Technology & Innovation

CMO perspectives: Succeeding in the digital space

April 27, 2015

Global

April 27, 2015

Global
Our Editors

The Economist Intelligence Unit

_____________________

Explore what the evolving role of digital leadership means for your company through a briefing from The Economist’s summit on marketing.

Content is sponsored by Accenture and Pegasystems

Today, every business is a digital business.Customer use of digital technologies increasingly drives corporate growth,putting marketing departments at the forefront of leading the digital transformation.This session, sponsored by Accenture and Pegasystems, explored the evolving role of digital leadership: digital strategy, product development and operational challenges like integrating and expanding digital infrastructure, rethinking supply chains and engineering "hyperscale."

As digital marketing strategy evolves at an unprecedented rate, companies across sectors are racing to optimise their sites for mobile, understand how to best leverage data and create engaging content.

Digital tools give marketers valuable new capabilities—for example, the ability to understand the “why” behind customer behaviour. Leon Trefler, senior vice-president of global customer success at Pegasystems, said data insights via the company’s “next best action marketing” make it possible for businesses to react to customer needs in real time. “I think we’re all sick and tired of getting the same offer, over and over again of things you’re just not interested in. Well, what if you were able to refine it by understanding who I am and what I need, and—in real time—give me something that I really want?”

Ryan McManus, digital strategy lead at Accenture, noted the phrase “digital strategy” means different things to different people. In addition to the field’s traditional IT and marketing components, digital product service development s now key to a company’s success.

McManus emphasised the importance of optimising both websites and business strategies for mobile. “When you think of the 1.4 billion people coming into the emerging market middle class over the next few years, it’s absolutely massively critical,” he said.

Mark Yolton, vice-presdient of digital at Cisco said “nimble and agile” companies have a distinct advantage when it comes to mobile because they can react to evolving best practices faster than a bigger business. “We have 85 country websites in 40 different languages—getting those 85 websites migrated onto mobile and mobile enabled? ... It’s something that takes a long time. It means changing the underlying infrastructure of what powers those websites, changing the content model, etc.,” he said.

McManus and Yolton agreed that in addition to making their existing websites mobile-friendly, businesses should focus on taking advantage of mobile-specific tools, such as apps and location-based services.

The rising demand for content was another big focus of the panel. Amanda Rubin, global co-head of brand and content strategy at Goldman Sachs, said 98% of Goldman’s marketing activity is digital—much of it content-related. “Digital gives us the platform to take what could be difficult, complex topics and break them down in a more digestible way,” she said.

According to Rubin, measuring the effectiveness of that content goes beyond counting clicks. For a single video, for example, Goldman measures user behaviours such as the amount of time they spent watching, whether or not they shared the video and how many pages a user looks at after first engaging with the site. “Digital allows us to measure all that and then subsequently make our products and marketing communications more efficient,” she said.

Despite the valuable insights provided by analytics, Rubin and McManus asserted that digital data is in its nascent stage. Companies now have the tools to collect seemingly infinite amounts of information about customers and users, but understanding which data is worthwhile presents an ongoing challenge.

All four panelists advised businesses—and CMOs in particular—to focus on innovation no matter what their objective. That focus often requires strategists to become advocates within their own organisations. Helping stakeholders from multiple departments understand what’s possible is critical to future survival.

To succeed in the digital space, Trefler said, companies must implement “change management.” “It’s getting people to actually understand the digital means and to think about doing things in a digital way.”

 

For more content like this, go to: http://digitalevolution.eiu.com/

Enjoy in-depth insights and expert analysis - subscribe to our Perspectives newsletter, delivered every week