If your CEO or VP hasn't yet asked you for metrics that demonstrate your impact on the business - get ready for 2010 because it's coming! As we travel across the country and meet with marketers now fully tasked with making a lead generation and demand generation impact, it is apparent that more and more companies are asking for, even requiring, "Metrics That Matter." In business speak, this means what is the revenue contribution from marketing. For many marketers, this is a daunting task but with the arrival of marketing automation systems on the market, this is now a slam dunk!
As you look at how you can report on "Metrics That Matter," here are five best practices:
1. Start with what you have
As you adopt marketing automation systems and implement and begin to fully utilize them, you will change what you measure because you will now be able to measure things you could not before. However, in the beginning, start with what you can tangibly and discretely measure. Items such as: # of emails sent, % open, % click-throughs and % effective rate (click-through/open)
2. Create a set of base-line metrics
To see improvement, you have to start with a baseline. Create a baseline (even if it is your best guess) for every key metric you will be tracking and reporting. Try to get general agreement on these metrics.
3. WAG for every campaign
A few years ago Harvard Business Review did an article on the art of guessing (Wild *#* Guess) in business and found that experienced professionals were often no more than 10-20% away from their WAG when compared to actual results. For the DG marketer, this means that EVERY campaign needs to have a set of WAGs associated with them - from Day 1. This will help you get used to working to achieve these key metrics.
4. Only a handful of metrics matter
While there are many things you can measure, ask yourself - "What does my leadership team care about?" This will help you define the Metrics That Matter. For example, your CEO could probably care less about how many emails got sent out or the number of opens or even click-throughs. What he probably cares about are the number of highly qualified leads sent to sales as measured by the % of these leads that converted into opportunities.
5. Walk and talk like a VP of Sales
Last year we did a study on metrics by interviewing top Demand Generation Marketers. We found many common attributes across this seasoned group but one of the most surprising was they sounded like a VP of Sales. They were incredibly Metrics That Mattered driven and could tell you at anytime where they were against plan - almost like they had a quota (some did.) Additionally, they were deeply integrated with sales and knew that if sales was going to achieve their quota, then they had to achieve theirs.
What have you seen?
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
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1 comment:
It is remarkable that B2B marketing has survived so long with so few metrics. The irony is that we are paired with Sales, the most accountable organization in the company! I think you have to start by measuring your #1 deliverable: Sales Ready Leads. How many did you deliver in the period, how many became Sales Accepted Leads, how many became Sales Qualified Leads and so on. Open rates and clicks are way down the list in importance, but certainly very easy to measure!
-Kevin
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