1. The document reports on a technology marketing research study conducted in the UK, Germany, and France interviewing both IT decision-makers and technology marketers.
2. It finds that while CIOs and other C-level executives are involved in final purchasing decisions, IT managers are most likely to identify technology needs and lead primary procurement teams. The technology purchasing process takes around 18 months and involves various stakeholders.
3. When researching technology solutions, IT decision-makers value vendor websites, direct contact with vendors, and search engines most highly, while social media is rated lowest. Vendor personnel, content, and owned channels are seen as particularly important influences.
Digital transformation report sweden july 2017Ola Reppling
Digital Transformation Report 2017
@Qvartz and Microsoft have interviewed leading Swedish companies in many industries about Digital Transformation and the practical aspects of it. Understanding the What, Why and How of Digital Transformation. There are many commonalities across industries and between companies, but my key take-away is that there is no silver bullet. You can’t use the cookie cutter and use the same solution over and over again. Each company and situation is different and therefor each company approach needs to be different, both in What, How and timing. This report strengthens my view that Microsoft is in a unique position to support our customers as we continue to invest in both our platform, but more importantly, in our customer relationships.
When we are in a strategic partnership with our customers we can really support them in all stages of the Digital Transformation Maturity Curve. Many of our larger customers have different units/divisions that are in different stages of the maturity curve and Microsoft’s flexible, scalable and versatile platform and way of working allows us to support the customer as needed in throughout the company.
The report also reinforces the validity and importance of Microsoft’s four pillars of Digital Transformation: Engage your customer, Empower your employees, Optimize your operations and Transform your products.
The report will give you a benchmark of where Swedish customers are on their Digital Transformation journey and some insights into the What, Why and How.
It is advice that technology vendors today should take to heart.
Corporations everywhere in the world are now in the midst of a transformation with respect to information technology. This is not necessarily about a revolution in technology processing power, but rather a fundamental change in the
power of technology process – an internal shift in responsibility over IT decision-making within organizations away from its traditional center, the Chief Information Officer, to the Chief Marketing Officer and Chief Financial Office
Digital transformation report sweden july 2017Ola Reppling
Digital Transformation Report 2017
@Qvartz and Microsoft have interviewed leading Swedish companies in many industries about Digital Transformation and the practical aspects of it. Understanding the What, Why and How of Digital Transformation. There are many commonalities across industries and between companies, but my key take-away is that there is no silver bullet. You can’t use the cookie cutter and use the same solution over and over again. Each company and situation is different and therefor each company approach needs to be different, both in What, How and timing. This report strengthens my view that Microsoft is in a unique position to support our customers as we continue to invest in both our platform, but more importantly, in our customer relationships.
When we are in a strategic partnership with our customers we can really support them in all stages of the Digital Transformation Maturity Curve. Many of our larger customers have different units/divisions that are in different stages of the maturity curve and Microsoft’s flexible, scalable and versatile platform and way of working allows us to support the customer as needed in throughout the company.
The report also reinforces the validity and importance of Microsoft’s four pillars of Digital Transformation: Engage your customer, Empower your employees, Optimize your operations and Transform your products.
The report will give you a benchmark of where Swedish customers are on their Digital Transformation journey and some insights into the What, Why and How.
It is advice that technology vendors today should take to heart.
Corporations everywhere in the world are now in the midst of a transformation with respect to information technology. This is not necessarily about a revolution in technology processing power, but rather a fundamental change in the
power of technology process – an internal shift in responsibility over IT decision-making within organizations away from its traditional center, the Chief Information Officer, to the Chief Marketing Officer and Chief Financial Office
Digital Disruption in Asset and Wealth ManagementCapgemini
The groundswell that is today impacting massively retail banking is now impacting all banking businesses. Opportunities offered by new digital technology such as Big data & analytics have not been fully explored yet by Asset & Wealth Management actors, and new technologies are mainly confined to improve shared platforms and reporting flexibility. But the turn might come soon now with the aggressive launches of Fintechs investing all parts of the banking business, including its most exclusive territories.
Asset and Wealth Management might be the next targets, facing the up-rise of new Robo-Advisors quickly gaining market
share on their devoted playground until now.
Traditional Asset and Wealth Managers should anticipate and react, building on their knowledge and assets in order to contain this new trend but this will require that they adapt and probably more globally rethink their business model, to avoid the commoditization of their activity.
The aim of this document is to present how Asset and Wealth Managers can take advantage of the digital revolution / emergence of Fintechs to become more competitive and attract more clients.
Silicon Valley is recognized globally as the birthplace of some of today’s most popular and iconic technologies. Many of its startups have a particular dynamic to thank for their success: the formation of clusters, or groups of companies and organizations that congregate in a region around a particular field.
Brett Gilbert, an associate professor in Rutgers Business School’s department of management and global business (and @ProfGilbert on Twitter), studies the formation and influence of these clusters. When a prominent university or a powerhouse company draws other, smaller organizations to its region, a tech cluster forms, supporting entrepreneurs as they develop their own breakthroughs. This model has been observed for decades in the United States. Now, emerging markets such as South Africa are seeing nascent cluster formation. And the success of these nations in the global economy may depend, at least in part, on their ability to make clusters work.
Gilbert, who has a Ph.D. in entrepreneurship from Indiana University and served a gubernatorial appointment as an advisory committee member for the Texas Emerging Technology Fund from 2008 to 2010, recently spoke with strategy+business about her research in the U.S. and abroad.
Shiny Object or Digital Intelligence Hub? Evolution of the Social Media Comma...Susan Etlinger
This report provides an industry update, best pratices and frameworks for understanding how to approach and build a social media command center that integrates with other digital and enterprise signals in the business.
