Completing the Annual Planning Process
By Laura Patterson
Imagine an office without a
desk, or lights, a computer, or even something as simple as a
chair. When the architects and designers started planning a
building or office space they knew they would have to make
concessions for these items during each of the building
activities. As marketers, we take part in many activities,
much like a builder or designer does.
Of these activities, there is
one that precludes each of these; the annual planning and
budgeting process. One part of planning often gets left out
though, measuring the effectiveness of the activities we plan.
Yet plans without metrics are like offices without chairs,
conference rooms without tables, or buildings without a
foundation. Parts of each exist, but there is a major
component missing.
Recently surveys have
concluded that 55% of business to business marketing
executives face the challenge of measuring marketing’s
effectiveness. A recent survey conducted by Unica made this
statement: "However, survey respondents also said they faced
numerous challenges, chief among them measuring marketing
effectiveness, which was cited by 55% of respondents." It was
also stated that many executives don't believe marketing is
measurable. And 63% of them don’t consider marketing to be
measurable. So it should be no surprise to learn that as many
as 57% of marketing plans overlook metrics and that plans are
more about counting activities rather than measuring the
impact on business outcomes as was determined the fifth
Business Readiness Survey conducted by VisionEdge Marketing.
Can we measure marketing’s
effectiveness? Does it really make a difference?
It certainly does for many
companies. One company in particular, VCON, found
incorporating a metrics framework into their planning process
to be extremely valuable. Founded in 1994, VCON develops and
manufactures collaborative communication solutions that
include videoconferencing and audio conferencing products.
VCON's entire portfolio is integrated together with a suite of
management systems and development tools, providing a unique
and fully integrated conferencing experience for the user. The
company relies on an indirect channel to sell their solutions
worldwide. For the past decade, VCON has consistently been the
first to market with innovative products and technologies,
both in the conferencing market and in the solutions needed to
manage and deploy conferencing systems.
The marketing team realized
that securing a larger marketing budget would require taking a
more metrics-related approach as a means to demonstrate the
marketing organization’s contribution to the company. So when
they realized the need for a metrics-based approach, they
hired VisionEdge Marketing to help them develop the right set
of metrics. VCON turned to an outside resource to help create
a framework for their plan. They chose VisionEdge Marketing
because the company’s metrics expertise and a model ties
marketing metrics to the goals of the company.
Laura Shay, VCON’s Global
Product Marketing Manager, wanted an approach that went beyond
tracking results from a variety of marketing activities, such
as metrics associated with web site visits, click-throughs,
and participants at a webinar. Rather she wanted a way to
connect the marketing initiatives to the company’s market
share, partner development, and up-sell objectives. “We had a
good idea of the adoption process for our technology and we
were monitoring dozens of activities and outcomes. What we
didn’t know was whether these were the right things to be
monitoring and how to tie activity tracking to the success of
our marketing objectives and strategies,” added Laura.
VCON’s limited marketing
resources were overwhelmed with the number of things that were
possible to track. The challenge was getting the team out of
the weeds of tracking various marcom activities and more
focused on identifying metrics that would really indicate
whether the marketing initiatives were moving the needle for
the business.
Prior to the metrics
development and framework session, VisionEdge Marketing
examined the metrics currently being used by the company and
the company’s business objectives for the coming year. “This
preparatory stage was very helpful,” commented Laura. “It
enabled us to start thinking about tying our marketing
initiatives to very specific business outcomes such as market
share, order value, and repeat business.” The business goals
were used as a framework for the plan. By understanding the
specific business outcomes, the session could focus on where
marketing could make an impact and how to measure this impact.
Within a half day or so the marketing department was able to
develop a manageable set of metrics. A key part of the process
was to clarify what outcomes have real impact on the business.
The metrics focused on two
primary areas: The channel's role in VCON's success, and a
goal of achieving 25% quarter-to-quarter growth from new
products across all sales regions. Three metrics were
selected: revenue/partner, qualified leads/region, and new
products sold vs. previous product sold. Key indicators were
defined for each of these and appropriate objectives and
strategies were then incorporated into the annual plan. A side
benefit was that the planning session was far more productive.
“We didn’t get bogged down in discussing the nuances of each
region and why tracking certain activities would or wouldn’t
work. We could keep our eye on the larger picture and each
region could address its individual differences,” added Laura.
The process enabled the VCON
team to achieve two important outcomes:
1. A set of key metrics that
crossed markets and regions
2. A plan and budget the
management team could evaluate based on business outcomes
Of course the best outcome
was the team was able to deliver a plan and a budget request
the management team could relate to. “We were more successful
in securing faster approval and a better budget, because the
plan very clearly connected the dots between marcom activities
and business outcomes,” said Laura.
VCON has learned the
importance of a complete marketing plan and have already
reaped the benefits by securing a higher marketing budget.
They have learned the importance and ability of metrics to
measure the effectiveness of marketing to show how their
efforts impact business goals.
Since working with VCON,
VisionEdge Marketing has continued to educate companies and
individuals on the importance of metrics to a marketing plan
and communicating marketing’s effectiveness to the company. By
using VCON as an example, they are able to show how completing
the planning process pays off for the company, as well as the
marketing department; just as adding all components to a
building, makes it complete.
To learn more about strategic
metrics that align marketing with business goals, check out
VisionEdge Marketing’s latest book, Measure What Matters by
Laura Patterson, President of VisionEdge Marketing.
VisionEdge Marketing is a
strategic marketing consulting firm that helps organizations
develop metrics-based marketing strategies and processes that
create a competitive advantage designed to attract, secure and
retain profitable customers to maximize the value of the
organization.
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