The Best of ITSMA’s
20th Annual Conference
Conference Kickoff &
Opening Remarks
Dave Munn
President and CEO
ITSMA

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 2
Opening Remarks:
Five Priorities for Marketers
1. Use metrics that matter
– Only half of marketers think metrics are
important, and they often measure
efficiency rather than effectiveness and
don’t link to business outcomes
– Consequently, few CEOs and CFOs use
marketing’s metrics

5. Create a proactive and adaptive
marketing culture
– Marketers face constant disruption
– How can marketing leaders become
proactive, collaborative, and better at
anticipating opportunities and threats?

2. Use technology effectively
– Most marketers think tech will be
increasingly critical to marketing, yet twothirds are underinvested in it

3. Be relevant and personalized
– Overwhelmed buyers respond only to the
most personal and relevant
– Most B2B marketers aren’t yet B2I
(business to individual)

4. Do thought leadership selling
– Only one company in five is effective at
using thought leadership to sell
– Marketers need to provide better training,
customization, and support
The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 3
Marketing as an Accountable
Business Partner and
Revenue Center
Karen Walker
Senior Vice President
Global Marketing
Cisco Systems

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 4
Marketing as an Accountable Business Partner
and Revenue Center
 Our new North Star: revenue.
Optimize every aspect of the
portfolio to drive revenue
 Over half of marketers have a
revenue goal—and it’s going up
 We’re still Mad Men, but are also
Math Men: turning data into
stories that lead to actions
resulting in revenue
 Focus first on strategic goals,
then tactics
 Learn to be repeatable and
predictable in driving revenue
 Make explicit pacts with sales on
rules for leads and follow up

 Events are still important, but
merge the physical and digital to
track customer experience and
sales opportunities

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 5
Measuring & Communicating
Marketing’s Value
Nick Panayi
Director
Global Brand &
Digital Marketing
CSC

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 6
Measuring & Communicating
Marketing’s Value
 Technology brings data, data brings
knowledge, and knowledge is power
– With the marketing dashboard, senior
executives see marketing’s
contribution to total contract value
(TCV), updated daily, dynamically
– Drill-down data provides sales with
funnel metrics and individual lead
details

 To market smarter, CSC had to build
a digital infrastructure

 Dashboards are great rearview
mirrors; the real value comes from
predictive analytics
– Use digital body language to identify
leads before they raise their hands
– Create an index score to predict
impact of a piece of content

 Data and analytics enable content
personalization: marketing to
individuals and accounts

– 45 best-of-breed tools, integrated
seamlessly into a single ecosystem
– A hub and spoke model with the
customer management system (CMS)
as the core brain

 The right people are the lynchpin for
success
– People understand the information
and context
– People communicate with executives
and sales

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 7
How Buyers Consume:
Content, Knowledge, and
Wisdom
Julie Schwartz
SVP, Research and
Thought Leadership
ITSMA

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 8
How Buyers Consume: Content, Knowledge, and Wisdom
 Today’s buyers are hungry for
knowledge. They spend a lot of time
educating themselves. The bigger the
buyer, the more time they spend.
 Two trends:
– There is a need for person-toperson connections
– The role of SMEs is expanding
 45% of buyer time is spent talking to
people (versus 55% reading online
and in print)
– Half of this time is spent with peers,
especially those within the company
– The other half is with SMEs, sales,
and at events
 Buyers are happy to talk to sales –
76% are satisfied with their most
recent sales experience

 SMEs are the top people-based
source for all functions except lines of
business, where they are number two
– Most buyers have good access to
SMEs, but there is room for
improvement
– The most credible SMEs are those
who demonstrate knowledge of the
buyer’s business
 Top takeaways:
– Buyers can’t learn it all digitally;
they need to interact with people
– Online, offline, and people-based
interactions need to be seamlessly
integrated
– The people they most want to talk
to are your SMEs – and since there
aren’t enough, you have to find
ways to scale them.

