THE BUSINESS CASE FOR MARKETING …...2 01 02 03 04 THE BASICS OF MARKETING AUTOMATION page 4...

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THE BUSINESS CASE FOR MARKETING AUTOMATION HOW TO CRAFT A COMPELLING CASE the executive team will approve

Transcript of THE BUSINESS CASE FOR MARKETING …...2 01 02 03 04 THE BASICS OF MARKETING AUTOMATION page 4...

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THE BUSINESS CASE FOR

MARKETINGAUTOMATIONHOW TO CRAFT A COMPELLING CASE

the executive team will approve

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Bottom line, you can’t realize the benefits of nurture marketing the way Top Performers do unless you incorporate a technology platform that can preconfigure business rules to manage timely engagement and escalate prioritized leads to sales via integration with CRM.

No amount of hired resources could manually reach out and touch prospects at just the right time with just the right message.

Marketing automation forms the backbone for configuring nurture marketing campaigns across channels and managing communications based on prospect engagement. It’s also one of the only ways marketers can actually start to attribute marketing spend to closed sales.

– Gleanster, March 2013

Set-it-and-forget-it nurture marketing

““

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01020304

THE BASICS OF MARKETING AUTOMATIONpage 4

CONTENTS

HOW TO MAKE A BUSINESS CASE FOR MARKETING AUTOMATIONpage 12

WHAT THE EXECUTIVE SUITE NEEDS TO KNOWpage 28

CLOSING THOUGHTS AND RESOURCESpage 39

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YOU’RE CONVINCED

MARKETINGAUTOMATIONWILL HELP YOUR COMPANY

leap forward......if you can convince executive management to adopt the technology. Because the buyer has evolved. Which means the seller (you) must, too.

The scales have shifted. Digital channels, non-stop connectivity, expectations for personalized interactions, and unprecedented global competition have empowered today’s buyers with more knowledge and choices than ever before.

As a result, marketers must shoulder much more responsibility for measurably contributing to sales and revenue goals, an expanded role that’s less “traditional persuasion” and more “buyer education.”

Success hinges on finding the right mix of inbound and outbound strategies, and the right data that effectively measures what matters across the increasing array of moving pieces.

Marketing automation is a proven method for striking this balance and can significantly, measurably, and sustainably increase your chances for continued success.

This eBook is designed to help you create a compelling business case that convinces executive management to adopt marketing automation.

We’ve laid out the basics of what marketing automation is and what it can do, and we’ve sifted the research and categorized the results by business challenge. Please feel free to use any part of this that will help you make the case to your executive team.

Here we go.

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+ What is marketing automation?

+ What’s the value of marketing automation?

+ What’s included in marketing automation?

+ What do businesses use marketing

automation for?

+ Marketing automation vs. CRM

THE

BASICS OF MARKETING AUTOMATION

01

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A SCENARIO:PERFORMANCE

Companies that have adopted marketing automation are out-performing those without it.

in action

58% 63% 79%

of top-performing companies (defined

as those where marketing contributes more than half of the sales pipeline), have adopted marketing

automation.

(Forrester Research, Dec 2013)

of companies that are outgrowing their

competitors use marketing automation.

(The Lenskold and Pedowitz Groups, Nov 2013)

of top-performing companies have been

using marketing automation for more

than 2 years.

(Gleanster, Aug 2013)

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Marketing automation … focuses on the

definition, scheduling, segmentation,

and tracking of marketing campaigns.

The use of marketing automation makes

processes that would otherwise have been

performed manually much more efficient

and makes new processes possible.

(Marketing Automation Times)

Marketing automation is the use of software

and Web-based services to execute, manage,

and automate marketing tasks and processes. It

replaces manual and repetitive marketing processes

with purpose-built software and applications geared toward

performance. (techopedia)

Marketing automation is the use of technology to generate,

nurture, score and qualify leads, and drive sales, using

customized, multi-touch marketing communications tailored for

each contact’s profile, level of interest, behavior, or place in the

buying process. (Sales Lead Insights)

01 THE BASICS OF MARKETING AUTOMATION

WHAT IS MARKETING AUTOMATION?It depends on who you ask. Here’s a sampling of how others define it:

LEAD-TO-REVENUE MANAGEMENTForrester Research prefers the term “lead-to-revenue management automation solutions” and notes that such systems were developed to “bridge a gap between lead generation activities (e.g., trade shows, direct mail, telemarketing, and email campaigns) and selling activities that were managed by a customer relationship management (CRM) system (e.g., closing the deal). The opportunity to calibrate marketing spend to revenue generation was a significant driver of L2RM” adoption.

SALESFORCE.COM

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The core strength of marketing automation is creating a digital infrastructure in which marketing and sales can understand, and interact with, buyers throughout the entire lifecycle – from acquisition to retention – in a well-timed, personalized way.

Consider these facts:

• 78% of marketers cite marketing automation systems as most responsible for improving revenue contribution. (The Lenskold and Pedowitz Groups, Nov 2013)

• B2B marketers cite the #1 benefit of marketing automation as the ability to generate more and better leads. (Pepper Global, Sep 2013)

• B2B marketers who have successfully deployed lead nurturing programs average a 20% increase in sales opportunities from nurtured leads versus non-nurtured leads. (DemandGen, Aug 2013)

• B2C marketers who take advantage of marketing automation have seen conversion rates as high as 50%. (eMarketer, Feb 2013)

• 69% of top-performing companies cite “cooperation between marketing and sales” as the most critical value-driver for maximizing marketing automation ROI. (Gleanster, Nov 2012)

It’s a compelling value proposition.

MARKETING AUTOMATION BENEFITS

Done well, marketing automation can:

Increase overall sales, both for new and repeat customers

Shorten the sales cycle by 50% or more

Increase deal sizes

Increase sales quota achievement rates

Lower the cost per lead

Lower overall sales and marketing costs across the company

Increase alignment of sales and marketing teams

01 THE BASICS OF MARKETING AUTOMATION

WHAT’S THE VALUE OF MARKETING AUTOMATION?

