Nine out of 10 marketers say approval delays are the top reason they miss deadlines. And while this might seem like a passing problem, it doesn’t take long to become embedded in the culture of an organisation. Another deadline missed because no one’s managing your marketing approvals? Nevermind — there’s always tomorrow.
If you look forward to getting something approved in your organisation like you look forward to visiting the dentist, you’re not alone. Inconsistent and drawn-out approval timelines are rampant in marketing. And far from being a transient issue, they don’t just fix themselves.
It gets worse when there’s no centralised approach to managing approvals, leaving different teams and team members to default to using their own favourite tools and messaging systems.
If you’re in an industry in which regulatory requirements require marketing audits, there’s little hope of even following the trail of who approved particular changes, let alone improving the process.
So here are a few tips that will help marketers to streamline the approval process so your team can get out of first gear and really start motoring.
An approvals matrix is really just a fancy term for documenting the roles or people that need to approve each type of marketing activity you conduct.
A key step to streamlining marketing work processes is to recognise that not everything is the Magna Carta – just as the CMO shouldn’t need to approve every social post, the CEO shouldn’t need to approve every campaign.
Take an organised approach to who needs to approve which tier of activity, and save your team countless hours in lost time.
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Since different people will often be called into the approval process at different stages, it’s important that everyone knows what’s going on.
This means you are absolutely clear on what you’re asking people to review, and that everyone knows where they fit into the approval process.
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Take a step back. How many people are there involved in your approval process at each stage? And how many revisions does your process allow for?
Limiting the number of approvers is necessary if you don’t want your approval process to trail along at a snail’s pace.
More people means more feedback, the possibility of contradictory feedback, and more rework and potential confusion for writers and designers. This in turn can mean chaos when it comes to version tracking.
And try to keep the number of revision rounds to two: one round to make changes and another to sign off. It might feel like a pipe dream, but applying this kind of discipline will keep your approvers focused on the job at hand and can literally shorten your campaign creation process by weeks.
Thanks to content marketing, your digital assets can pile up pretty quickly. In fact, according to the Content Marketing Institute, on average, marketers use 13 different formats in their content marketing efforts!
Certain formats — especially those that are interactive — can make approvals challenging. For example, documenting video edits and amendments.
Time spent chasing approvals is a pet hate of most marketers. All you need is a simple sign-off. How many emails (and time spent wording them diplomatically) does it take?
The bottom line is marketing teams need to have a system of record for the act of making marketing.
That calls for a marketing operations platform such as Simple, part of the new wave of modern, cloud-based MRM systems that are helping to revolutionise the working life of marketers.