Find out what 72 forward-looking CMOs and 30 academic B2B thought-leaders have to say about your ever-changing industry landscape. From commoditization and globalization to new rivals and buying behaviors, this presentation from Ralph Oliva, Executive Director of Penn State's Institute for the Study of Business Markets (ISBM) explores your greatest challenges and opportunities up ahead.
This presentation was delivered to the attendees of Godfrey's FWD:B2B conference on November 7th, 2013.
Green Hat B2B Marketing Outlook Report 2015 Green Hat
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This comprehensive report, based on the participation of 455 marketers, clearly demonstrates how the practice of B2B marketing continues to experience rapid change year on year, and in 2015, B2B is alight with opportunity and challenges.
The State Of Digital Transformation In China Versus The Rest Of The World by ...Brian Solis
When Brian Solis was principal analyst at Altimeter Group, he launched a highly regarded series that captured the global state of digital transformation. In 2019, Brian partnered with Prophet Asia's Leon Zhang and Benoit Garbe to zoom in on digital transformation in China. The team quickly realized that China is very different than the rest of the world. As a result, Brian created this document to highlight those differences and also provide recommendations in how to more effectively compete.
What the hell is digital transformation anyway ! - webinar - 25 april 2018 (1)Good Rebels
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Learn about the challenge of creating a digital first culture and organisation, the forces driving digital transformation, and practical insights and advice on delivering a transformation programme.
It is the age of the digital customer. And digital customer experience is something that most companies have on top of their agenda. It is not hard to see why. In a survey, 70% of respondents said that good service had a considerable influence on their loyalty and 69% would recommend the company to others. The reverse is also true. Poor customer experience drives customers away. Research shows that nearly 89% of customers walk away from a company after a single poor customer experience. And this can have a significant impact. Businesses are estimated to lose as much as 20% of revenue from poor customer experiences. And this is precisely the reason we chose to focus the sixth edition of our Digital Transformation Review on Customer Experience. How can organizations create compelling digital customer experiences that work? We posed this very question to a diverse panel from around the world. Our panel for this edition includes industry leaders, academics, startup founders, platform vendors and technology gurus. They come from all over the world, including the home of innovation in the digital age — Silicon Valley
More and more, marketers are being tasked with proving the return on investment (ROI) of their marketing initiatives. This can pose a challenge, because there are many ways to determine the results and value of each campaign. For our most recent Marketing Maven survey, we wanted to know more about how industrial marketers handle proving ROI and what challenges they encounter.
We conducted a ground-breaking survey of the UK’s data and business professionals to get a snapshot of the state of the world of data, uncover some of the issues facing the industry and get a sense of the changes on the horizon. The results were enlightening, and in some cases, very surprising.
This paper offers views on some current and future trends in marketing. The content is based on recent literature and on what is happening in the business world. The paper is based on secondary data. The paper is based on extant literature and internet sources. The various articles,
researches, reports, newspapers, magazines, various websites and the information on internet have been studied. We experience a radical change in India towards the digitization. The consumer are looking and searching more on internet to find the best deal form the sellers around India as compared to traditional or conventional methods. In this study, we acknowledged that businesses can really benefit from Digital Marketing such as search engine optimization (SEO), search engine marketing (SEM), content marketing, influencer marketing, content automation, e-commerce marketing, campaign marketing, and social media marketing, social media optimization, e-mail direct marketing, display advertising, e–books, optical disks and games and are becoming more and more common in our advancing technology. It is demonstrated that we all are connected through whatsapp and facebook and the increasing use of social media is creating new opportunities for digital marketers to attract the customers through digital platform. Awareness of consumer’s motives is important because it provides a deeper understanding of
what influences users to create content about a brand or store. Digital marketing is cost effective and having a great commercial impact on the business. Based on this study, it can further be argued that knowing which social media sites a company’s target market utilizes is another key factor in guaranteeing that online marketing will be successful. The effectiveness of Internet marketing with respect to different business can be analyzed. The study can further be extended
to compare the internet marketing techniques with specific to various businesses. Keywords: - Internet, Marketing, Digitization, Social Media, Marketing Trends, Digital
Marketing
Good News is No News? Effects of Positive Stories about African Americans on ...Miglena Sternadori
This study used a 2 (session) x 2 (trial type) experimental design to explore whether positively valenced news stories about African Americans affect the malleability of implicit attitudes.
Digital Disruption in Asset and Wealth ManagementCapgemini
The groundswell that is today impacting massively retail banking is now impacting all banking businesses. Opportunities offered by new digital technology such as Big data & analytics have not been fully explored yet by Asset & Wealth Management actors, and new technologies are mainly confined to improve shared platforms and reporting flexibility. But the turn might come soon now with the aggressive launches of Fintechs investing all parts of the banking business, including its most exclusive territories.
Asset and Wealth Management might be the next targets, facing the up-rise of new Robo-Advisors quickly gaining market
share on their devoted playground until now.
Traditional Asset and Wealth Managers should anticipate and react, building on their knowledge and assets in order to contain this new trend but this will require that they adapt and probably more globally rethink their business model, to avoid the commoditization of their activity.
The aim of this document is to present how Asset and Wealth Managers can take advantage of the digital revolution / emergence of Fintechs to become more competitive and attract more clients.
Silicon Valley is recognized globally as the birthplace of some of today’s most popular and iconic technologies. Many of its startups have a particular dynamic to thank for their success: the formation of clusters, or groups of companies and organizations that congregate in a region around a particular field.