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01 THE BASICS OF MARKETING AUTOMATION

WHAT’S INCLUDED IN MARKETING AUTOMATION?Generally, marketing automation systems offer most or all of the following:

• Email message and campaign creation

• Automated email campaign deployment and measurement

• Triggered emails

• Lead management and routing

• Automated lead nurturing

• Automated lead scoring

• Creation and hosting of landing pages and forms

• Website visitor tracking

• Social media marketing and sharing

• Inbound marketing, with some SEO capability

• Database with segmentation capabilities

• CRM integration and automatic data synchronization

• Web events/webinar integration, registration, and management

• Tracking, reports, and analytics

• Third-party app integration

• Data capture of demographic, firmographic, and behavioral information for leads and customers

• Alerts to notify sales and/or marketing when a specific person or company visits a specific page on the website

THE HALLMARKS OF A MARKETING AUTOMATION PLATFORM• Data integration, data analytics, list creation,

dynamic list-building

• Automated workflows for the development and execution of outbound and inbound marketing

• Ability to create email messages, landing pages, and online forms

• Lead management features for lead scoring, lead distribution, and lead nurturing

• Visibility and access for sales into marketing campaign efforts and individual prospects

• Unique activity reports for each lead and contact showing website behaviors, clickthroughs, content views, etc.

• Reporting, analytics, and dashboards

- Adapted from SiriusDecisions, SiriusView: Marketing Automation report

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For many customers,

size matters. As a small

marketing team, I’ve

experienced first-hand how

potential clients will quickly

reject your company if it

appears too small based on

company profile or perceived

project capabilities.

As an added benefit, our

company suddenly appeared

bigger because we were (and

are) doing the work of a

much larger marketing team.

That’s the power of marketing

automation.

1 Create and manage email marketing campaigns with less time and effort.

2 Apply qualification metrics to leads and contacts.

3 Segment the database to support targeted, personalized campaigns.

4 Nurture leads with timed content, to help them progress through the sales funnel.

5 See and understand lead behavior as leads move along or drop out of the sales funnel.

6 Score leads to indicate sales-readiness.

7 Synchronize leads to the CRM system as they qualify.

8 Help sales engage more effectively with buyers by using intelligence gathered at multiple touch points.

9 Reduce costs by consolidating point tools.

10 Reduce costs by saving time.

11 Handle increased workloads without additional staff or specialized technical skills.

12 Improve sales response times through information sharing between marketing and sales.

13 Respond 24/7/365 with no downtime, no overtime, and no need for training or retraining.

14 Create set-it-and-forget-it drip campaigns.

15 Publish to multiple social accounts with one action.

16 Eliminate manual data entry for webinar and event registrations.

17 Manage all communications around webinars and events, from initial promotions to final follow-up.

18 Get comprehensive understanding of each lead and customer by integrating marketing automation and CRM systems.

19 Build complex marketing campaigns that coordinate multiple channels and messages automatically and in accordance with pre-strategized, lead-nurturing timeframes.

20 Demonstrate marketing’s contribution to the company’s number of deals, and revenue.

01 THE BASICS OF MARKETING AUTOMATION

WHAT DO BUSINESSES USE MARKETING AUTOMATION FOR?Virtually everyone using marketing automation begins by employing it for email marketing, then scales it in different directions, depending on need.

Here are 20 possibilities: ““

Ben Jackson, VP of Sales, voices.com

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“Suresh Vittal, Chief Product Officer at Neolane and former Customer Intelligence analyst at Forrester Research, responds:

The reality is that marketing has

been largely underserved by CRM

providers. Many of the large CRM

vendors don’t provide the type of

flexibility and capability for efforts like

lead management to the marketing

organization as they do to the sales

organization.

The marketing capabilities delivered

within CRM applications tend of focus

entirely around campaign setup and

profiling. They fail to support marketing

professionals in creating landing pages,

implementing sophisticated nurture

campaigns, tracking online visitor

behavior, scoring prospects by implicit

and explicit actions, and automatically

transferring prospects to sales staff when

they are sales-ready.

“Christian Wettre, president of W-Systems, an agency that specializes in deploying marketing and sales technology, with an emphasis on CRM, said:

With a modern CRM system, you

typically have some ability to broadcast

emails to your client list, and the

ability to capture leads from websites.

But when the customer needs more

sophisticated capabilities, that’s when

we look to marketing automation.

01 THE BASICS OF MARKETING AUTOMATION

MARKETING AUTOMATION VS CRMA common question: “If I have a CRM solution in place, do I really need marketing automation?”

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A large company A small company

A global company has thousands of sales reps who manage their contact database and strategy using a CRM tool designed to improve the sales department’s productivity.

But what about the marketing department’s productivity, including generating, nurturing, classifying, evaluating, and scoring, which they then pass to the sales force? The sales CRM system is not built to accommodate that.

The marketing automation system is responsible for those activities, and it’s owned and run by the marketing department.

This company has two local bricks-and-mortar locations and 20 sales reps who may or may not use a CRM tool.

On the marketing side, this company has two marketers who wear multiple hats, including manually collecting, scoring, and transferring leads.

But as the leads grow and/or become more complex due to business growth, multiple products, more sales regions, etc., the marketing team will become increasingly less efficient and effective without an automation platform to plan and execute the increase in campaigns.

Marketing automation is the tool for the job.

While marketing automation and CRM have different capabilites, the two systems are complementary and can be integrated to form a powerful sales and marketing toolset that’s rich in features and capabilities.

Ideally, a comprehensive business approach means investing in both CRM and marketing automation.

01 THE BASICS OF MARKETING AUTOMATION

THE TALE OF TWO USE CASESLet’s take a look at two use cases Suresh uses to illustrate his point:

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+ Why invest in marketing automation?

+ Specific marketing challenges you may have... and how marketing automation helps solve them

+ Lead generation and management

+ Campaign optimization

+ Sales enablement

+ Resource optimization

+ Data and analytics

HOW TO MAKE A

BUSINESSCASE FOR MARKETING AUTOMATION

02

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Marketing automation systems positively impact both the top and bottom lines, with many results seen quickly after implementation:

Top Line Improving the experience and engagement of prospects and customers drives more demand for products and services, generates more higher quality leads, and helps close more sales.

Bottom Line Improving process and operational efficiencies decreases costs (e.g., resources, capital equipment, outsourcing) while increasing profitability.

1Revenue

Marketing automation helps companies realize core strategic goals:

Brand relevance Marketers can more easily, quickly, and effectively deliver the right message to the right person at the right time via the right channel. This dramatically increases your company’s relevance in customers’ eyes.

Increased efficiency Launch campaigns in hours or days, with little or no IT support needed. Automating common tasks allows relationship-building with fewer resources while increasing personalization. Sales can use lead intelligence to shorten the sales cycle.

Data intelligence Visibility into the performance of campaigns, personas, and buying stages allows companies to optimize marketing efforts, improve results, and measure ROI.

