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4 Ways Finance Can Positively Influence Marketing Value Creation

If you’re a Finance leader, particularly in a B2C business, it comes as no surprise that CEOs are increasingly leaning on Finance to develop and implement strategy. 

It’s difficult to fully embrace this strategic role without forging a collaboration with Marketing, which means it’s more essential than ever to find ways to partner with your marketing team when it comes to value creation. 

Here are four specific changes a partnership with marketing can help promote to drive demonstrable value for the business. 

1. Treat the marketing budget as an investment rather than an expense.

As a finance leader you’re familiar with the concept of portfolio management; marketers are essentially portfolio managers of portfolios that include emerging customers and markets, and goals such as retaining and/or profitably growing a set of customers and markets (VisionEdge Marketing)

Within this framework your financial acumen can help guide and challenge marketing to:

  • Build plans that consider how best to allocate funds across each element of their portfolio.
  • Clarify how investments are intended to contribute to the business
  • Report relevant metrics to the portfolio’s investment performance.

2. Help marketing reimagine its mission as value creation, rather than simply sales enablement and brand stewardship.

This begins by working with your marketing team to understand how value is being gained (or lost) and to seek greater transparency into marketing’s operations. 

From there. collaborate on a set of measurable marketing metrics that support the business’ financial objectives, including customer acquisition, and retention targets and costs. 

Your support will ensure metrics reflect the health and value of the customer base (e.g., net present value, lifetime value, return on loyalty, cost per acquisition) and potentially earn a place on the balance sheet.

3. Shift performance measurement from historic to future focus. 

Marketing ROIs may help justify past performance, but they do little to accurately guide future investment decisions. As you focus on value creation, the metrics market used should evolve too.

CFOs should begin to shift from focusing on how to optimize marginal revenue to asking “where should the next dollar of investment be made?” (VisionEdge Marketing)

4. Align on metrics that forecast future revenue and profitability rather than settling for past program ROIs.

Financially relevant, quantitative and predictive marketing performance metrics have long been the elusive holy grail for marketing. But AI and machine learning are making these resources accessible and affordable. 

“For too long, marketers ability to drive performance has been hindered by their inability to measure it in a cohesive, relevant manner,” Keen’s CRO Enid Maran says. “Analytics tied to financial contributions that facilitate assessment across both online and offline channels, in a future-focused manner, have only become viable as AI and machine learning at last infiltrated marketing performance management.”

As your company’s finance leader it’s important to understand the state of  marketing performance measurement and engage with your marketing team  to make sound assessments about where “non-working” investment in performance  management solutions will pay dividends, something marketing traditionally has  been reluctant to commit to.  

To learn more, download the free eBook, A Marketer’s Guide to Collaborating with Finance in an Era of Digital Transformation.

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After Volatile Year CMOs Still Lag In Adopting AI/ML Automation

Perhaps the most striking thing about this year’s CMO Survey is the number of all-time highs and all-time lows, evidence of the remarkable volatility wrought by the COVID-19 pandemic and its reverberating effects on consumer behavior:

  • Marketer optimism surged from a near-historic low to a near-record high with an unprecedented rebound between last June and February.
  • As a percent of firm revenue marketing budgets rose to the highest level in survey history.
  • Internet sales rocketed to 19.4%, the highest level in survey history, with a 70% increase among B2C companies over last year.

Yet if one trend dominated this year’s survey it was the surge in digital marketing, with a 32.7 percent increase in contribution to company performance reported over last year. CMO Survey Founder and Director Christine Moorman describes it as

“…A pillar of success during this pandemic year, a trend that cannot be overstated.”

Digital transformation is expected to permeate all aspects of business, with digital budgets expected to increase another 10.1% over the coming year.

Why Marketing Planning Needs To Keep Pace With The Market

Just as the task of buying media has become highly automated and programmatic, the process of building a marketing plan, based on potential financial contribution, also is rapidly evolving into a technology-powered, automated paradigm.

AI and machine learning have enabled robust technology platforms, like Keen’s MIDA solution, to automate the process of analyzing all available marketing channels to calculate the profit threshold for each investment in each week of a plan.

In addition to improving financial contribution with a more precise and quantitative approach, these solutions free up substantial human resources, broadening marketers’ strategic activity bandwidth over time.

Given these benefits and the past year’s turbulence, one would think adoption would be barreling into the mainstream by now. Yet even with a 39 percent increase in use of quantitative measurement tools over the past year, fewer than half of marketers rely on them.

The CMO survey reports that implementation of AI and machine learning tools has grown ~10% year over year since 2018. And survey respondents predict ~20% growth over the next three years.

Yet here’s the rub: Moorman acknowledges a strange phenomenon that we have heard echoed by other leading analysts:

“One cautionary note–actual activity levels have not kept pace with expectations for the future in this area.”

It’s curious to consider what might be holding marketers back.

  • The pain is real.
  • The conditions are ripe.
  • The potential is proven and significant.

My hunch, and experience from conversations from hundreds of top brand leaders over the past few years, suggest it is the most familiar obstacle to innovation: fear of change.

Concerns over risk can be quickly and logically mitigated by the experiences of early adopters. Among Keen clients using our solution to guide future decision making, marketing contribution improved 41 percent over the past 52 weeks.

And looking more broadly, according to a survey conducted by ClickZ, 78 percent of marketers felt they had missed opportunities due to poor decision making, while those tracking the impact of their predictive analytics reported “significant returns on their investment” with 99.1 percent reporting uplift between 10 to more than 50 percent.

Learn more at KeenDS.com or connect with us: info@keends.com.