Brett Gilbert, an associate professor in Rutgers Business School’s department of management and global business (and @ProfGilbert on Twitter), studies the formation and influence of these clusters. When a prominent university or a powerhouse company draws other, smaller organizations to its region, a tech cluster forms, supporting entrepreneurs as they develop their own breakthroughs. This model has been observed for decades in the United States. Now, emerging markets such as South Africa are seeing nascent cluster formation. And the success of these nations in the global economy may depend, at least in part, on their ability to make clusters work.
Gilbert, who has a Ph.D. in entrepreneurship from Indiana University and served a gubernatorial appointment as an advisory committee member for the Texas Emerging Technology Fund from 2008 to 2010, recently spoke with strategy+business about her research in the U.S. and abroad.
Shiny Object or Digital Intelligence Hub? Evolution of the Social Media Comma...Susan Etlinger
This report provides an industry update, best pratices and frameworks for understanding how to approach and build a social media command center that integrates with other digital and enterprise signals in the business.
Find out what 72 forward-looking CMOs and 30 academic B2B thought-leaders have to say about your ever-changing industry landscape. From commoditization and globalization to new rivals and buying behaviors, this presentation from Ralph Oliva, Executive Director of Penn State's Institute for the Study of Business Markets (ISBM) explores your greatest challenges and opportunities up ahead.
This presentation was delivered to the attendees of Godfrey's FWD:B2B conference on November 7th, 2013.
Green Hat B2B Marketing Outlook Report 2015 Green Hat
The 2015 B2B Marketing Outlook study has been conducted for the fifth consecutive year by Green Hat in conjunction with ADMA, the Association for Data-Driven Marketing and Advertising, Marketing Magazine and B2B Marketing UK.
This comprehensive report, based on the participation of 455 marketers, clearly demonstrates how the practice of B2B marketing continues to experience rapid change year on year, and in 2015, B2B is alight with opportunity and challenges.
The State Of Digital Transformation In China Versus The Rest Of The World by ...Brian Solis
When Brian Solis was principal analyst at Altimeter Group, he launched a highly regarded series that captured the global state of digital transformation. In 2019, Brian partnered with Prophet Asia's Leon Zhang and Benoit Garbe to zoom in on digital transformation in China. The team quickly realized that China is very different than the rest of the world. As a result, Brian created this document to highlight those differences and also provide recommendations in how to more effectively compete.
What the hell is digital transformation anyway ! - webinar - 25 april 2018 (1)Good Rebels
What the hell is digital transformation anyway?” a webinar presented by Mark Ralphs, partner at Good Rebels, on the 25th of April 2018.
Learn about the challenge of creating a digital first culture and organisation, the forces driving digital transformation, and practical insights and advice on delivering a transformation programme.
It is the age of the digital customer. And digital customer experience is something that most companies have on top of their agenda. It is not hard to see why. In a survey, 70% of respondents said that good service had a considerable influence on their loyalty and 69% would recommend the company to others. The reverse is also true. Poor customer experience drives customers away. Research shows that nearly 89% of customers walk away from a company after a single poor customer experience. And this can have a significant impact. Businesses are estimated to lose as much as 20% of revenue from poor customer experiences. And this is precisely the reason we chose to focus the sixth edition of our Digital Transformation Review on Customer Experience. How can organizations create compelling digital customer experiences that work? We posed this very question to a diverse panel from around the world. Our panel for this edition includes industry leaders, academics, startup founders, platform vendors and technology gurus. They come from all over the world, including the home of innovation in the digital age — Silicon Valley
More and more, marketers are being tasked with proving the return on investment (ROI) of their marketing initiatives. This can pose a challenge, because there are many ways to determine the results and value of each campaign. For our most recent Marketing Maven survey, we wanted to know more about how industrial marketers handle proving ROI and what challenges they encounter.
We conducted a ground-breaking survey of the UK’s data and business professionals to get a snapshot of the state of the world of data, uncover some of the issues facing the industry and get a sense of the changes on the horizon. The results were enlightening, and in some cases, very surprising.
This paper offers views on some current and future trends in marketing. The content is based on recent literature and on what is happening in the business world. The paper is based on secondary data. The paper is based on extant literature and internet sources. The various articles,
researches, reports, newspapers, magazines, various websites and the information on internet have been studied. We experience a radical change in India towards the digitization. The consumer are looking and searching more on internet to find the best deal form the sellers around India as compared to traditional or conventional methods. In this study, we acknowledged that businesses can really benefit from Digital Marketing such as search engine optimization (SEO), search engine marketing (SEM), content marketing, influencer marketing, content automation, e-commerce marketing, campaign marketing, and social media marketing, social media optimization, e-mail direct marketing, display advertising, e–books, optical disks and games and are becoming more and more common in our advancing technology. It is demonstrated that we all are connected through whatsapp and facebook and the increasing use of social media is creating new opportunities for digital marketers to attract the customers through digital platform. Awareness of consumer’s motives is important because it provides a deeper understanding of
what influences users to create content about a brand or store. Digital marketing is cost effective and having a great commercial impact on the business. Based on this study, it can further be argued that knowing which social media sites a company’s target market utilizes is another key factor in guaranteeing that online marketing will be successful. The effectiveness of Internet marketing with respect to different business can be analyzed. The study can further be extended
to compare the internet marketing techniques with specific to various businesses. Keywords: - Internet, Marketing, Digitization, Social Media, Marketing Trends, Digital
Marketing
Good News is No News? Effects of Positive Stories about African Americans on ...Miglena Sternadori
This study used a 2 (session) x 2 (trial type) experimental design to explore whether positively valenced news stories about African Americans affect the malleability of implicit attitudes.
De-Mystifying Twitter for Small Business - 2016Charlie Conard
Cut through the common confusion about Twitter & discover how this social media platform can help grow your small business. Charlie Conard answers common questions about Twitter for business owners, including:
- Getting Your Business started on Twitter
- How do Hashtags work, & Why they are Important?