2Achieve Organizational Goals

According to the latest stats,

COMPANIES THAT USE MARKETING AUTOMATION SEE:• 107% better lead conversion

• 40% greater average deal size

• 20% higher team attainment of quota

• 17% better forecast accuracy

02 HOW TO MAKE A BUSINESS CASE FOR MARKETING AUTOMATION

WHY INVEST IN MARKETING AUTOMATION?Every organization experiencing success with marketing automation has a different answer to this question. The three that surface most often:

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Marketing automation systems provide the infrastructure for sales and marketing to work together.

Sales and marketing cooperation Many aspects of marketing programs must be calibrated to sales’ needs. When the teams align, their mutual decisions are implemented via the marketing automation system. This alignment results in nurturing, scoring, and handoff processes tuned to sales’ requirements, leading to intradepartmental trust and more effective follow-up

Sales intelligence The real-time intelligence about a lead’s fitness, concerns, and behaviors lets the sales rep begin a warm, targeted conversation and build a relationship more quickly. It also reduces the need for cold calls.

3 Improve Internal Cooperation

B2B organizations with tightly aligned sales and marketing achieved 24% faster revenue growth and 27% faster profit growth over a three year period. (SiriusDecisions)

MINIMIZE INVESTMENT RISKS

To minimize investment risk, consider a vendor that offers a monthly subscription tied to the number of contacts you plan to actively email to in each month. Start small and test the waters, expanding as needs and benefits become more apparent, and as your team’s skill sets grow. Marketing automation’s reporting capabilities will help you validate the system’s worth and document your return on investment.

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Marketing automation platforms provide sophisticated, highly choreographed, interoperable technologies that power and support an extensive range of digital marketing opportunities. By design, the benefits are far-reaching and interrelated, woven through multiple teams for multiple uses at multiple times.We’ve organized marketing’s most common hurdles into five categories. We hope this will help you create a strategic plan to show how marketing automation can answer your own organization’s biggest challenges.

1 LEAD GENERATION AND MANAGEMENT

2 CAMPAIGN OPTIMIZATION

3 SALES ENABLEMENT

4 RESOURCE OPTIMIZATION

5 DATA AND ANALYTICS

TRY THIS:USE CASE STUDIES.Show your executives that other companies in your industry or other companies of your size are achieving success with marketing automation. Look for case studies that make one of those points, or look for a study that spotlights how someone used marketing automation to solve a problem your own company recognizes as a pain point worth solving. Your goal is to show parity of some kind, and reinforce the idea that companies like yours are seeing a return on investment with marketing automation.

Be sure to research whether one or more of your competitors is using marketing automation.

02 HOW TO MAKE A BUSINESS CASE FOR MARKETING AUTOMATION

SPECIFIC CHALLENGES YOU MAY HAVE...AND HOW MARKETING AUTOMATION HELPS SOLVE THEM

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1. INBOUND AND OUTBOUND FROM ONE PLATFORM. Automation platforms enable marketers to communicate “out” (e.g., email, social push) and pull prospects “in” with capabilities such as landing pages, search engine optimization, and integration with pay-per-click systems such as Google AdWords.

2. LEAD CAPTURING. Marketing automation offers several mechanisms for capturing the contact information of prospects who have responded to offers or messages, thereby facilitating moving the contact into the funnel. Key among these mechanisms are:

Landing pages and forms, both of which can be quickly created in automation platforms and tied directly to the database of record.

Webinars and other online events can effectively expand brand visibility, and create awareness of – and demand for – products and services. Automation platforms offer integrated capabilities that allow marketers to plan and launch web-based events, engage attendees before and during the event, and follow up afterwards.

10The average number of marketing touches leads receive from the time they enter the top of the funnel until they’re a closed-won customer.(Aberdeen Group, Jul 2012)

DID YOU KNOW…

According to Aberdeen Group, 60% of marketing leads are generated through outbound marketing and 40% from inbound channels.

but...

Top Rank Marketing found leads gained through organic searches have a 14.6% rate of close, while outbound marketing leads have a close rate of only 1.7%!

02 HOW TO MAKE A BUSINESS CASE FOR MARKETING AUTOMATION

LEAD GENERATION AND MANAGEMENT

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3. LEAD SCORING. Lead-scoring allows marketers to qualify leads by assigning pre-determined values to their behaviors and profile characteristics. When a buyer-ready lead score threshold is passed, a notification is triggered, allowing marketers to quickly pass the lead to sales. Automated lead scoring benefits marketers by:

• Providing timely information on a lead’s progress through the funnel/buyer’s journey.

• Taking the guesswork out of a lead’s status with automated lead classification based on scores (e.g., Marketing- Qualified, Sales-Accepted, Sales-Qualified).

• Uncovering the content and interactions that drive the highest response.

• Delivering more and better-qualified leads to sales with less time and effort.

Companies that excel at lead nurturing generate 50% more sales-ready leads at 33% lower cost.(Forrester Research, 2011)

Nurtured leads make 47% larger purchases than non-nurtured leads.(The Annuitas Group, Nov 2012)

4. LEAD NURTURING. With automation, you can implement and manage nurture programs (e.g., multi-touch drip campaigns) that:

• Keep new leads in the funnel – especially important for complex, high-value sales cycles.

• Help leads move through the funnel, via a mix of educational and other materials sent in a timed cadence.

• Are personalized and customized to the lead’s specific areas of interest, which strengthens relationships with potential and existing customers.

5. LEAD SEGMENTATION. Dynamically segment leads in the database as they arrive from social media campaigns, form-fills, email campaigns, or paid campaigns. By segmenting leads based on sources, marketers can use the appropriate medium of communication to send out relevant messages and craft effective campaigns. Leads can also be segmented by industry, company size, products already purchased, or any other factor that helps you create more targeted campaigns.

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6. TARGETING: SENDING THE RIGHT MESSAGE TO THE RIGHT PERSON.

From nurturing leads to re-capturing lost sales to managing loyalty programs, automation lets marketers set up targeted messages based on any number of attributes (e.g., age, gender, title, geography, engagement behaviors, etc.). This allows marketers to:

• Send the right message at the right time.

• Have visibility into who their most profitable customers are, where they came from, and how to find more like them.

• Cross-sell and upsell to segments.

TRY THIS:

USE DATAGather your baseline data. Know how many leads are generated and conversion rates at each step, including what percentage of marketing-generated become closed deals in contrast to leads generated in other ways. Understand whether your sales team is losing deals to competitors, or to no-decision. Review your email statistics, including sends, opens, and clickthroughs; know which campaigns are delivering qualified leads and which are not. Know at what point leads fall out of the funnel. You will use this data to understand how an improvement at any step could affect revenue.