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 9
Enabling Sales with New
Playbooks, Mobile Apps,
Services-led Offers, and More
Barb Robidoux
Vice President
Services Marketing
EMC

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 10
Enabling Sales with New Playbooks, Mobile Apps, Services-led
Offers, and More
 There are always two sales that you
have to make:
– Final customer
– Salespeople who talk to the
customer
 We created a free IT Transformation
Workshop for the final customer.
Then we actively marketed it to sales
via:
– Playbook available via mobile app
– Annual training program, led by
SME “rock stars”, with pre-work,
role-playing, pitch certification,
application of best practices to real
accounts
– Blog posts with links to materials
– Email to sales by VP America Sales

 30-question survey to benchmark
customers relative to peers
– Facilitated dialogue about next
steps
– Kept tangible to get buy-in from
salespeople who sell products
– Sales loved it; the workshop
qualifies customers, moves them
along purchase journey

 The workshop had three stages:
survey, benchmarking, and a write up
at the end
The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 11
Developing Thought
Leadership Sellers:
Can Marketing Meet the
Challenge?
Dave Stein
Renowned Sales
Consultant, Trainer,
Author, and CEO of
ES Research Group

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 12
Developing Thought Leadership Sellers:
Can Marketing Meet the Challenge?
 Beware the right-brained sales-person;
logic and analysis work better than intuition
and charisma
 To become trusted advisors, salespeople
need to:
– Manage customer’s perception of value
– Think strategically
– Be a better consultant
– Define and position solutions
 Which requires:
– Financial acumen
– Research skills
– Industry and customer knowledge

 Seek out the value buyer, not the
commodity buyer, who seeks:
– Long-term solution, not a quick fix
– Long-term partner, not vendor-ondemand
– Long-term strategy, not day-to-day
tactics
– Planned investments, not lowest prices
– A view of the future, informed by the past
– A desire to lead, not just survive

 Sales needs help in:
– Communicating value, not features/specs
– Measuring value for each persona within
customer organization
– Explaining the “how” and the “by how
much” in addition to the “what”
– Providing simulations, models, and case
studies to capture mindshare
The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 13
Marketing Leaders Panel:
Digital Engagement and the
Evolving Role of Marketing
Facilitated by Jane Hiscock, President,
Farland Group

 John Kennedy, Vice President,
Marketing IBM Global Business
Services
 Eileen Lynch, Senior Vice President,
Marketing, Thomson Reuters
 Roberto Ricossa, VP, Marketing &
Inside Sales, Avaya

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 14
Marketing Leaders Panel:
Digital Engagement and the Evolving Role
of Marketing
 Business buyers are consumers, too;
consumers now have higher expectations—
which spill into the business realm as well.
 Marketers have a difficult job, but can also
be more effective, due to:
– Transparency
– Personalization
– The rise of communities of like-minded
people
– Need for two-way communication, not
broadcasting

 Don’t just target companies; target
individuals within companies—as well as the
influencers who surround each individual
 There is no single content strategy; there are
many kinds of content offering different
value to different people

 Transparency has had an impact on brand
building:
– Brands used to be built through promotion
– Now what happens inside is almost as
visible as what happens outside
– The brand is the culture, the people, the full
operational characteristics of the company
– Marketers need to leverage what’s inside
the walls—especially the people

 ROI = return on interesting; to content
consumers, if it’s interesting, they share it
 Think beyond leads and pipeline to how
you can enable sales to close deals

– Learn from online journalists, who create
different versions for SEO, Tweeting, or
clicking into a site
– Salespeople almost need a script. Read your
content aloud. Is it simple and short? Would
you feel comfortable saying the words?
The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 15
Powering Growth through
Digital Advantage:
The B2B Perspective
David Edelman
Partner
Marketing & Sales Practice
McKinsey & Co.

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 16
Powering Growth Through Digital Advantage:
The B2B Perspective


Digital is not about more. It’s about a different way
of engaging with customers and it requires
fundamental shifts in how you approach the
market.



“Digital” is also a misnomer. It’s multi-channel.
Clients want many ways of learning:
– Publishing and webcasts
– In-person speakers and conversations
– Talking to other clients
– Ability to convene people and facilitate meetings
is almost as valuable as the content itself



Think about core content themes used across
channels—that can be repackaged and reused
while presenting consistent themes.
– Spreading diverse content around has less
impact
– Themes should present a strong use case—
unlike what’s found on a hierarchical, cataloguelike website
– Our theme: powering growth requires creating
some kind of digital advantage; sub-topics
support this larger theme



Services companies used to build the corporate
brand to the exclusion of people. Now customers
want authenticity and transparency—a dialogue
with individuals. Which drives:
– Use of social media
– Speaking through third-party forums (HBR,
Forbes)
– Metrics need to focus on intermediate steps.
There is no direct path from a Tweet to a deal.
– How many followers—and who are they?
– How many new conversations?
– How many face-to-face meetings and with
whom?

