The measurements that matter
So how do you know the measurements that matter, beyond them being “commercially sound” or “business grade”? Martens sees the most critical KPI as incremental revenue “with a really clear understanding of its impact on profitability”.
“Ultimately, if we want a greater investment in marketing, we’re going to have to demonstrate a really direct and measurable correlation between the activity we do and those bottom and top-line outcomes,” she advises. “It is this balance of all of the metrics we have in place. Yes, customer lifetime value, ROMI, share of market – they’re all useful, but they have to ladder up to that incremental value and those metrics that the CEO, the CFO and the business ultimately care about. Then you need to make sure as a whole you’re justifying marketing spend as sound investment to deliver growth of the business.”
Holt labels marketing ROI a “secondary metric” around contribution. “Marketing contribution is an absolute or relative measure of impact on a business and ROI is just the efficiency with which I go about achieving that outcome,” he argues. “There aren’t enough marketers talking about the contribution they’re making.
“How many marketers can draw the growth or value driver tree for the business they’re working for today? I would hazard virtually none. That’s a problem because to Samuel’s point earlier, unless you are part of the business and focused on running the business to the same degree as everyone else around you on a leadership team, then you’re at risk of being deemed discretionary or redundant.”
Mackenney also brings it back to the problem you’re trying to solve with the work undertaken as marketers.
“Sometimes it’s growth in terms of acquisition of new customers – just to keep it simple – or it may well be a brand issue. Ideally, we’d love to throw that problem to the agency and that’ll get solved with one big bright idea. But the reality is, sometimes that is not the case,” Mackenney points out. “It’s about trying to understand: If the issue in the business is that we’re not acquiring customers, is that a brand problem? Is it the quality of the digital experience? Are we in the wrong channel? Start with a problem statement and at least a hypothesis of why we’re not getting there.”
However, Mackenney was less swayed by the point raised by his fellow podcast panellists about ongoing perceptions of marketing as a cost centre.
“I do think there is an interesting opportunity now for marketers in a world that is becoming more and more crowded when it comes to advertising and how we consume content. If we don’t have great craft that’s going to cut through, the ability to drive growth in the absence of that will be a critical driver. How you measure that will be the next critical step,” Mackenney claims.
“Content is a way that we change consumers’ behaviours and get them to either join our brand, buy more, or be loyal to us. So how do we use that? It always comes back to what that piece of communication is actually trying to achieve and what’s the business outcome we’re trying to deliver on. If we can always link that back, it’s easier to get people on-board. Because we know we’re either trying to grow customers, or keep them, or increase lifetime value, which for a CFO, is a lot easier to measure because it ties nicely back to the revenue or cost line.”