If your current systems don’t allow you to measure these factors, then gaining the capability to understand how your marketing is performing becomes a solid business reason for implementing automation.

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1. REDUCE LEAD TIME. Marketing automation efficiently facilitates the quick coordination, scheduling, launching, and measuring of marketing campaigns from simple to complex, across single or multiple channels. What used to take weeks can be implemented in hours or days.

2. OPTIMIZE CAMPAIGN EFFECTIVENESS. Begin by using A/B testing for campaign elements to increase the odds of success. Then, through tracking and monitoring the progress (often in real time) of a campaign, marketers are able to identify what works and what doesn’t, and can change it on the fly. The new knowledge is incorporated to find fresh ways of appealing to customers.

3. PERSONALIZE YOUR INTERACTIONS. Personalization is a proven technique to increase conversion. Automation allows marketers to tie behaviors to individuals, thereby opening new doors for dynamically personalizing emails, custom landing pages, and offers.

4. REACH A WIDER AUDIENCE. Combining the full complement of data collection and profiling with outbound and inbound tactics, marketers can significantly expand their visibility and reach, including growing their database and increasing lead flow.

5. TEST TO IMPROVE RESULTS. Marketers can use testing techniques such as A/B splits for landing pages as well as email to test creatives or messaging with a representative audience sample. The winning version can then be rolled out in the larger campaign.

02 HOW TO MAKE A BUSINESS CASE FOR MARKETING AUTOMATION

CAMPAIGN OPTIMIZATION

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6. OPTIMIZE FOR SEARCH ENGINES.According to a study by Conductor, organic search drives the most traffic of all channels; it’s responsible for nearly half of all website visits (47%). Marketing automation platforms can streamline SEO tasks with on-page evaluation tools to ensure web pages, blogs, and other content are optimized for search engines and aligned with best practices.

7. GO SOCIAL.Automation helps marketers track and manage social publishing and listening across a wide range of popular social media channels, even sending notifications when it’s time to respond, which allows marketers to learn what’s being said and participate in conversations. Some platforms offer sentiment analysis, competitive analysis, and prospecting.

8. UNDERSTAND YOUR WEB VISITORS. Website visitor tracking can show precisely which products and services each visitor is interested in, helping marketers further target campaigns and promotions to meet their interests. It can also help you identify anonymous visitors and uncover their contact information.

9. SCHEDULE SET-IT-AND-FORGET-IT EMAIL CAMPAIGNS.

Marketing automation helps marketers take full advantage of email marketing, including nurture programs and trigger email programs. Pre-determined content, offers, and messages are automatically sent to the right recipients at the right time, working to keep them engaged and progressing through the funnel.

10. CREATE AND EVALUATE LANDING PAGES. How well are your landing pages performing? Do they follow SEO best practices? Do you know the right metrics to watch? Which designs are more effective? Automation software provides the tools to answer those – and many more – questions. Some also have one-click webpage creation from an email message.

TRY THIS: BE READY TO ANSWER QUESTIONS ABOUT TIME AND RESOURCES.Evaluate everything your team does now, and how much time it takes. Estimate conservatively how much time you might save on frequent key tasks, such as email campaign setup and management. Talk to companies the same size as yours who have implemented marketing automation; ask them to share information with you.

Think about headcount. Consider whether you already have the right resources on your team, or whether you’ll need to add staff. Some marketing systems require training before you can use them; others are easier to use.

Evaluate how you currently work with, and share information with, sales. Consider how marketing automation will affect what you already do, and whether any processes will need to change.

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11. CREATE AND EVALUATE BLOG POSTS. Marketing automation platforms can be integrated with popular blog platforms such as WordPress or Drupal. Marketers benefit by creating and measuring blog performance from a single platform, as well as optimizing each post for SEO.

12. INTEGRATE WITH PAID SEARCH MARKETING.If you use pay-per-click advertising, ensure that your chosen marketing automation platform can integrate with your PPC service. Because most of them can’t. (Act-On offers easy integration with Google AdWords, allowing marketers to see how PPC campaigns are performing and the search terms that are bringing impressions, clicks, and conversions.)

13. INCREASE WEB EVENT EFFECTIVENESS. Web events – webinars, webcasts, virtual conferences, demos – offer a multitude of benefits including lead generation, nurturing, thought leadership, training/education, and brand building. Marketing automation software integrates with popular web event platforms such as WebEx and GoToWebinar, and can dramatically reduce the time spent on organizing the events, while increasing engagement and lead quality.

Marketing automation can even handle registration, which means registrants will go straight into your database as segmented leads.

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A SCENARIO:MARKETING AUTOMATION

Let’s say you build a promotional campaign comprised of PPC, targeted email and landing pages, social media sharing, and two pieces of content: an eBook and a video.

1day

DISPLAYADS

2day

SOCIALMEDIA

ADS3

day

LAUNCHEMAIL

ASSESS ACTIONS

LANDING PAGE

in action

With marketing automation, the launch of your campaign elements can be pre-scheduled and precisely calibrated. For example:

• Display ads are in place on Day 1.

• Social media ads on Day 2.

• Emails launch on Day 3, targeted to specific segments of your database.

• When prospects begin to respond by visiting the landing page, the automation system does the work by assessing their actions and then channeling prospects into the campaign track (including messages, cadence, and scoring) that best corresponds with their interests.

• If a prospect fills out a form and downloads the eBook or video, the system will send a triggered thank-you note targeted to whatever action was taken, and personalized to whatever degree possible (e.g., first name).

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02 HOW TO MAKE A BUSINESS CASE FOR MARKETING AUTOMATION

SALES ENABLEMENT

1. GET MORE – AND BETTER– SALES-QUALIFIED LEADS Marketing automation changes lead generation 180 degrees by supporting lead capture and lead scoring, which enables sales reps to:

• Optimize their time by using lead scoring to identify and prioritize sales-ready buyers.

• Focus on getting in front of leads that are ready to buy.

• Build trust-based customer relationships by delivering relevant information at the right time.

2. ACCESS IN-DEPTH, UNIFIED INSIGHTS FOR SMARTER SALES CALLS.

Automation technology streamlines and aggregates data from multiple channels and sources, making it easy to access and understand. This makes a lead’s interests and status in the sales cycle clear, enabling sales reps to effectively frame their conversations and communications to a prospective customer’s pain points without spending too much time.

3. INTEGRATE WITH EXISTING CRM. Sales reps can remain in their CRM system while still accessing all the information and intelligence the automation platform provides; no switching back-and-forth between systems.

