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I remember, when I first started in an advertising agency about 20 years ago, we were very concerned about building our creative portfolio and secondarily on the market results. Things have changed for the industry and now we are obsessed about how to get the Return on Investments from our marketing programmes.
Marketing has become a wonderful combination of art and science where you employ the rigorous and analytical approach to marketing activities. Marketing effectiveness is measured by Return on Investment (ROI), Customer Lifetime Value (CLV), Customer Loyalty, Brand Awareness, campaign response rates, media effectiveness and a host of other measurements.
First, I just started naming companies I liked, as a professional marketer, as a customer, or just as an admirer. One of the first companies that came to mind was the educational toymaker, Leapfrog. A very impressive company. I also liked the JetBlue airline.
But, no matter what company I named, I had this problem: How could I prove it was enjoying sweet spot status?
That's exactly what I said in the book, and I believe it just as strongly today. I've been searching for the companies in which everything inside the company is aligned with the factors outside the company that determine acclaim and success.
I had to get in front of the senior management, CEO and the board to convince them of the value of marketing and how we will show the improvements. The strategic architecture outlined what we will expect in the year 2007 and the improvements that will be made year over year. Without good metrics and measurement system of the marketing effectiveness we would not be able to show the progress.
I think that the CEO is – or should be -- focused on creating three types of values: 1) Shareholder Value 2) Customer Value and 3) Employee Value.
Marketing needs to own customer value completely. We need to build a good customer value proposition which results in meeting the wants and needs of the customers. We need to get out of the comfort zone of building just the best marketing communication, and venture into the world of creating growth strategies deeply rooted in customer insights.
Second, we need to have a rigorous approach to marketing and reduce the unknowns as much as possible. The unknowns can be greatly reduced by rigorous test marketing and piloting a solution or testing the marketing communications. Once we step up to this challenge, the CEO will take notice.
The real challenge, however, is to balance the short term with the long-term goals. In a zest to do more for less, very often the long-term goals like brand building process takes a secondary role to the short term return from promotional programmes. It helps to have a CEO who understands the value of brand.
We are especially fortunate in this area that our CEO, Michael Critelli, really understands the value of building a brand and he has been a steadfast supporter of marketing when it comes to building long term value.
Des Dearlove is a long-term contributor and columnist for The Times and a contributing editor to Strategy+Business. Stuart Crainer is a contributing editor to Strategy+Business and executive editor of Business Strategy Review.
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