- Learning to Write an effective Tweet –in under 140 Characters!
- Case Studies: See how Twitter has helped other Small Business Owners Transform
You’ll leave this lecture with a clear understanding of how Twitter works & the ways it can help your small business build sales.
About the Speaker
Charlie Conard, co-founder and principal of Social Go To, specializes in creating social media strategies that grow audiences, increase engagement, and transform prospects into customers. Charlie has worked with brands including L’Oreal, Mount Sinai Medical Center, Continental Airlines, United Way, Publishers Weekly, and KitchenAid.
Select slides with annotation from a seminar presented at the New York Science, Industry, and Business Library Small Business Resource Center (New York Public Library) on 02/09/16.
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Ruder Finn has been working in partnership with Brand Republic to conduct research among marketers into whether their involvement in technology buying decisions has and will increase, and what their views are on the existing marketing messages that they see emanating from technology providers. The resulting report, “Technology for Marketers: Are you Engaging Effectively?”, makes interesting reading for technology companies and marketers alike, particularly those looking to target decision makers in the marketing department.
Slides and content from LinkedIn's TechConnect London event which was held on November 6th 2014 at Ham Yard Hotel, London.
Speakers included:
Bryan Glick, Editor-in-Chief, ComputerWeekly
Sumeet Vermani, Head of Paid and Earned Media, EMEA, Symantec
Nicholas Spyer, Seniore Director and GM EMEA, Social.com
Simon Morris, Director of Demand Marketing, Adobe
Are you a Digital Transformation leader? Can you create a high-performance strategy in the digital age? Have you got what it takes to avoid the tumbling barrels of distracting digital tactics, over hyped technology or the belief that your market is immune to disruption? Have you allocated the right resources to deliver a focused plan of transformation?
The Financial Times, in partnership with HP, recently held an event in Milan to discuss new CIO strategies for the digital age. Topics discussed included customer engagement, consistent delivery of service across all channels, strategies for driving innovation and supporting business growth, and security concerns in an era of BYOD and cloud services.
This white paper highlight key discussion points from the event.
Slides and content from LinkedIn's TechConnect London event which was held on November 6th 2014 at Ham Yard Hotel, London.
Speakers included:
Bryan Glick, Editor-in-Chief, ComputerWeekly
Sumeet Vermani, Head of Paid and Earned Media, EMEA, Symantec
Nicholas Spyer, Seniore Director and GM EMEA, Social.com
Simon Morris, Director of Demand Marketing, Adobe
We’ve worked with Executives and IT leaders for over 30 years, and the single most common complaint we hear from them is their profound frustration with the lack of results and transparency from their never-ending IT investments.
To add further complexity, the demand for digital products and services has made it increasingly difficult for organizations to make ongoing investments and balance the need for innovation with optimization.
The latest data, combined from global enterprises, big consulting and research firms, makes the case that companies need to urgently act to address the digital disruption of their business and their related skills gaps. The data shows that 70% of digital business initiatives are likely to fail to deliver business growth, due to lack of business process and product innovation, as well as poor organizational adaptability.
Poor governance and legacy product management processes to align business and IT initiatives, coupled with insufficient leadership engagement across the organization, are the main reason most companies are wasting money on IT.
This thought paper speaks to these challenges and how optimizing both technology innovation and cross-organizational engagement will accelerate the positive business outcomes that organizations are looking to achieve especially in lieu of increasing digital disruption.
Authors - Alex Adamopoulos and Bob Kantor
Synopsis: “Digital transformation” often means di erent things to di erent people—even those within the same organization. To dig into what it means to digitally transform an organization—and determine the best practices for doing it—we interviewed seven C-Suite members at the forefront of digital transformation, and surveyed 50 other C-Suite members. This overview and analysis of their responses and survey data provides insights from multiple points-of-view across several verticals.
The Total Economic Impact of Marketo EngageMarketo
In this webinar, you'll hear from a top marketing analyst on how the world of marketing is changing and why investment is crucial. Next, we’ll share the results of a recent ROI study commissioned by Adobe and conducted by Forrester Consulting, an independent research firm. This study quantifies the value of Marketo Engage, based on interviews with real customers. Finally, you'll hear from a Marketo Engage customer to hear her personal story of driving martech investments, transformation and value at her company.
Making Demand Generation Work in the Technology IndustryLedger Bennett DGA
How well do you understand your tech buyers? When do you know they are ready to buy? More significantly where can you find them? Our guide to Making Demand Generation Work in the Technology Industry has been designed and customised significantly to answer the questions that are important to you. Discover the latest insights and analysis on the biggest issues impeding your revenue streams and identify the key players you need to know to get in on the action.
Industry 4.0 is the name of the next industrial revolution which is fueled by the advancement of digital technologies. It
is dramatically changing how companies engage in business activities. As a result, the disruptive nature of Industry 4.0
demands a reassessment of the requirements for IT. On the one hand, there is the possibility that the responsibilities of Chief Information Officers (CIOs) could be taken over by other executives such as the Chief Digital Officer (CDO) or the Chief Technology Officer (CTO). On the other hand, this
recent development creates entirely new perspectives for positioning themselves and their IT departments
within the business.
The impact of digital technologies is reaching a magnitude at which IT is considered a substantial
business driver, potentially placing CIOs in the driver’s seat.
Digital Marketing Program Evaluation, Maturation and Evolution - A Digital Ma...Mike Corak
Is Your Marketing Mature Enough? Ways to Evolve Your Digital Marketing
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Join Jeffrey Rohrs, author of the book “Audience: Marketing in the Age of Subscribers, Fans and Followers,” with panelist: Mike Corak a digital agency veteran as they share their experience in the rapidly evolving world of digital marketing. They’ll expose common digital marketing weaknesses and demonstrate how to turn those into game-changing opportunities.