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 17
Engagement in the Era of
the Millennial
John Della Volpe
Founder & Managing
Partner, SocialSphere
and Director of Polling at
Harvard’s Institute of
Politics

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 18
Engagement in the Era of the Millennial


Millennials are the largest generation in history—onethird of the global population and about a trillion dollars
in the US economy.
– They give back. They’re connected to society. They
value relationships.
– Ideal of sharing online is deeply embedded. They
have shared online every day of their lives.
– They expect everyone to be connected all the time.



It is easy to find a lot of information about individual
people who are online: age, race, location, clothing, PC
or Mac, music, political affiliation, and so on.
– For instance, a prominent early voice from the Arab
Spring in Egypt— who now has a half-million Twitter
followers—was Alya el-Hosseiny.
– Angry at America but also loves lasagna, Nirvana,
and The Simpsons.
– Alya is a window into thousands of like-minded
Egyptians.





“Orbit” measures elements driving online influence:
– Onsite engagement (broadcast or dialogue?).
– Reach of audience (1,000 followers puts you in the
top 5% of Twitter users).
– Bias (point of view).
– Influence (likelihood of retweeting).
– Topicality (frequency of creating engaging content).



Tweaking elements where you’re weak—for instance,
engaging rather than simply broadcasting—can
increase your influence.

The job of marketers is to find the Alya’s that matter to
their organizations.
– It’s a win-win, since you need their feedback to
shape the future of your project, and they want to be
recognized and play a role.
– Bring them into your CRM system and court them as
key influencers.
– Count their readers and aggregate the number of
impressions that they can drive.

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 19
Marketing Leaders Panel:
Leading Marketing Change
and Transformation
Facilitated by Bev Burgess,
Senior Vice President, ITSMA
• Julie Johnson, Executive Director,
Industries & Marketing, KPMG
• Steve Pinedo, Vice President,
Services Marketing, Oracle
• David B. Lee, Vice President,
Marketing, Strategy & Sales
Enablement, Dell Services

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 20
Marketing Leaders Panel:
Leading Marketing Change and Transformation
 As products and deployment options
proliferate, it’s difficult for customers
to put them all together into a
coherent whole; that’s an opportunity
for marketing
 Learn what your peers in sales do
– At Frito-Lay, executives board a
delivery truck to learn what the
salesperson—the delivery person—
has to know and do
– Deals and customer relationships
are our trucks. Commit to sit in front
of a customer throughout the sales
cycle. Learn what the salesperson
goes through—what enables and
what disables.
– Try to go arm-in-arm with sales to
customers saying, “We’re in this
together. Our metrics are the
same.”

 Focus on stories—and never leave
out the “how” part. Not just victories,
but how the victory was achieved:
– The value proposition
– How it was communicated
– How the competition was disarmed
– How they can do it themselves

 Create formal mechanisms to enable
voice of the customer such as Net
Promoter Score and Customer
advisory boards; map everyone
against those metrics

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 21
A Sampling of ITSMA Articles and Research
How Buyers Consume Content, Knowledge, and Wisdom
Elevating Brand Perceptions: How TCS Reframed its Peer Group
ITSMA’s 2013 State of the Marketing Profession Address
Strategy &
Market
Planning

Repositioning for SMAC: Seven Rules for a New Era
It’s a Marketing SMAC-down: Why You Need to Reposition Your Company
Marketing Transformation: Are We There Yet?
How Marketing Can Lead: The CMO as a Strategic Systems Thinker
Marketing for Impact: Five Strategic Imperatives for Growth

Portfolio
Management

From Complex to Comprehensible: Juniper Transforms the Services Portfolio
How Marketing Can Facilitate the Go-to-Market Strategy
Professional Services and Solutions, 2012 Brand Tracking Study

Internal &
External
Communications

How Dell Mobilized a Disciplined Army of Social Media Ambassadors
How to Market to Traditional and B2B Social Buyers
Triple Your Pipeline, Cut Churn, Expand Your Reach: Lessons from DocuSign

Sales
Enablement

ITSMA Online Survey: Thought Leadership Selling: How to Help Sales Influence Customers with Ideas
Microsoft’s ABM Metrics: Making the Case to Scale Up
2013 ITSMA/VEM/Forrester Marketing Performance Management Survey: Increasing Marketing’s Relevance to the Business
Why You Need a Chief Marketing Technologist

Marketing
Operations

Clean Up Your Data: Best Practices in Data, Modeling, and Metrics
Adopting Marketing Technology: Six Best Practices
Creating Great Marketing Dashboards
Realizing the Promise of Marketing Technology

