was inspired from the book Think Like your Customer. He encourages marketers to ask: “How attractive are we to our prospective buyers?”

    Thinking Differently

    Businesses need to think differently in an environment where economic pressures ask you to close deals this quarter. Sellers have big pressures. But, buyers don’t want to be engaged in a sales pressure situation. Sellers need to get the buyer to “like you.” MO provides the roadmap for a CMO to implement marketing strategies with process and discipline.  Organize marketing activities around the customer. Break down the silos that exist in your business. Examine how the functions in your business align with marketing such as customer service, P.R. sales, manufacturing/distribution, etc. They are all part of the marketing function. If they are not aligned, those who touch the customer directly will reflect a different message or attitude than your marketing message.

    Demonstrating Measurable Returns on Marketing

    Using MO to measure results always comes back to the business goals. Social media is a new channel. You can measure details such as RSS subscriptions, website traffic from new keywords used in social media, names of employees producing great content, etc.  The challenge for many companies is that using social media is still new. There is no history or benchmark. The analytics usually provides indicators but not results. Executives ask the CMO how these metrics impact revenue today? In most cases they will affect revenue in the future, not the immediate present. So, it’s imperative the CMO has strategic alignment with the CEO and all other key stakeholders in the business for short term survival and long term success.

    MO Take Away

    Regardless of the size of your company here’s the take-away on marketing operations…How do you execute a marketing strategy regardless of individuals? How can you build a marketing organization that sets the right processes and can scale effectively as the company grows? The more you grow, the more marketing programs you run and the more challenges you will face in measuring, managing and staffing.

    Companies are wise to think with an MO mindset before you get into trouble. You can’t defend your marketing budget, your people or your programs without processes. You’ll get marketing programs (or people) cut when things go wrong without MO processes in place. Often senior management doesn’t understand the value of what was cut in the absence of MO processes until after it’s been cut. Reduce your risk and maximize your long term success with an MO mindset.

    If this topic interests you, you can learn more from Gary Katz and his company Marketing Operations Partners at his website, his MO blog, his LinkedIn groups, and his MO presentations on Slideshare. You can also follow Gary on Twitter.

    So, what’s your take away from this MO discussion?

    Bernie Borges

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    Panelists from Blue Coat, Juniper, NetApp, Polycom added for 4/16 MO Workshop

    Marketing Operations leaders from Blue Coat Systems, Juniper Networks, NetApp and Polycom have joined the panel discussion for the April 16 Best Practices in Marketing Operations workshop. Edward Allison, senior director of Marketing Planning & Operations at Juniper; Judy Ash, director of Strategic Marketing at NetApp; Larissa DeCarlo, Vice President, Marketing Operations at Blue Coat; and Jennifer Pockell-Wilson, director, Global Marketing Operations at Polycom will share their experiences, best practices and lessons learned during the second half of the workshop.

    Marketing Operations Partners CEO Gary Katz is conducting the workshop on behalf of the the Silicon Valley Chapter of the American Marketing Association on April 16 at the University of Phoenix in Santa Clara:

    WHEN
    Wednesday, April 16, 2008
    5:30 pm-6:00 pm Registration and Networking
    6:00 pm-8:00 pm Program and Q&A
    Get more information or register now

    WHERE

    University of Phoenix, 3590 N. First Street in San Jose (near Tasman)

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    Co-create the future of the Marketing Ops field 4/23 from 1-3 p.m. in SF

    Filed under: Marketing Operations Community, NoRepost — gary @ 10:21 am
    PMImarketing and sales banner

    I hope you can join us on Thursday, April 23 from 1–3 p.m. in San Francisco for a historic event as leaders in Marketing Operations build a shared vision of what’s next for our emerging profession. Some of the possibilities we’ll explore together include an annual MO conference here in Silicon Valley and a Marketing Operations Institute to advance the discipline to the next level of excellence.

    Sponsored by the PMIMSSIG (thank you Dave Hutchinson!), the event will be held at a restaurant near Moscone Center TBD and includes a free lunch. More details to follow.
    Space is limited and it’s first come, first served so please RSVP to gary@mopartners.com no later than Friday, April 17.

    Gary
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    Final days to participate in VisionEdge Marketing Performance Survey

    Filed under: NoRepost, Return on Marketing — Gary_Katz @ 10:21 am

    Our partner, VisionEdge Marketing, is conducting its annual 2008 Marketing Performance Survey and you still have until this Sunday, February 10 to register your opinions. The survey, which takes about 15 minutes to complete, is a national Web survey intended to track how companies are adopting marketing metrics today. As a participant in this study you can request a complimentary copy of the survey summary, which will be sent to you in early March after the survey closes. This report will give you insight into which performance indicators are being tracked by other companies. It will also help you assess where your company is in relation to the metrics movement: at the vanguard, about average, or adopting metrics more slowly than average. Also, if you provide your name and email address VisionEdge will enter you into a drawing for a $50 gift certificate from either Amazon.com or iTunes.

    This should be a no-brainer for marketing leaders who care about demonstrating the value of marketing to their organizations and raising the stature of our profession in the C-suite and in general.

    Click here to participate in the survey.

    Gary

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    Location Set for “Co-create the Future of the Marketing Ops Field” Event

    We’ve secured Buca di Beppo, 855 Howard St. in San Francisco, for our “Co-create the Future of the Marketing Operations Field” luncheon, sponsored by the PMIMSSIG on April 23 from 1–3 p.m. Please RSVP to gary@mopartners.com by Friday, April 17. Space is limited.

    Here’s a recap of the key details:

    Agenda: Build a shared vision of what’s next for our emerging profession. Explore an annual MO conference here in Silicon Valley and a Marketing Operations Institute to advance the discipline to the next level of excellence.

    Sponsored by: the Project Management Institute Marketing & Sales SIG (PMIMSSIG).

    PMImarketing and sales banner

    Gary


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