Attendees will learn:
How to identify common mistakes in digital marketing
How to pinpoint opportunities where none seem to exist
What tactics will help your team successfully plan and execute winning digital campaigns
Where to uncover unique opportunities to jump ahead of competitors.
Jeffrey Rohrs is VP of Marketing for Exact Target and author of the book Audience: Marketing in the Age of Subscribers, Fans and Followers. Mike Corak has developed and implemented winning digital and integrated strategies for hundreds of companies over his 17-year career, including Bank of America, Coca-Cola, ConAgra Foods, FedEx, Farmers Insurance, Nike, Office Depot, and Walt Disney.
ethology, a full service digital agency audits over 100 brands' digital marketing programs annually. Their team stays at the forefront of industry trends, conducts website analyses and audits, and reviews site architecture. It's been noted through these audits that Challenger brands - those competing with industry leaders - have a great opportunity to achieve competitive advantage through thoughtful digital expansion.
Seizing the Executive Engagement Opportunity: How Executives Engage Study (Pa...ITSMA
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This report is a follow-on to an earlier ITSMA report published in May 2020: How Executives Engage: Understanding Changing Buyer Behavior in Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic, Part 1.
Together, the two-part study provides critical data and insight for B2B marketers who are focused on building and strengthening relationships and sales at the executive level in the wake of the dramatic disruptions of COVID-19. By September 2020, senior-level B2B buyers had moved well beyond the early reactions to the COVID-19 pandemic and were focusing on new strategies and priorities for growth and innovation even amid an extremely uncertain future.
Seizing the Executive Engagement Opportunity: Responding to Changing Buyer Priorities Amid the COVID-19 Pandemic provides essential data and insight on the priorities, preferences, and perceptions of executive-level B2B buyers as they explore and invest in new technology-based solutions and services.
The report highlights the changing business and technology priorities for business and IT executives nine months into the pandemic, and the preferences that executives now have for content and engagement with solution providers interested in responding to their changing needs.
Specific highlights from the second wave of this year’s study include:
- Changes in IT spending since the pandemic began
- The state of business transformation and top business and technology investment priorities
- Preference for different types of information sources and time spent researching solutions
- The value of thought leadership
- Preferences for different types of online engagement
- Top requirements for earning trust
In this context, the report identifies four essential guidelines for B2B marketers to follow as they adapt and develop their executive engagement programs.
The study includes new survey and comparative survey data from 503 executives from nine regions/countries (ANZ, Benelux, Canada, France, Germany, Nordics, UK, and US) across seven major industry sectors. Most respondents are from $1 billion+ companies. In addition to aggregate data, the full report includes Comparisons: Wave 1 (May 2020) and Wave 2 (September 2020)—North America and Europe Only data and crosstabs by region.
The study was co-sponsored by SAP and Adobe.
Measure for measure - the difficult art of quantifying return on digital inve...
Kingpin-Technology-Marketing-Report-2015
1. 1Technology Marketing Research 2015
Technology Marketing Research
2015
Contact: James Foulkes | james@kingpin.co.uk | +44 (0)20 7803 1000
Kingpin, The WireWorks, 78-83 Great Suffolk Street, London SE1 0BU
2. 2Technology Marketing Research 2015
1. Introduction ......................................................................................................................................................................................................... 3
2. How IT purchasing works ............................................................................................................................................................................. 5
3. How marketing managers think IT purchasing works .............................................................................................................. 10
4. Buyers and marketers must be aligned - some conclusions ................................................................................................. 13
5. Takeaways: What should tech marketers do? ............................................................................................................................... 14
6. Appendix ............................................................................................................................................................................................................. 15
Contents
3. 3Technology Marketing Research 2015
The technology industry changes
rapidly and at the same time so
too does the way IT decision-
makers (‘ITDMs’ in this report)
operate, whatever vertical industry
they work in. But that sets a
challenge for those of us who
market technology. How do we
keep up?
Given that opening challenge, it
is no surprise that at Kingpin we
are keen researchers of ITDMs.
Depending on the context, an
ITDM can be anyone from an IT
pro to an IT manager to an IT
director or CIO – or even other
directors on the board.
In this year’s technology marketing
report, we interviewed at length
both ITDMs and technology
marketers (‘TMs’ here) in the UK,
Germany and France to find out
what’s going on.
What we found were differences
by country, job title, stage of
the buyer’s journey and more.
Understanding these nuances can
be critical.
For example, busy ITDMs don’t
hate being phoned up. Very few
told us they never want to be
contacted that way. But they
do hate poor quality sales calls
from those who don’t understand
their business needs or even the
technology that’s being touted.
They especially don’t like those
calls minutes after they’ve
downloaded a gated white paper
on a website.
When it comes to influences,
we’ll go on to show here that
vendors’ own websites and search
engines rank above technology
publications and other sources.
Yet a vendor’s ultimate asset –
especially in the final stages of
procurement – is good sales and
account management.
Word of mouth will continue to
rank above paid-for or owned
media and, for now, our research
shows that is still less likely to
happen for large B2B technology
purchases over social media than
over a gin and tonic. But as we go
on to say, don’t write off social
media – younger ITDMs use social,
even platforms such as Facebook,
for information gathering.
We would love to take this
discussion further. Understanding
ITDMs, working out the best
technology marketing approaches,
staying on top of trends in IT and
marketing – this is what we do.
We welcome your feedback to this
report and hope to catch up with
you soon.