Services Marketing Budgets and Benchmarks: 2013 Budget Allocations and Trends

For more ITSMA research, visit ITSMA’s Online Library at http://www.itsma.com/research/online-library/
The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 22
Thank You
David C. Munn
President & CEO
ITSMA
dmunn@itsma.com
+1-781-862-8500, Ext. 117
For more information, visit www.itsma.com

The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 23

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The Best of ITSMA’s 20th Annual Conference

  • 1. The Best of ITSMA’s 20th Annual Conference
  • 2. Conference Kickoff & Opening Remarks Dave Munn President and CEO ITSMA The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 2
  • 3. Opening Remarks: Five Priorities for Marketers 1. Use metrics that matter – Only half of marketers think metrics are important, and they often measure efficiency rather than effectiveness and don’t link to business outcomes – Consequently, few CEOs and CFOs use marketing’s metrics 5. Create a proactive and adaptive marketing culture – Marketers face constant disruption – How can marketing leaders become proactive, collaborative, and better at anticipating opportunities and threats? 2. Use technology effectively – Most marketers think tech will be increasingly critical to marketing, yet twothirds are underinvested in it 3. Be relevant and personalized – Overwhelmed buyers respond only to the most personal and relevant – Most B2B marketers aren’t yet B2I (business to individual) 4. Do thought leadership selling – Only one company in five is effective at using thought leadership to sell – Marketers need to provide better training, customization, and support The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 3
  • 4. Marketing as an Accountable Business Partner and Revenue Center Karen Walker Senior Vice President Global Marketing Cisco Systems The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 4
  • 5. Marketing as an Accountable Business Partner and Revenue Center  Our new North Star: revenue. Optimize every aspect of the portfolio to drive revenue  Over half of marketers have a revenue goal—and it’s going up  We’re still Mad Men, but are also Math Men: turning data into stories that lead to actions resulting in revenue  Focus first on strategic goals, then tactics  Learn to be repeatable and predictable in driving revenue  Make explicit pacts with sales on rules for leads and follow up  Events are still important, but merge the physical and digital to track customer experience and sales opportunities The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 5
  • 6. Measuring & Communicating Marketing’s Value Nick Panayi Director Global Brand & Digital Marketing CSC The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 6
  • 7. Measuring & Communicating Marketing’s Value  Technology brings data, data brings knowledge, and knowledge is power – With the marketing dashboard, senior executives see marketing’s contribution to total contract value (TCV), updated daily, dynamically – Drill-down data provides sales with funnel metrics and individual lead details  To market smarter, CSC had to build a digital infrastructure  Dashboards are great rearview mirrors; the real value comes from predictive analytics – Use digital body language to identify leads before they raise their hands – Create an index score to predict impact of a piece of content  Data and analytics enable content personalization: marketing to individuals and accounts – 45 best-of-breed tools, integrated seamlessly into a single ecosystem – A hub and spoke model with the customer management system (CMS) as the core brain  The right people are the lynchpin for success – People understand the information and context – People communicate with executives and sales The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 7
  • 8. How Buyers Consume: Content, Knowledge, and Wisdom Julie Schwartz SVP, Research and Thought Leadership ITSMA The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 8
  • 9. How Buyers Consume: Content, Knowledge, and Wisdom  Today’s buyers are hungry for knowledge. They spend a lot of time educating themselves. The bigger the buyer, the more time they spend.  Two trends: – There is a need for person-toperson connections – The role of SMEs is expanding  45% of buyer time is spent talking to people (versus 55% reading online and in print) – Half of this time is spent with peers, especially those within the company – The other half is with SMEs, sales, and at events  Buyers are happy to talk to sales – 76% are satisfied with their most recent sales experience  SMEs are the top people-based source for all functions except lines of business, where they are number two – Most buyers have good access to SMEs, but there is room for improvement – The most credible SMEs are those who demonstrate knowledge of the buyer’s business  Top takeaways: – Buyers can’t learn it all digitally; they need to interact with people – Online, offline, and people-based interactions need to be seamlessly integrated – The people they most want to talk to are your SMEs – and since there aren’t enough, you have to find ways to scale them. The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 9
  • 10. Enabling Sales with New Playbooks, Mobile Apps, Services-led Offers, and More Barb Robidoux Vice President Services Marketing EMC The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 10