Crucially, this allows reps to have more effective and productive engagements with potential and current buyers.

4. ELIMINATE COLD CALLING. With customer intelligence from lead-tracking data, profile information, engagement history, and CRM integration, sales reps are armed with the essentials before picking up the phone or sending an email.

TRY THIS:GET SALES INVOLVED FROM THE BEGINNING.Know what percentage of leads sales ignores, and what percentage of leads return to marketing. Talk to sales and see what they think of having complete account histories at their fingertips; ask if prioritized hot-prospect lists would be helpful. Because sales is so profoundly impacted by a marketing automation system, it’s a good idea to make them your ally from the beginning.

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5. MAKE THE MOST OF EMAIL.Marketing automation systems let sales reps automatically personalize messages for a particular customer or industry and send them at the optimal times. Trigger emails can be customized to inbound actions so buyers receive personalized communications in response. All email communications — automated or otherwise — are captured in your activity history for each lead.

6. IDENTIFY THE BEST LEADS WITH REAL-TIME ALERTS

Sales reps can set up alerts that notify them in real time of important activities and milestones such as when particular leads visit pre-determined web pages or engage with content, when a lead-score threshold has been met, or when a qualified lead has been assigned.

7. SHORTEN THE SALES CYCLE. The comprehensive capabilities provided by marketing automation software – inbound and outbound marketing, lead scoring, data collection, and CRM integration – allows sales reps to convert leads faster and at higher rates.

8. CLOSE BIGGER SALES. According to a 2013 Pedowitz study, 28 percent of marketing teams using marketing automation reported an increase in the average deal size from a marketing-qualified lead that was passed to sales. Given that such leads have been educated and nurtured, and that sales can have a richer, deeper conversation with them, greater deal size is a predictable outcome of relationship building.

Companies that excel at lead nurturing have 9% more sales reps making quota.

(CSO Insights)

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1. SAVE TIME BY AUTOMATING MANUAL TASKS. From deploying email campaigns on a staggered schedule, to setting up drip campaigns that run by themselves; from tallying website visits by visitor, to publishing across multiple social channels with one push of a button – marketing automation saves time. Many marketers use that time to add new programs or do more analysis; many use it to lessen the need to add headcount.

2. REDUCE MARKETING COSTS THROUGH BETTER-TARGETED CAMPAIGNS.

Marketing automation plays a huge role in reducing the costs of marketing campaigns. The ease of segmentation, personalization, and data-driven optimization lead to more targeted and tailored campaigns that can be launched faster and perform better. This has the potential business benefits of reducing cost and driving profitability.

3. INTEGRATE WITH EXISTING SYSTEMS AND TOOLS. Most marketing automation systems can be integrated with a wide range of systems and tools, often accomplished with minimal clicks. This saves time by allowing teams to keep the tools they’re used to, and reduces costs by more efficiently supporting marketing campaigns and communications. Examples include:

• CRM platforms

• Web event management systems

4. IMPLEMENT WITH MINIMAL OR NO IT SUPPORT. Marketing automation systems are designed for ease of use, including intuitive user interfaces that facilitate all phases of implementation and campaign development. This dramatically reduces reliance on IT resources and allows marketers to more fully manage their own activities.

• Blogging platforms

• AdWords

Marketing automation drives a 14.5% increase in sales productivity and a 12.2% reduction in marketing overhead.

(Nucleus Research, Apr 2012)

02 HOW TO MAKE A BUSINESS CASE FOR MARKETING AUTOMATION

RESOURCE OPTIMIZATION

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5. DEPLOY CAMPAIGNS WITHOUT SPECIALIZED SKILLS. With automation software, developing and deploying marketing campaigns doesn’t require highly skilled marketing and/or IT personnel. This can significantly reduce the amount of effort taken to execute complex marketing tasks, and reduce costs associated with hiring specialists.

6. IMPROVE SALES AND MARKETING ALIGNMENT. One of the benefits of marketing automation is better cooperation and collaboration between sales and marketing. Marketing automation can end much of the struggle between the two teams because it improves lead quality, increases revenue, automates tedious tasks, and delivers actionable intelligence. Sales has input into determining lead quality, scoring, and timing, and so has more trust in the leads marketing delivers, and is likelier to follow up. Marketers learn what sales encounters on the front lines, and use the knowledge to create more relevant content and campaigns.

of CMOs at top -performing companies who say “Easy To Use”

is the most important driver for marketing automation ROI.(Gleanster, Aug 2013)

92%

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TRY THIS:UNDERSTAND YOUR CURRENT ANALYTICS.

1. GAIN FULL-SPECTRUM INSIGHTS. Marketing automation delivers real-time results across channels and campaigns, enabling marketers to quickly gauge campaign effectiveness, optimize efforts, and allocate resources to the most effective strategies.

2. CUSTOMIZE ESSENTIAL DATA VIEWS. Integrated dashboards aggregate data from all digital channels and can be customized to provide the information deemed most important to each user. On-demand and drillable views provide deeper insights and inform strategic decisions.

3. TRACK CAMPAIGN ROI. Sales and marketing teams share responsibility for driving revenues, which includes the ability to demonstrate a return on investment. Marketing automation platforms make reporting an integral part of every campaign and activity, allowing sales reps and marketers to stay in tune with short- and long-term ROI numbers.

4. UNDERSTAND CUSTOMERS BETTER. Gut decisions can err on the side of optimism rather than reality. Applying metrics to various parts of the marketing process can show you where you lose potential customers, and what attracts them most. The more you know … the more you know.

5. VISIBILITY MEANS ACCOUNTABILITY. In many organizations, marketing is seen as a collection of creatives who are not anchored to sales goals or other metrics. Marketing automation provides the reporting that clearly shows how marketing is performing and what contributions the marketing team makes to sales goals and revenue. This accountability helps marketing make decisions that are in line with company goals, and receive credit for its accomplishments.

As you build your case for marketing automation, review what your company is already measuring. Make recommendations that will complement those measurements, or that will fill in a critical gap. Keep the total number small. In most cases, it’s far better to track a few key metrics than to keep watch on many.

Remember that marketing automation will allow you to demonstrate ROI on marketing’s contributions.

02 HOW TO MAKE A BUSINESS CASE FOR MARKETING AUTOMATION

DATA AND ANALYTICS

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+ Selling marketing automation to your decision makers

+ The CEO

+ The CFO

+ The CIO

+ The VP of Sales

+ Checklist: What your business case should include

WHAT THE

EXECUTIVESUITE NEEDS TO KNOW

03

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Marketing automation allows you to give prospective buyers what they want, when they want it, and how they want it … so you can gain, retain, and increase your competitive advantage.