1. Introduction
James Foulkes
Co-founder and
Director
Mirza Fur
Co-founder and
Director
4. 4Technology Marketing Research 2015
Kingpin mainly interviewed senior
IT decision-makers and marketing
managers.
Our ITDMs came from all industry
verticals and had a wide range of
technology and other needs. IT
manager was the most common
job title.
The TMs we surveyed represent
all kinds of technology sectors,
including hardware, software,
cloud and other services.
Marketing manager was the most
common job title. They were most
likely to be aged 36-45.
For our methodology, please see
the Appendix section.
Demographics
Fig 1: Job titles of ITDMs Fig 2: Job titles of TMs
35%
31%
13%
8%
6%
4%
2%
2%Chief Executive Officer
Engineering Manager/Director
Architect
IS Manager/Director
Other
IT Network Manager
CIO/IT Director
IT Manager
CMO
Marketing Coordinator
Marketing Research Analyst
Marketing Junior
Marketing Specialist
Marketing Assistant
Business Owner
Senior Marketing Manager
Other
Head of Marketing
Marketing Executive
Marketing Director
Marketing Manager 20%
12%
10%
10%
10%
10%
10%
8%
6%
4%
2%
2%
2%
1
http://www.ey.com/Publication/vwLUAssets/DNA_of_the_CIO/$FILE/DNA_of_the_CIO.pdf
Fig 3: Company size of ITDMs Fig 4: Company size of technology marketers
2,001+
501-2,000
251-500
101-250
1-10018%
11%
21%
30%
21%
350+
101-250
1-100
44%
21%
35%
5. 5Technology Marketing Research 2015
Across the three largest
European markets we asked our
respondents about the decision-
makers and identifiers in their
organisations for IT purchases. We
also asked how the process works.
As in previous studies, IT managers
lead the way. Despite a lot of
attention being paid to IT chiefs
such as CIOs (they come second)
as well as other C-level execs and
other business unit heads or end
users, IT managers are the most
likely to identify needs.
There was variation by country.
CIOs (‘C-level IT’) are clearly very
influential in Germany at this
point, as are non-IT roles such as
‘Department head’ in France and
Germany or ‘End user demand’ in
the UK.
The respondents in Germany
are also much less likely to cite
‘Nobody specific’, while across
all countries very few of our
sample left such identifying to
outsourcing partners, which is
perhaps not so surprising given we
polled those who are IT decision-
makers rather than those who
have expressly outsourced IT.
And while there is a big theme
in technology media of IT spend
coming from outside the IT
department, for example driven
by those in marketing, finance,
HR and so on, our numbers didn’t
support that.
Our research also allows us to
paint a picture of those involved
in the primary procurement team
(Fig 6).
And who is involved at which
stages? (Fig 7)
What can we deduce from all
that? That IT procurement is a
team effort and CEOs and CIOs/
IT directors are only the major
player when it comes to the final
purchasing decision. Obviously
that’s a critical stage – though at
the end of a chain of decision-
making that takes a long time,
often around 18 months.
Other research backs this
up. TechTarget’s 2015 Media
Consumption Report found that
“IT purchase decisions are made
and influenced by many members
of the organisation”. This was
across the various European
markets covered in its survey and
included non-IT department roles
such as “business influencer”.
2.How IT purchasing works
22%
Fig 5: Who in the company identifies an IT need in your company?
Nobody specific
Outsourced provider
End User demand
IT Manager/Dept
C-level IT
C-level non IT
Department Head
UK France Germany
14%
6%
16% 7%
44% 20% 42%
20%
2%
13% 12%
18% 37% 4%
37% 24%
52%
20%
Fig 6: Once a need is identified, who is involved in the primary project team? IT Manager, Head of Department, Outsourced provider,
end user or other?
Outsourced ProviderC-Level Non-ITEnd UsersC-Level ITDepartment HeadIT Manager/Dept
UK France Germany
62%
50%
26% 26%
14% 16%
10%
43%
83%
10%
17%
23%
64%
22%
52%
10% 14%
2%
6. 6Technology Marketing Research 2015
How to decide?
Respondents told us ‘research’
is the first step they take in any
project – ahead of an RFP process
or project plan. That means they
are looking for information. So
where do they go?
When we asked about the value
and use of 15 types of sources,
leading the way were ‘Direct
contact with vendor’, ‘Search
engine’ and ‘Vendor websites’.
This shows something we have
said for a long time – vendor
personnel, content and owned
destinations are critical.
Something like a vendor’s website
or email database is owned.
Platforms such as social media
aren’t. Social media came bottom.
Taking this further, it could be
seen these leading sources mean
search engine optimisation (SEO),
inside sales and user experience
online are vital – though often not
front of mind when technology
companies look across all
channels. Taking one step further
back this also begs the question
‘What makes someone search or
be aware of a brand or product?’
We begin to see a joined-up
picture where tactics such as
brand display advertising can
be a first step in an integrated
approach.
Meanwhile with social media, a
wide body of research suggests
use is generational, that for
younger ITDMs social channels
will be where they go to find
things out, even including
platforms we associate with our
non-professional lives such as
Facebook.
Fig 7: Who is involved in the decision making of a new project in any of the following stages:
Final Purchasing DecisionVendor negotiatingBenchmarkingShortlistingResearch
Other C-Suite
CFO
Other
IT Head/Manager
IT Director
CEO 6% 8%
12%
9%
17%
5%
3% 2%2%5%
8%4% 5% 5%
17% 15% 13% 8%
14% 12% 16% 12%
18% 14% 18% 18%
2% 5% 18%
5%
6.4
7.3
6.7
6.2
4.2
6.0
5.5
3.8
5.6
6.0
4.7
6.1
7.5
7.6
7.9
6.6
8.4
5.9
5.9
4.4
6.1
6.6
5.7
5.9
6.1
3.9
6.5
5.3
2.9
5.4
6.5
6.2
6.3
6.5
7.2
6.6
Fig 8: When researching IT products, services, and solution, can you grade the following in terms of value and use to you on a scale from
1-10 (10 being the greatest value)
Search Engine
Case Studies
Whitepapers
Specialist bloggers
Peer Group
Forums/Peer group online communities
Social Media Search
Twitter, Experts Exchange, LinkedIn...
