Demystifying Marketing - 8 Key Questions To Measure Marketing’s Value To The Corporation

Companies that continue to see marketing as a bag of tricks will lose out in short order to companies that stress substance and performance.”
–Regis McKenna

Marketing doesn’t really get much respect in the business world and is rarely looked at as a key contributor to the bottom line. It is frequently looked at as the function that produces the pretty Web site or the glossy sales brochure, but not much more than that. This is odd, considering marketing is a business discipline. Thus—as a business discipline—it should provide real value to the business.

Marketing’s inability to produce measurable results is probably one of the biggest reasons that many executives don’t know what to do with marketing. As the saying goes, if you can measure it, you can control it. And if you don’t know how to measure it, then you can’t effectively use it.

Many executives have formal training in, for example, finance and accounting. Things are fairly concrete in the accounting world. Tracking things, creating reports, and understanding the value of specific scenarios is the foundation of this discipline. Yet, the executive who tries to apply these same principles to marketing is frequently frustrated with the results.

Once we get to the point where marketing is left unaccountable—because those responsible for it don’t know how to track it or measure its worth— management begins to have serious doubts about the value of marketing. Once the belief is held that there’s no way to verify marketing’s worth, marketing becomes viewed as an expense, not an investment.

Thus, since it’s believed that marketing can’t be tracked and the value to the company is essentially unknown, marketing is tossed aside as a “nice-to-have” business accessory. Instead of trying to learn more about marketing and discovering how it can be turned into an asset for the company, executives exacerbate the situation by basically ignoring it. Research shows that executives devote only 10% of their time to marketing. If nothing else, devoting so little time to such a vital business function further marginalizes its worth.

And thus begins the cycle of disgust. It’s as much about the attitude you hold as it is the actions you put forth. The attitude a lot of people have about marketing is reflected in the way it is implemented within the company. And the way marketing is implemented fuels the attitude people take. And round and round it goes.

Futher complicating matters, when marketing becomes marginalized or disbanded altogether, there’s no obvious consequence. The cause and effect relationship is diluted enough, and since there aren’t any tracking mechanisms in place, there’s no perceived benefit or detriment to these efforts.

The best remedy? The obvious answer is to quantify marketing’s efforts. The trick, of course, is how does one do that? The first step is to understand what marketing’s role really is and then to create quantitative objectives that support that role.

Ultimately, the marketing objective must support the corporate goals. At a high level, the goal of any company is to create customers. Without customers, there would be no revenue. Once customers have been created, the company has another goal: to retain customers. It is frequently cited that it is cheaper to sell to existing customers than to acquire a new one by a factor of five. So, if only from a cost perspective, it is imperative to retain customers.

Now we know that we are in business to create customers, to generate revenue. This is fairly obvious. Yet, generating revenue, or more specifically, generating profit, is in itself, a meaningless statement of purpose for any business. Without a clear view of the customers and how to serve them properly, there would be no profits. Or, conversely, if the only goal of the company was to make money, then you could be in any business. But you aren’t. You are in a specific business, serving specific customers. As Peter Drucker states, “The customer determines what a business is and is the foundation of a business.”

By focusing on your customer as the end goal, you are building in an inherit marketing value … the value proposition, the reason that your customers come to you in the first place. If you still aren’t sure, think about this: What would happen to your company if all your customers went away? Now, turn that around. Would your customers miss you if your profit machine disappeared? How about, Would they miss you if the value you created for them went away? See the difference?

Therefore, creating profit is not a meaningful goal. Ted Levitt argues that “The purpose of a business is to create and keep a customer.” Philip Kotler states that “profits are not the objective, but are the reward for creating satisfied customers.”

In other words, the only worthwhile measure of what a company is doing is measuring profitability through customer satisfaction. Since customers are satisfied by the value the company creates for them and this value is created by the role marketing MUST play in any organization. Marketing’s role, which shall be addressed in a separate article, is to articulate the company’s capabilities and match them with the customer wants.

Because marketing plays a pivotal role in creating the value and is a key player in creating customer satisfaction, marketing’s value can be understood by measuring customer satisfaction.

Nirmalya Kumar, in his book “Marketing as Strategy,” poses eight questions that should be asked by businesses, but are frequently ignored. The answers to these questions will provide you a way to understanding the health of your company, especially if you understand that customer satisfaction is the main goal of the company, and through customer satisfaction, you will be rewarded with profits. I don’t recommend you throw away the P&L statements, but these questions will provide a better way to understand the value that marketing brings to your business and gives you a road map of sorts to help steer your company to success.

Are we servicing our customers better?

Have we truly differentiated our products in a clearly visible way that matters to the customer?

Is our differentiation generating profits?

Does our price premium reflect the additional value delivered to customers?

Are we satisfying our customers better than our competition?

Are we exploiting market opportunities faster than others?

Do our people understand how we create value for our customers?

Must distributors carry our products to maintain legitimacy in the industry?

Aperio Marketing offers organizations a better, more efficient way to build competencies for executing strategic growth. Our pragmatic approach to creating processes that our clients can follow make Aperio Marketing a first choice among small- and mid-sized businesses that are devoting their energies to development and trusting Aperio Marketing with their growth.

For more information on how you can discover the benefits of resourceful innovation, visit us online: Aperio Marketing.

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