BUT …

Whether it’s a small executive team or a bona fide C-suite, convincing the deciders to adopt marketing automation relies in large part on how well your plan meets management’s – and your company’s – best interests.

To be successful you need to understand what’s important to each, anticipate their questions and objections, and directly address them.

This section highlights some of the top issues your key executives care about, tips on how to craft a focused reply that resonates, and additional data points to help support your case.

03 WHAT THE EXECUTIVE SUITE NEEDS TO KNOW

SELLING MARKETING AUTOMATION TO YOUR DECISION MAKERSGetting approval from your executive team is where the rubber meets the road.

“Matt Heinz, President, Heinz Marketing

If I’m anyone in the C-suite evaluating

an investment, unless you tell me

otherwise, it feels like money out of my

pocket. So help me understand how

you’re helping me spend money to

make money.

“NEED HELP CRAFTING YOUR STRATEGIC PLAN? We can help you craft a proposal that meets the specific needs of your business and executive team.

Contact us today

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03 WHAT THE EXECUTIVE SUITE NEEDS TO KNOW

THE CEO

RESPONSIBLE FOR: • Fully understanding all disciplines including sales, marketing, finance,

operations, and product/technical aspects

• Developing a complete vision for the company, both near- and long-term

• Setting the company’s values and ethics, and leading by example

CONCERNED ABOUT: • The entire revenue cycle – top-line growth and profitability

• Customer satisfaction and loyalty

• The competition

WHAT YOU SHOULD FOCUS ON:

1: HAVING SALES ON BOARDYour CEO will likely ask stakeholders for their opinion, in particular the sales team. The chance of your proposal getting accepted will increase significantly when the sales team is behind it.

• TIP: Get buy-in from sales first, before you sell to the CEO.

• DATA POINT: Companies that use marketing automation are nearly 2X more likely to capture intelligence for the sales team than companies without automation. (The Lenskold and Pedowitz Groups, Nov 2013)

Marketing automation

replaces separate systems

for email, web visitor

tracking, lead scoring,

nurture campaigns,

campaign management, and

reporting with one solution

that streamlines marketing

processes and shares data

with sales.

David Raab Marketing Technology Consultant, Raab Associates

“2. SELLING DEMAND GENERATION, NOT FEATURESCEOs don’t care about a system’s features, they care about measurable business results – customers and revenue. Be sure to clearly articulate how marketing automation will help generate more demand for your company’s products and services which, by extension, will drive more sales.

• TIP: Include an explanation of lead management. Your CEO will know what lead generation is, but may be unfamiliar with how leads are actually managed. Demand-generation processes such as targeted content marketing, lead scoring, and lead nurturing, are key strengths of marketing automation, essential for increasing qualified leads, new and repeat sales, and revenue.

• DATA POINT: 80% of CMOs at top-performing companies indicate that their most compelling reason for implementing marketing automation is to increase revenue, and 76% say to get higher quality leads. (Gleanster, Aug 2013)

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3. METRICS THAT DEMONSTRATE RESULTSIllustrate marketing automation’s value by tying it directly to the metrics your CEO cares about. Emphasize that the CEO can check up-to-the-minute reports and have on-demand access to dashboards that show campaign effectiveness in real time and across time.

• TIP: Keep the metrics high-level but tied to revenue and profitability. Some ideas include lead-to-opportunity conversion ratios, sales quota attainment rates, percentages of marketing-sourced sales opportunities, and database growth.

• DATA POINT: Companies that adopt marketing automation see 53% higher conversion rates than do non-adopters. (Aberdeen Group, Jul 2012)

• DATA POINT: Companies that automate lead management see a 10% or greater increase in revenue in 6-9 months. (Gartner Research, Mar 2011)

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03 WHAT THE EXECUTIVE SUITE NEEDS TO KNOW

THE CFO

RESPONSIBLE FOR: • Implementing and supervising internal controls, including management of cash

flow and overhead expenses, vendor payment terms, and company liabilities

• Developing the company’s annual budget; analysing capital investment requirements

• Cultivating good working relationships with outside financing sources

CONCERNED ABOUT: • Controlling costs

• Identifying strategies that will increase profits

• Return on investment (ROI)

• Reducing risks

WHAT YOU SHOULD FOCUS ON:

1: TOTAL COST OF OWNERSHIPYour CFO will expect to see all costs associated with the implementation and management of a marketing automation system, so do the math on the platform,

If the CFO can support you

in decisions and understands

how the marketing spend

delivers value for the

organization, then it is

much easier for the rest

of the executive [team]

to understand.

Catherine Howard Head of UK Marketing, Atos

“the people, and the content. It’s just as essential to be upfront about real-world costs as it is to show the benefits of making such an investment. It underscores your credibility and evokes more confidence from those who control the purse strings.

• TIP: Create a table that shows the specific line items and costs, breaking them down by month, quarter, and annually. Items to include are contract terms, setup fees, usage/subscription costs per user or bandwidth or list size.

• TIP: Think about the expertise that will be needed (a demand-generation manager, content creators, etc.) and run a thorough analysis to ensure the benefits outweigh the costs. For example, although it will cost money to implement a marketing automation platform, pay the monthly fees, and potentially add some number of resources, the benefits – e.g., increased opportunity, increased conversion yield on the pipeline, optimized used of sales reps’ time, eliminating repetitive tasks, and increasing productivity per headcount – should trump the costs. Additionally, they’re easy to do the math on.

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2. METRICS THAT INFORM STRATEGIC ALLOCATION OF FUNDSThe depth and breadth of real-time data collection and customized reporting available from a marketing automation system enables you to not only measure campaign results, but also quantify the cost-effectiveness of marketing channels, both standalone and in relation to the buyer’s journey.

• TIP: Emphasize how automated reports and on-demand, customizable dashboards make it easy to gain complete visibility of what’s working and what’s not, which helps your CFO make informed decisions about what to spend budget on to reap the biggest financial gains.

3. TYING MARKETING AUTOMATION TO ROIYour CFO is all about the numbers, relying on them to determine whether – and to what degree – any investment will impact profit. A fundamental strength of marketing automation is its ability to effectively manage leads and, as a result, measurably increase sales. When presenting your case to your finance executive, it’s essential to show how the investment will produce quantifiable returns.

• TIP: Demand-generation processes are among the easiest to tie to ROI. Start by thinking through the sales and marketing processes: demand generation, lead generation, nurturing, conversion, repeat sales. Assess the headcount and time necessary for each activity and translate those into costs. Spotlight how marketing automation will enable the company to do more with the same headcount/hours it is already paying for.

