Auto-Tune for Marketing: Tips For Using Analytics To Plan, Execute And Adjust Your Marketing Strategy In Real Time

How can you keep your marketing strategy in tune when the industry is shifting so quickly? Columnist Joshua Reynolds has some tips for how to adjust and change course ahead of time so that you'll always be prepared.

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Ever feel like your marketing strategy starts off in perfect tune and slowly drifts off-key as the months roll by?

Ever wish you could find a way to auto-tune your marketing strategy so that every note resonates with your audience, no matter how the melody shifts?

If so, you’re not alone. Planning cycles everywhere, in and out of marketing, are in the midst of a sea change.

The problem is that marketers have to be able to course-correct their strategies with increasing speed and agility as environments become less predictable. But budget cycles and consensus-building processes still remain on an annual cycle for the most part.

A Growing Gap: Forecasts, Budgets And Realities

By the end of 2017, Gartner predicts, most organizations will have shifted from conducting market analyses on an annual or quarterly basis to a daily basis. Things are changing so quickly, any sense of sustainable competitive advantage will have vanished.

A lack of predictability in audience behavior, economic conditions, technological disruption and competitive developments have resulted in the need for increasingly agile planning cycles.

Meanwhile, continued advances in marketing data analytics give marketers — and the executives who approve their budgets — a real-time view into financial performance, marketing effectiveness and customer insights.

The problem is that budget cycles haven’t caught up to the new reality just yet. Many marketers still must make an annual fourth-quarter pilgrimage to the keepers of their respective corporate war chests.

There they offer what predictions and projections they can and ask for the money they need to execute against their best guesses for the coming year. If they’re persuasive, they get a fraction of what they actually need.

Compounding this problem is a growing lack of business predictability. A recent report indicates that even Wall Street analysts, despite all their access to data, have grown worse, not better, at predicting financial performance.

For companies and business disciplines of all kinds, the future is getting harder and harder to see.

So how can marketers be expected to know what they’re going to need months ahead of time when the businesses they serve have such limited visibility? And how can they bridge the gap between what looks smart a year ahead of time vs. what is smart right here right now? Forecasting awesomeness is a tricky thing.

Designing An Auto-Tune Function Into Your Marketing Plan

Here are a few tips for architecting course corrections ahead of time into your marketing strategy, to help you stay on key no matter what music you’re facing.

1. Find the business KPIs that matter. Reverse-engineer your marketing performance to hit the notes that you know the senior leadership of your company will listen to most closely. Ultimately, most KPIs ought to tie back to revenue in some way — units sold, customer churn, sales performance with a certain demographic and so on.

Speak openly with your company’s leadership to determine which data line they’re tracking most closely, as well as the volatility they see in that data.

Specifically, explore any blind spots around why those KPIs do or don’t do well. Where are you facing a KPI mystery? And which KPIs should you check most regularly to keep an eye on changes?

2. Benchmark and correlate your data against those KPIs. Once you know what KPI you need to impact most, explore the connection between what marketing has been doing and how that KPI has been performing.

What are the most likely causes behind an increase or decrease in that KPI? What are the obvious correlations you can spot, and where do you as a marketer have blind spots?

And go a level deeper than just putting two data lines next to each other. Get curious and courageous.

Make sure you’re using analytics to find correlations that matter, not coincidences that don’t. And if you can’t tell the difference, bookmark those and get help investigating them.

New approaches to “explanatory analytics” can help you explain correlations, not just predict outcomes.

3. Build explicit checkpoints into your marketing plan. While you may not be able to predict what course corrections you’ll need to make, you can safely predict that you’ll need to make them. So be explicit about that.

Plan ahead for what questions you’ll investigate along the way. Where you have hunches, build in ways to test them against data. Where you have blind spots, build in ways to examine your data to fill them in.

And build in explicit permissions with your internal stakeholders so that when the data tells you that you need to course-correct, you’ll do so.

Educate them on what explanatory analytics can do that predictive analytics can’t. Find out what it will take for them to trust the data you bring them.

Changing lanes or making a U-turn is a lot less painful if you signal in advance. Making explicit agreements to course-correct helps reduce the friction and awkwardness of course corrections as they happen.

4. Let the data lead you to better questions. The only thing worse than the wrong answer is the right answer to the wrong question. And some of the most pernicious side effects of unpredictability are the unknown unknowns.

If you don’t know what questions would yield the best insights, then let your data whisper to you and guide you to smarter questions. Explanatory analytics solutions can help you explore how strong certain correlations are.

The simple act of scanning your data for strong correlation signals can sometimes lead you to serendipitous discoveries that make a huge difference. Learning how to let your data lead you to smarter questions is going to create massive advantages for marketing organizations in 2016 and beyond.

5. Act on insights decisively and courageously. According to the same Gartner report, one in four market leaders will be overtaken by a smaller, younger company by the end of 2017. One of the reasons given is that smaller, nimbler companies are more comfortable with digital technologies such as data analytics, social media and mobile technologies.

But another reason is that smaller companies have fewer cultural barriers to overcome when it comes to acting on data. At a recent Techonomy conference, business leaders from multiple companies including PayPal, Hilton and Visa talked about how larger companies that need to compete with smaller businesses must have the courage to change and act on insights.

Plan ahead for whatever cultural barriers you might face when marketing recommends a course correction. It may be as minor as adjusting your creative approach or messaging for a specific campaign. It may be as major as recommending a fundamental shift in your product or go-to-market strategy.

Whatever it is, scan ahead for where you might run into opposition. Bring other players into your process. Walk them through your data, and make sure they appreciate the strength of the correlations you’re looking at.

Remember, the time to secure permission to make a change and adjust course is before it happens, not as it’s happening. If change is the only constant, plan on having to make some changes.



And then as the cycles of planning, execution and measurement continue to accelerate and merge, you’ll be well positioned to improvise and make sure your marketing strategy stays in tune — no matter what.


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily MarTech. Staff authors are listed here.


About the author

Joshua Reynolds
Contributor
Joshua Reynolds heads marketing and client consulting for Quantifind. He has been spent the last 18 years advising senior leaders at disruptive companies across multiple sectors how to accelerate market adoption by focusing on an authentic purpose. Prior to joining Quantifind, Josh served as CEO at Blanc & Otus. Previously, he served for five years as the Global Technology Practice Director for H+K Strategies. Josh began his technology career as a Gartner analyst. He has particularly extensive experience working with the C-suite of companies who are focused on innovation, including Adobe, Deloitte, Dolby, eBay, Facebook, Hootsuite, LinkedIn, Oracle, Yahoo! and others. Josh is also an executive coach and strategic advisor to several startups, and currently sits on the advisory boards of AirGrub, Artivest, Blanc & Otus, H+K Strategies and Taptalk. He earned his B.A. degrees in English and History from UCLA, holds a minor in theology from Oxford University, and earned his law degree from UC Hastings College of the Law.

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