Direct contact with vendor
Events
Email
Channel/Outsourced partner
recommendation
Reviews/recommendation sites
IT Publications Online
IT Publications Print
Vendor Websites
GermanyFranceUK
6.9
7.3
6.5
6.2
5.4
6.4
5.9
4.3
6.4
7. 7Technology Marketing Research 2015
Platform?
Lead, me?
How do ITDMs feel about being contacted (Fig 9). This is a big
question for technology marketers.
We asked:
Very few said they never expect to be contacted (Fig 9).
Although the numbers are still in the minority of total
respondents for each answer, there is a clear quid pro quo
for access in exchange for information, networking or trial
software.
Research we have conducted separately suggests this is all
about the ‘how’. Busy ITDMs have told us they are OK when
someone who is informed and truly useful calls them. Cold,
uninformed sales calls are what makes their blood boil.
And what methods are preferred? Telephone and email far
outstrip the older methods of post and face-to-face, as well as
those who are very hands-off or don’t have a preference
Fig 9: How do ITDMs feel about being contacted
GermanyFranceUK
post a download
post an event attendance
post registration for a free trial
I never expect to be contacted
by a vendor after anything
all of the above
24%
10%
9%
18%
33%
39%
17%
32%
12%
40%
19%
28%
6%
12%
What kind of platforms do you most frequently use
when researching solutions for your company?
Tablet, Smartphones, laptops, print publications,
or other?
GermanyFrance
18% | 10% | 28%
10% | 10% | 14%
10% | 7% | 26%
4%
2% | 0% | 8%
84% 97% 84%
UK
Other
Telephone
Print publications
PC/Laptop
Smartphone
Tablet
We wondered whether newer ways to consume
information such as smartphones and tablets
were making an impact on where ITDMs
research their information.
We found the traditional PC/laptop still rules1
.
Tablets and then smartphones are some way
behind. But remember that the tablet was
barely a category five years ago and these
mobile digital devices still do slightly better
than print and other channels.
When we asked the same question but
about signing up or contacting a vendor, the
proportions were similar but telephone and
other – which includes face-to-face – scored
higher.
Fig 10: What’s your preferred method of initial contact with vendor?
By email, by phone, post, or do you prefer to initiate the contact?
GermanyFranceUK
Face-to-face
I do not have a
preferred method
Never
By post
By email
By telephone 30%
44%
4%
22%
10%
4%
10%
6%
4%
37% 40%
63% 40%
2
This is backed up by other research. TechTarget’s 2015 Media Consumption Report found “laptops and desktops are the primary devices used to view IT-related content” (p41) and IDG’s 2014
Customer Engagement: The Role of Content in the IT Purchase Process % Connecting Content Marketing to Sales Follow Up report found Desktop/laptop computers are used for more time
each day (3.41 hours) than either smartphones (2.51) or tablets (1.51).
8. 8Technology Marketing Research 2015
When it comes to receiving
vendor emails, other studies
have shown some ITDMs use
personal or specifically-created
email accounts. IDG in its 2014
Customer Engagement report
found 27 per cent of ITDMs use
this tactic, which is worth noting
as vendors sometimes rely only
on email addresses to identify
the organisations expressing an
interest.
As we have long said, vendors
must respect the preferences of
all would-be customers. Some
frown on telemarketing or email
marketing but these have their
place when done well.
Shortlisting influences
Further along the IT procurement
journey, we asked our ITDMs to
identify what influences them
when deciding on shortlists
(Fig 11).
And lastly we looked at the most
important final selection factors.
Could it be that relationships
aren’t as important in the UK as in
France and Germany? We ask the
question after seeing the answer
for ‘Trust’ in Fig 122
.
Meanwhile, when it comes to
influences (Fig 13) above all
kinds of marketing what stands
out is the importance of vendor
personnel.
2
It should also be noted that ‘trust’ is a major factor in sources of information, not just for deciding one vendor over another. As such, technology media will point to its trusted position – which is
all the more important as vendor-owned channels such as brand publications and websites grow. IDG’s 2014 Customer Engagement report found “77 per cent of ITDMs report association with a
known, familiar source drives trust”.
Fig 11: What determines or influences what organisation you want to deal with
when shortlisting vendors and solutions?
GermanyFranceUK
Incumbent/legacy relationship
Channel partner recommendations
Case studies
Project team recommendations
Peer group recommendations
Specialist bloggers
Tech publications print
Tech publications online
Social presence
Online community
Vendor events face-to-face
Vendor events online
Vendor content via 3rd party
Vendor content on their website
Vendor pre-sales contact 24% 7% 30%
20%
14%
12%
10%
12% 14%
16% 14%
14% 14%
6% 7% 2%
26% 6%
24% 23% 18%
20% 17% 12%
10% 33% 12%
12% 7% 26%
10% 18%
20%
24%
7% 8%
32%
20% c%
27%
Fig 12: What is the single most important factor in determining what vendor to use
for your project?
GermanyFranceUK
Trust
Knowledge base
Reputation
Reliability
Cost vs Value
Compatibility with Business systems 18% 10% 2%
18% 3% 12%
14% 13% 6%
12%
10%
20% 10%
2%
7% 2%
Fig 13: Post negotiation, what are the most important factors for you before you
finally select a vendor?
