Just because a channel is easier to track does not mean it is the more valuable channel.
A lot of companies over-index on channels like Paid Media simply because it is a lot easier to connect investment to ROI.
Meanwhile, channels that are equally valuable such as content do not get as much investment because the attribution is at times unclear.
This is the same reason why some companies ignore more traditional channels (tv, radio etc.), channels that don't have clean attribution (e.g. podcast advertising, influencers) or building a brand through thought leadership (books, podcasts, YouTube).
A lot of this pressure to track is driven by management, who want clean reports on all marketing activities.
The answer is to educate internally on the value of creating a blended model of channels that are easier to track and ones that aren't so that you're building the best marketing engine.
If you become obsessed with the reporting aspect of marketing, you'll eventually be limited to pa...
Obsessing over attribution eventually becomes counterproductive.
There are marketing departments that won't invest in channels because the ROI is not obvious and they can't sell the merit of the activity internally to get buy-in from other stakeholders (especially the CEO).
This is a huge mistake.
When you're going from 0 (where nothing is being tracked) to 1 (where marketing is tracking contribution to revenue), attribution can be incredibly valuable.
Yes, you want to know how marketing dollars invested are leading to a return in closed won bookings.
It's just that some marketing activities create an "environment" for buyers to make their way through to buying your product. A lot of these activities cannot be measured.
Content is a lot like that. Social media is a lot like that. Building a brand is a lot like that.
You can measure some of the metrics around these activities, but you can't measure them all.
But if you stop those activities simply because you can't measure the...
This is why you should NOT worry about decreased engagement as you scale your content and distribution.
Good fit customers only increase their engagement over time. Bad fit customers fall off a cliff.
Content or Ad "Fatigue" is often used as the counter to scaling more content, more emails, more touch points.
But your best fit customers want to hear more from you. You are solving a very real pain in their life.
The more content you put out, the more helpful they will find you to resolving that pain. The more helpful you are, the more likely they are to buy from you.
This is why scaling content to infinite distribution works.
Now, the trick is to leverage personalization and customization whenever possible. That will only increase engagement because you'll have dedicated streams for different segments of your market.
If you focus too much on the bad fit customers and their engagement, you'll get caught trying to be everything to everyone.
Focus on your best fit customers and d...
Your market is not just on one channel. Too many companies over-index on one channel and set of activities (SEO, LinkedIn, Google Ads). While these are all good standalone channels, they are also just one place to find your ideal customer.
You will find different subsets of your customers in different channels. Presence in each of those channels is more than half the battle for every company.
So:
-Go to the trade show
-Invest in paid search
-Rank for your SEO terms
-Create thought leadership content
-Host webinars
-Create ABM plays to your target accounts
-Run ads on FB / LI
-Do PR / Comms
The best companies at marketing do it all. They also have higher marketing budgets for this reason.
Communication is the single biggest skill set a marketing leader can possess. You have to:
1) Lead your team, set goals and objectives, bring people together.
2) Talk to the market about the problem they're facing and how you solve it.
3) Manage people above you (CEO, board) and set expectations on marketing performance.
4) Educate the rest of the organization on marketing's plan and how other functions are critical to that plan.
Communicate up, down, inward, outward.
Do all 4 effectively and you become a rockstar marketing leader.
Another expensive software is not the answer to your marketing problems...
In the ever-growing Martech landscape, so many providers have blitzed the marketplace with content about how today's marketers need "their" tool to do marketing right.
As a result, so many marketers get caught up in implementing a new platform or overhauling an older one because they think that's how they can ramp up marketing faster.
This is a huge mistake.
All great marketing functions begin with having the right people in the right seats. Then they build the right processes.
Only then does the tool have any validity.
Give a good marketer a marketing stack of Mailchimp, Wordpress and Google Analytics and they can crush it.
Give a not so good marketer DemandBase, Pardot, Engagio, Terminus and even then you may not get very far. But you'd have spent a fortune in annual marketing stack subscriptions.
Do the first thing first.
Your content is a part of your product. It is not something you:
-Use to sell your product.
-Create to rank for SEO purposes only.
-Publish on your blog.
Your content is a critical part of how your prospects and customers experience your brand, company, business and what you're selling.
Treat it as such and invest in it more.
Every business has hidden growth levers.
Your job as a growth leader is to find them and help the business capture them over time.
These include (not an exhaustive list):
-New revenue
-Expanding existing accounts
-Cross-selling / Upsell
-Increase pricing
-New products
-New markets
-New business
-New customer segments
-Lower attrition
-M&A
The more you capture them, the more enterprise value you create.
Copywriting is not as important as everyone will tell you.
Copy is not what separates good marketers from great ones. Things that are far more important:
1) Connecting marketing's efforts to the overall business strategy and results
2) Interfacing with other functions and roles (product, sales, customer success, engineering)
3) Being finance-literate (it would help a lot of marketers to look at an income statement and balance sheet or know what EBITDA means)
4) Understanding the strategic growth levers of the business and how marketing plugs into those levers.
A lot of people will try to "sell" you on the idea that copy is your biggest growth opportunity as a marketer. While it will help you get an entry level job, you will eventually hit a ceiling.
Understand the above 4 opportunities and your career has no limits as a marketer.
Don't miss the forest for the trees.
P.S. Join the SaaS Marketing Simplified newsletter for more bite-sized content like this in your inbox a few t...
Over 50% of sales reps miss quota.
What companies don't realize is that this number is not just an indicator of good a sales team is.
Yes, a better sales team will hit quota more. But show me a better sales team and I can show you a better marketing engine:
-Better brand
-Better positioning
-Better demand gen
-Better content
If your sales investment outweighs your marketing investment by 4:1 or 5:1 like it does in a lot of companies, expecting sales reps to always hit quota is absolutely unfair.
Hitting quota and marketing investment go hand in hand.
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