• DATA POINT: 70% of top-performing companies indicate their investment in marketing automation generated a positive ROI after the first year of use. (Gleanster, Nov 2012)

• DATA POINT: B2B marketers who have implemented marketing automation increased their contribution to the sales pipeline by 10% over B2B marketers who have not implemented marketing automation. (Forrester Research, Jan 2014)

Assumptions are a common method for demonstrating projected results and getting agreement.

Make “worst case”, “expected case”, and “best case” assumptions to show the range of possible ROI outcomes.

ROI OUTCOMES

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03 WHAT THE EXECUTIVE SUITE NEEDS TO KNOW

THE CIO

RESPONSIBLE FOR: • Driving the strategic analysis and

(re)engineering of business processes, the drivers, responsibilities, and timing

• Implementing technologies that are essential to strategic and operational objectives

• The processes and practices that support information accessibility and flow

CONCERNED ABOUT: • Balancing the competing demands

of technology, business needs, and risk

• Analytics and business intelligence

• Service availability

• Data and system security

WHAT YOU SHOULD FOCUS ON:

1: HOW THE SOLUTION WORKSYour CIO understands the technology-based systems and solutions. Your role is to help define the hard questions in order to assess if – and how – they fit into the business infrastructure. Generalities don’t work here; it’s important to deliver a comprehensive description of the automation platform in a way that enables your CIO to evaluate the business need, and the effort needed to execute.

• TIP: Be prepared to provide the very specific design and architectural components needed to integrate the solution. Examples include how it’s hosted, what business capabilities it replaces or adds, how data is stored and secured, what type of ongoing support the vendor offers, what effort and support will be needed from the IT team in the short- and long-term.

2. INTEGRATING DISPARATE TOOLSTying together disconnected tools offers a wealth of cascading benefits to the IT department. Not only does it streamline the overall infrastructure and processes, it saves resource time and effort, and reduces errors, all of which lower costs. Built-in analytics tools can consolidate multiple reporting mechanisms into a single view, helping IT quickly assess system health.

• TIP: If sales uses a CRM tool, spotlight how most automation platforms integrate with CRM, which is a game-changer for optimizing resources, improving sales-funnel velocity, and increasing sales. Other integration points include web services, blog and webinar platforms, and pay-per-click campaigns. Uncover where your company could best integrate with the platform, so you can articulate those areas – including benefits – to the CIO.

BE SURE TO...Introduce the CIO to the marketing automation vendor as early as possible to facilitate a smooth implementation.

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3. IMPROVING DATA INTEGRITY The ability to easily integrate with a wide variety of business-critical tools and systems delivers an additional and essential benefit: data accuracy. Marketing automation platforms effectively map, exchange, and synchronize data between all touchpoints, which reduces errors and duplication.

• TIP: Technology leaders focus on providing services in advance of business needs and are constantly looking for partnerships across departments to meet multiple business initiatives. When engaging your CIO, use information that shows how the product will benefit your business objectives. Use examples that clearly paint how marketing automation will drive the business forward, and stay within your scope while highlighting the benefits.

Marketing automation systems require little-to-no IT resources to implement, set up and manage, and cloud-based systems require no hardware. In addition, most automation systems don’t require technical savvy to use. These all contribute to significant cost savings.

COST-SAVINGS

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03 WHAT THE EXECUTIVE SUITE NEEDS TO KNOW

THE VP OF SALES

RESPONSIBLE FOR: • Increasing company revenue

• Managing sales teams and other resources to deliver profitable growth

• Collaborating with marketing functions to establish successful lead generation and conversion

CONCERNED ABOUT: • Quotas

• Lead quality and quantity

• Increasing sales conversion

WHAT YOU SHOULD FOCUS ON:

1: INCREASING LEAD QUALITY AND QUANTITYYour VP of Sales must be convinced that a new system will generate more leads and result in more sales. Making the case is relatively easy to do because marketing automation is a lead-management machine. To get the VP of Sales on your side, you must connect the dots: from lead-management processes to more qualified leads to increased sales conversions.

• TIP: Begin by working with sales reps to understand their current processes, including the tools used, the time it takes, and the average results. Then itemize how marketing automation can optimize each. For example, lead scoring prioritizes leads based on interest and engagement, giving sales definitive knowledge on who to call, when, and what to discuss. Segmentation allows reps to refine and target their communications more effectively. Lead nurturing campaigns and related tactics such as drip and trigger marketing keep leads engaged and moving along the buyer’s journey.

• DATA POINT: Businesses that use marketing automation to nurture prospects experience a 451% increase in qualified leads. In turn, nurtured leads make 47% larger purchases than non-nurtured leads. (Annuitas Group, Nov 2012)

DOING THE MATHFind out what your sales team’s current rates are, and then run the numbers based on the averages your marketing automation vendor sees from its customers.

WITH ACT-ON, SALES TEAMS SEE:

• 26% increase in lead conversion

• 10% increase in deal size

• 20% higher quota attainments

• 70% decrease in cost-per-lead

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2. MEETING AND EXCEEDING QUOTASSimilarly to the CFO, your VP of Sales is also about the numbers – phone calls, emails, campaign touches, qualified leads, closed deals. Meeting quota is critical to company revenue, which means getting highly qualified leads to the sales team is crucial. It’s essential to clearly show how marketing automation increases the sales team’s ability to strike when the iron is hot; that is, quickly connect with leads, continue conversations, and close sales.

• TIP: Focus on the built-in capabilities that directly impact sales’ ability to meet its quotas. For example, automated lead scoring allows reps to identify and prioritize sales-ready leads based on points scored. Integration with CRM keeps all contact information and histories in one place, allowing reps to increase efficiency while using the sales tool they’re most familiar with. If Act-On is your platform of choice, it includes website visitor tracking and real-time alerts, giving sales teams immediate intelligence about who is visiting the website and what they’re viewing.

• TIP: Use numbers to quantify the benefits by creating a side-by-side comparison of current sales metrics versus projected sales metrics after implementing marketing automation. The math is easy to do and the data pack a powerful punch.

• DATA POINT: Companies that invest in marketing automation solutions see 70% faster sales cycle times, and 54% improvement in quota achievement. (Bulldog Solutions, Mar 2012)

3. ALIGNING SALES AND MARKETINGCooperation between sales and marketing is essential to achieving revenue targets because both departments are responsible for top-line growth: marketing generates leads and passes them to sales, and sales closes deals. It’s important to specifically highlight marketing automation as a proven mechanism for bridging the sales-marketing divide.

