News & Trends Blog entriesNews & Trends Blog entries

rss

SiriusDecisions on the Challenge of Inbound

SiriusDecisions on the Challenge of Inbound

Good discussion starting on the SiriusDecisions blog about the challenge of tracking inbound activity. This is not an academic matter, as inbound becomes increasingly important and yet marketers are struggling to track inbound through to revenue.

Join the discussion here.

Analyst Jonathan Block notes (boldface added), "In our experience, there is a technology and process gap in populating records with inbound activity, particularly social. Most organizations track the lead source and, if they're lucky, the interaction that closed the deal. Consequently, few have a handle on their existing marketing mix, to say nothing of adding inbound to the mix. It's definitely a combination of all the technologies you mentioned; however, few organizations have the right tools and processes in place so it's more manual and requires marketers to roll up their sleeves and get analytical."

My personal wish list is case studies on companies that are doing this well.

The Metrics Your CMO Wants: Presentation from MarketingProfs Forum

The Metrics Your CMO Wants: Presentation from MarketingProfs Forum

We got some great feedback on Bulldog VP of Best Practices and Strategy Terry Flaherty's presentation yesterday at the MarketingProfs forum in Boston.
For those who weren't there, here's the promised copy of the slide deck for "How to Deliver the Right Metrics to Your CMO and Earn More Recnogition for Marketing."
Terry was joined by Jon Vlock, Director of Client Marketing for UBM TechWeb. Jon gave a very straightforward answer to the question, What do C-level Execs Expect and Value?

  • More revenue.
  • Less sass.
  • Total agreement with everything I say.
  • More credit given to the CFO and me.

Get Employees Involved in Social Media

Get Employees Involved in Social Media

This is the bane of many  marketers' existence: How to get employees, from the ranks to management, involved in social media. Not reluctantly retweeting. Not submitting a once-a-year blog post. And alas, for many companies, not hiring someone full-time to focus on social-platform friendly content. Really engaged and involved in a way that shines through and benefits the organization.

I like this post on Chris Koch's B2B marketing blog about getting employees involved. And I think he makes a very good point (although it's not his primary point) about backing up social media activity with official support.

He says, "Many companies take it a step farther by making idea development part of employees’ annual goals. The high-end consulting firms like McKinsey have done this for years. Ideas are baked into the culture. To rise in the firm, consultants know they need to come up with good ideas and try to get them published."

Make it part of people's goals, and it will get done. This is not rocket science: I think Pavlov figured it out a long time ago.

Along these same lines, we worked with our partners at Netprospex to create an easy-to-use briefing to help make your sales team social (last item on the page). It was written for our sales team, but really, the quick-start steps are applicable to anyone.  Worth checking out.

Marketing Watchdog Journal: Better Email Deliverability Right Now

Marketing Watchdog Journal: Better Email Deliverability Right Now

Not in the mood to hear Eloqua Chief Deliverability and Privacy Officer Dennis Dayman's EEC podcast about email practices? 
Read the print version, part of the EEC List Growth and Engagement podcast.
Find it in the May Marketing Watchdog Journal. Great, actionable advice on:

  • Understanding and maintaining your sender score (and why it matters for deliverability)
  • Watching email trends over time rather than once or twice post-campaign
  • Better segmentation. "We're talking about giving prospects what they really want based on their clickthrough behaviors. And if they are getting what they want, they are less likely to hit the spam button and your reputation will increase as a result."