  • 11. Enabling Sales with New Playbooks, Mobile Apps, Services-led Offers, and More  There are always two sales that you have to make: – Final customer – Salespeople who talk to the customer  We created a free IT Transformation Workshop for the final customer. Then we actively marketed it to sales via: – Playbook available via mobile app – Annual training program, led by SME “rock stars”, with pre-work, role-playing, pitch certification, application of best practices to real accounts – Blog posts with links to materials – Email to sales by VP America Sales  30-question survey to benchmark customers relative to peers – Facilitated dialogue about next steps – Kept tangible to get buy-in from salespeople who sell products – Sales loved it; the workshop qualifies customers, moves them along purchase journey  The workshop had three stages: survey, benchmarking, and a write up at the end The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 11
  • 12. Developing Thought Leadership Sellers: Can Marketing Meet the Challenge? Dave Stein Renowned Sales Consultant, Trainer, Author, and CEO of ES Research Group The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 12
  • 13. Developing Thought Leadership Sellers: Can Marketing Meet the Challenge?  Beware the right-brained sales-person; logic and analysis work better than intuition and charisma  To become trusted advisors, salespeople need to: – Manage customer’s perception of value – Think strategically – Be a better consultant – Define and position solutions  Which requires: – Financial acumen – Research skills – Industry and customer knowledge  Seek out the value buyer, not the commodity buyer, who seeks: – Long-term solution, not a quick fix – Long-term partner, not vendor-ondemand – Long-term strategy, not day-to-day tactics – Planned investments, not lowest prices – A view of the future, informed by the past – A desire to lead, not just survive  Sales needs help in: – Communicating value, not features/specs – Measuring value for each persona within customer organization – Explaining the “how” and the “by how much” in addition to the “what” – Providing simulations, models, and case studies to capture mindshare The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 13
  • 14. Marketing Leaders Panel: Digital Engagement and the Evolving Role of Marketing Facilitated by Jane Hiscock, President, Farland Group  John Kennedy, Vice President, Marketing IBM Global Business Services  Eileen Lynch, Senior Vice President, Marketing, Thomson Reuters  Roberto Ricossa, VP, Marketing & Inside Sales, Avaya The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 14
  • 15. Marketing Leaders Panel: Digital Engagement and the Evolving Role of Marketing  Business buyers are consumers, too; consumers now have higher expectations— which spill into the business realm as well.  Marketers have a difficult job, but can also be more effective, due to: – Transparency – Personalization – The rise of communities of like-minded people – Need for two-way communication, not broadcasting  Don’t just target companies; target individuals within companies—as well as the influencers who surround each individual  There is no single content strategy; there are many kinds of content offering different value to different people  Transparency has had an impact on brand building: – Brands used to be built through promotion – Now what happens inside is almost as visible as what happens outside – The brand is the culture, the people, the full operational characteristics of the company – Marketers need to leverage what’s inside the walls—especially the people  ROI = return on interesting; to content consumers, if it’s interesting, they share it  Think beyond leads and pipeline to how you can enable sales to close deals – Learn from online journalists, who create different versions for SEO, Tweeting, or clicking into a site – Salespeople almost need a script. Read your content aloud. Is it simple and short? Would you feel comfortable saying the words? The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 15
  • 16. Powering Growth through Digital Advantage: The B2B Perspective David Edelman Partner Marketing & Sales Practice McKinsey & Co. The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 16
  • 17. Powering Growth Through Digital Advantage: The B2B Perspective  Digital is not about more. It’s about a different way of engaging with customers and it requires fundamental shifts in how you approach the market.  “Digital” is also a misnomer. It’s multi-channel. Clients want many ways of learning: – Publishing and webcasts – In-person speakers and conversations – Talking to other clients – Ability to convene people and facilitate meetings is almost as valuable as the content itself  Think about core content themes used across channels—that can be repackaged and reused while presenting consistent themes. – Spreading diverse content around has less impact – Themes should present a strong use case— unlike what’s found on a hierarchical, cataloguelike website – Our theme: powering growth requires creating some kind of digital advantage; sub-topics support this larger theme  Services companies used to build the corporate brand to the exclusion of people. Now customers want authenticity and transparency—a dialogue with individuals. Which drives: – Use of social media – Speaking through third-party forums (HBR, Forbes) – Metrics need to focus on intermediate steps. There is no direct path from a Tweet to a deal. – How many followers—and who are they? – How many new conversations? – How many face-to-face meetings and with whom? The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 17