• TIP: Emphasize how marketing automation makes the customer lifecycle visible and measurable in multiple ways which, by extension, allows both teams to see and share real-time intelligence, craft aligned campaigns, and meet their respective quotas. For example, lead scoring helps marketing deliver more qualified leads to sales. Segmentation, search history, and visitor tracking allow sales to triangulate on the hottest opportunities.

• DATA POINT: Companies that use marketing automation are more likely than companies without automation to capture intelligence for the sales team, 35% vs. 19%. (The Lenskold and Pedowitz Groups, Nov 2013)

Hugh MacFarlane, founder and CEO of MathMarketing, conducted an alignment benchmarking study by surveying 1,400 professionals in 84 countries. The study found that the businesses with the greatest degree of alignment:

• Grow 5.4 points faster than their less-aligned counterparts when compared with businesses in the same industry

• Close 38% more proposals than non-aligned businesses

• Lose 36% fewer customers to competitors

THE BENEFITSOF ALIGNMENT

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ƛ Clear objectives for implementing marketing automation

ƛ Specific benefits of marketing automation adoption and how they map to company objectives

ƛ Technological components and benefits – For example, are you recommending email, website visitor tracking, social integration? If so, why? What about CRM integration? SEO auditing?

ƛ Data sources – Including integrations with your CRM systems, other prospect and customer data, and inbound and outbound campaign data.

ƛ Budget and milestones – Real-world costs for implementation, including phases and technologies, and reasonable times/milestones for learning, evolving and refining to the point where ROI can be achieved.

ƛ ROI projections, including:

ƛ Outline the volume of activity required to meet lead, quota, and revenue goals. Base this on historic data in your target market.

ƛ Calculate what key sales and marketing activities cost now (without marketing automation).

ƛ Calculate the potential improvement in costs and results after implementing marketing automation.

ƛ Calculate current and projected profit improvements.

ƛ Define the results of sales and marketing alignment in terms of lead generation, qualification, and enhanced cooperation.

ƛ Analytics and reporting

ƛ Risk management – Include the risks associated with both adopting and NOT adopting marketing automation.

ƛ Timelines and target dates.

CHECKLIST

WHAT YOUR BUSINESS CASE SHOULD INCLUDETo improve your chances for getting executive management’s buy-in, below is a list of key items to address as you craft your business case:

Be wary of offering generic

benefits like “increased

marketing ROI” or “shorter

selling cycles.” Those benefits

may be legitimate possibilities,

but they carry less weight

when they could apply to any

organization. Instead, identify

the most pressing sales and

marketing challenges at your

company, and speak to those

specific issues.

Howard Sewell President, Spear Marketing Group

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CLOSING THOUGHTS AND RESOURCES

04

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• For the small marketing team, it might be time savings.

• For the marketer with lead generation quotas, it might be the ability to customize and coordinate cross-channel marketing.

• For the marketer focused on sales enablement, it could be the ability to use automated programs such as lead nurturing and lead scoring.

• For the sales team, it might be more and better-qualified leads, nuanced intelligence about a lead’s needs, a shorter sales cycle, or a real-time list of hot prospects.

Much of buying and selling, and most of the buyer’s journey, are conducted online today. Marketing automation allows the organization to manage and control all aspects of digital marketing. When integrated with a CRM system, it becomes an end-to-end, lead-to-revenue management program.

Marketing automation provides the infrastructure and so creates the opportunity for marketers and salespeople to understand, and interact with, buyers throughout the entire lifecycle in a personalized way. This enables them to market and sell more effectively...and directly improve the company’s bottom line.

TRY THIS:KNOW YOUR GOALS.Before you seek executive support:

• Know the marketing and sales goals you think are both worth pursuing and attainable with marketing automation.

• Know the company objectives marketing automation can support.

• Know what internal support you have. Is the marketing staff willing? Does sales see this as an avenue for more/better leads and a more collaborative working relationship?

• Know how you plan to measure success.

04 CLOSING THOUGHTS AND RESOURCES

MAKE YOUR CASEThe business value of marketing automation varies according to how an organization applies the technology.

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With its ease of implementation, turnkey support for cross-channel marketing, robust lead management, and comprehensive data reporting, marketing automation gives businesses extensive revenue-driving capabilities in a single platform, at a single cost. What’s more, marketing automation software can keep you accountable, streamline your workflow, and speed up the time taken to see tangible results from your marketing efforts.

Fast.

If your company hasn’t yet embraced the power and upside potential of marketing automation, we hope this eBook has provided a compelling argument to get the conversation started.

04 CLOSING THOUGHTS AND RESOURCES

MAKING YOUR MARKETING LIFE EASIER AND MORE EFFECTIVE

Case Studies

• Manufacturer sees shorter sales cycle and doubles email open rate by moving from email marketing to marketing automation [Learn how]

• Marketing agency saves time in campaign creation, gives sales people more-qualified leads, and managing nurturing campaigns for sales cycles up to 3 years long [Learn how]

• Education software distributor used marketing automation and content marketing to go from two dozen marketing-qualified leads per month to over 700 [Learn how]

• Consulting firm providing oil and gas exploration information services sees 3X increase in closed sales generated from email campaigns [Learn how]

• Read more case studies

Reviews, Analysts Reports, Studies,

and Blogs

• Customer Experience Matrix Analyst David Raab’s blog

• Gleanster Research

• Forrester Research (no subscription needed to read blog posts)

• Software Advice reviews of marketing automation systems

• B2B Marketing Automation Platforms 2014: A Buyer’s Guide

Tools

• The Buyer’s Checklist for Marketing Automation

• See how marketing automation can improve your business with Act-On’s free, interactive ROI Calculator

• Get a free SEO Assessment of your website’s home page

• More information about marketing automation is available in the Act-On Center of Excellence.

Connect with us to learn more!

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42www.act-on.com | @ActOnSoftware | #ActOnSW

Act-On Software delivers cloud-based integrated marketing automation software. Marketers can manage all their online marketing

efforts from a single dashboard that can be seamlessly integrated with CRM, giving sales access into various marketing functions.

Act-On’s fresh approach to marketing automation gives its users full functionality without the complexity other systems impose,

and makes campaign creation and program execution easier and faster.

ABOUT ACT-ON SOFTWARE

©2014 Act-On Software, Inc. Trademarks belong to their respective owners. All rights reserved.

ACCLAIM FOR ACT-ON

See All of Act-On’s Awards and Accolades

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NOTES

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