Almost two in three marketers have expanded their responsibilities beyond marketing to include managing the customer experience but the same proportion still struggle to meet basic brand governance expectations, new research from Simple and the Australian Marketing Institute has found.
A significant majority (59%) of marketers report responsibility for managing the customer experience now rests with the chief marketing officer or marketing team at their organisation, according to the study, Marketing Operations Cloud in the Age of Intelligence.
And almost nine in 10 (87%) rate brand consistency as extremely or very important.
But a majority of marketers rate their own brand consistency poorly across key attributes:
“Managing the customer experience is looming as the key challenge chief marketing officers face in the next few years, but marketing teams must get their upstream planning and brand governance right so they can broaden their remit effectively,” Simple chief executive officer said.
The study examines how marketing teams are managing the customer experience and using people, partners and technology to plan and create marketing content efficiently, drive agility and improve the return on marketing investment – operational issues traditionally referred to as Marketing Operations Cloud.
The research shows marketers, hampered by the use of static tools to manage increasingly fluid processes, are struggling to obtain a big-picture view of marketing activities in areas such as planning, budgeting, governance and workflow:
Despite this, marketing teams are pursuing agility through their work processes, the study revealed, with 26% of marketing teams adopting at least some agile marketing practices.
“In order to remain agile, process optimisation should be a priority for marketers,” Australian Marketing Institute chief executive officer Lee Tonitto said. “It’s essential to take a disciplined approach to Marketing Operations Cloud as marketers broaden their remit to managing the customer experience.”
When it comes to artificial intelligence, the research showed marketers are excited by the opportunity to use their own data to improve outcomes.
Modern marketing teams, assisted by new technology, will be less encumbered by process as AI introduces the ability to reduce friction and free up time so marketers can focus on that sweet spot where insights meet creativity and generate amazing customer experiences.