  • 18. Engagement in the Era of the Millennial John Della Volpe Founder & Managing Partner, SocialSphere and Director of Polling at Harvard’s Institute of Politics The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 18
  • 19. Engagement in the Era of the Millennial  Millennials are the largest generation in history—onethird of the global population and about a trillion dollars in the US economy. – They give back. They’re connected to society. They value relationships. – Ideal of sharing online is deeply embedded. They have shared online every day of their lives. – They expect everyone to be connected all the time.  It is easy to find a lot of information about individual people who are online: age, race, location, clothing, PC or Mac, music, political affiliation, and so on. – For instance, a prominent early voice from the Arab Spring in Egypt— who now has a half-million Twitter followers—was Alya el-Hosseiny. – Angry at America but also loves lasagna, Nirvana, and The Simpsons. – Alya is a window into thousands of like-minded Egyptians.   “Orbit” measures elements driving online influence: – Onsite engagement (broadcast or dialogue?). – Reach of audience (1,000 followers puts you in the top 5% of Twitter users). – Bias (point of view). – Influence (likelihood of retweeting). – Topicality (frequency of creating engaging content).  Tweaking elements where you’re weak—for instance, engaging rather than simply broadcasting—can increase your influence. The job of marketers is to find the Alya’s that matter to their organizations. – It’s a win-win, since you need their feedback to shape the future of your project, and they want to be recognized and play a role. – Bring them into your CRM system and court them as key influencers. – Count their readers and aggregate the number of impressions that they can drive. The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 19
  • 20. Marketing Leaders Panel: Leading Marketing Change and Transformation Facilitated by Bev Burgess, Senior Vice President, ITSMA • Julie Johnson, Executive Director, Industries & Marketing, KPMG • Steve Pinedo, Vice President, Services Marketing, Oracle • David B. Lee, Vice President, Marketing, Strategy & Sales Enablement, Dell Services The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 20
  • 21. Marketing Leaders Panel: Leading Marketing Change and Transformation  As products and deployment options proliferate, it’s difficult for customers to put them all together into a coherent whole; that’s an opportunity for marketing  Learn what your peers in sales do – At Frito-Lay, executives board a delivery truck to learn what the salesperson—the delivery person— has to know and do – Deals and customer relationships are our trucks. Commit to sit in front of a customer throughout the sales cycle. Learn what the salesperson goes through—what enables and what disables. – Try to go arm-in-arm with sales to customers saying, “We’re in this together. Our metrics are the same.”  Focus on stories—and never leave out the “how” part. Not just victories, but how the victory was achieved: – The value proposition – How it was communicated – How the competition was disarmed – How they can do it themselves  Create formal mechanisms to enable voice of the customer such as Net Promoter Score and Customer advisory boards; map everyone against those metrics The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 21
  • 22. A Sampling of ITSMA Articles and Research How Buyers Consume Content, Knowledge, and Wisdom Elevating Brand Perceptions: How TCS Reframed its Peer Group ITSMA’s 2013 State of the Marketing Profession Address Strategy & Market Planning Repositioning for SMAC: Seven Rules for a New Era It’s a Marketing SMAC-down: Why You Need to Reposition Your Company Marketing Transformation: Are We There Yet? How Marketing Can Lead: The CMO as a Strategic Systems Thinker Marketing for Impact: Five Strategic Imperatives for Growth Portfolio Management From Complex to Comprehensible: Juniper Transforms the Services Portfolio How Marketing Can Facilitate the Go-to-Market Strategy Professional Services and Solutions, 2012 Brand Tracking Study Internal & External Communications How Dell Mobilized a Disciplined Army of Social Media Ambassadors How to Market to Traditional and B2B Social Buyers Triple Your Pipeline, Cut Churn, Expand Your Reach: Lessons from DocuSign Sales Enablement ITSMA Online Survey: Thought Leadership Selling: How to Help Sales Influence Customers with Ideas Microsoft’s ABM Metrics: Making the Case to Scale Up 2013 ITSMA/VEM/Forrester Marketing Performance Management Survey: Increasing Marketing’s Relevance to the Business Why You Need a Chief Marketing Technologist Marketing Operations Clean Up Your Data: Best Practices in Data, Modeling, and Metrics Adopting Marketing Technology: Six Best Practices Creating Great Marketing Dashboards Realizing the Promise of Marketing Technology Services Marketing Budgets and Benchmarks: 2013 Budget Allocations and Trends For more ITSMA research, visit ITSMA’s Online Library at http://www.itsma.com/research/online-library/ The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 22
  • 23. Thank You David C. Munn President & CEO ITSMA [email protected] +1-781-862-8500, Ext. 117 For more information, visit www.itsma.com The New Face of Marketing | Highlights | PN5311 | © 2014 ITSMA. All Rights Reserved. 23