GermanyFranceUK
Price/expertise
Quality of products/services
Project Delivery
Meet Needs
Tech publications print
Implementation Support
Specialist bloggers
Incumbent/legacy relationship
Vendor content via 3rd party
Tech publications online
Social presence
Online community
Vendor events online
Channel partner recommendations
Vendor events face-to-face
Case studies
Peer group recommendations
Project team recommendations
Vendor content on their website
Vendor pre-sales/sales/account
management contacts 32%27%18%
14% 26%
12%20%14%
10%
10%
14% 16%
6%30%4%
6% 18%
12%8%
10% 8%
10%8%
6% 12%
12%
10%
7%10%
6% 6%
17%
6%
10%
7%
6%
2% 3%
27% 4%
30% 6%
9. 9Technology Marketing Research 2015
Size matters?
While gathering vendor
information for a new project,
both large and small companies
in the UK tend to prefer spending
three months or less on research.
The same holds true in both
France and Germany, although
large companies in both countries
may spend longer doing so.
Similar responses were seen in
the negotiation process, where
both small and large companies
in all three countries tend to
prefer wrapping up talks in three
months or less; larger companies,
however, can often take longer
to negotiate deals, particularly
in Germany, where negotiations
are as likely to run between three
and nine months as they are to be
completed in three or less.
There is also a difference by
company size in the number of
assets that are downloaded. IDG’s
2014 Customer Engagement study,
albeit skewed more towards a US
sample base, found an average
of seven informational assets are
downloaded during the purchase
process but there was a split
between enterprise organisations
and SMBs, respectively eight
assets versus six.
The time it tends to take to
make a final purchase decision
also varies between large and
small companies in all three
countries we surveyed. In the UK
and Germany, both large and
small companies prefer to make
their final purchasing decisions
within three months, although
a significant proportion of each
takes longer. Small companies
in France strongly prefer coming
to a decision in three months or
less, while larger companies are
nearly as likely to take three to six
months in deliberations.
Channel?
Across the three markets, there
was quite a similar proportion
– about a 2:1 ratio – of ITDMs
preferring to work direct rather
than through a specialist partner.
The UK respondents prefer that
approach a little more than the
French, and the French a little
more than the Germans. But note
the use of ‘prefer’ – almost all will
use a mix of sourcing approaches
and won’t always get the delivery
they prefer.
Broken down by company
size, smaller companies (500
employees or fewer) in the UK
tended to prefer working with
vendors instead of partners (by
about 2.5 to 1) slightly more than
do larger enterprises (more than
500 employees), which show a 2
to 1 preference for vendors over
specialist partners.
In France, however, both small
and large companies prefer
vendors over partners by a ratio
of about 2 to 1. In Germany,
meanwhile, larger companies
prefer vendors over partners by a
ratio that is close to 2 to 1. That
preference is slightly less strong
among smaller companies.
When asked whether they
purchase business-critical
applications and services via
an outsourcing partner, smaller
companies in the UK express a
strong preference for doing so.
Larger companies, on the other
hand, are twice as likely to not
work with an outsourced partner.
In France, small companies are
about evenly split on whether
they do or don’t use an outsource
partner, while larger companies
prefer outsourcing by more than
a 3 to 1 margin. In Germany, both
small and large companies choose
more often not to purchase via
an outsourced partner, with the
preference slightly stronger for
large companies (more than 2 to
1 versus less than 2 to 1 for small
companies).
Fig 14: Do you generally prefer to work directly with a vendor or through a
specialist partner?
PartnerVendor
GermanyFranceUK
64%
60%
30%
38%
62%
26%
10. 10Technology Marketing Research 2015
As we turn our attention to
the technology marketers we
surveyed, we can say they skewed
senior (most common titles
were marketing manager and
marketing director) and older,
with under a third younger than
36 and 20 per cent aged 56 and
older. Just under half (44 per
cent) came from small companies
with fewer than 100 employees
and they represent all kinds of
technology sectors, including
hardware, software, cloud and
other services.
They tend to target larger
organisations but across most
vertical sectors.
Success?
These marketers are cognisant
of those who react best to their
messages and contact. The short
answer is they get better traction
with technical types – unless
they’re board-level, like most CIOs
and some IT directors (Fig A).
However, possibly the biggest
issue for them is the question of
which key performance indicators
(KPIs) they are asked to measure
and hit, as opposed to those they
are able to (Figs B and C).
That again differs to what they tell
us they can control.
When it comes to planning
cycles, quarterly planning is
most common. However, we
know from various research – not
only ours – that those who are
buying often operate against
much longer cycles, of even up
to 18 months. TechTarget’s 2015
Media Consumption Report found
a majority of IT purchases take
place in under three months but
theirs was of a sample skewed
towards SMBs and still a large
proportion of IT buying takes
place in the 3-6 month and 6-12
month brackets.
What’s perhaps more worrying is
that after top answer ‘quarterly’,
next came not ‘yearly’ but
‘monthly’ then ‘weekly’. If you’re
not being given enough time to
deliver results, the chances are
your peers are being given even
less.
3. How technology marketers think
IT purchasing works
Fig A: Which job function do you typically attempt to target in targeted companies?
Other
We do not typically attempt…
Board level IT
Board level
Business Head
Technical 51%
45%
100%
35%
8%
12%
Fig B: In your current role, which KPIs do you have to hit?
58%
49%
40%
38%
33%
33%
22%
4%
7%In my current role, there are no KPIs…
Other
Quantity of SQLs
Engagement Scores by prospect…
Quantity of MQLs
Thought leadership/perception
Pipeline Target
Awareness Growth
Revenue Target
Fig C: In reality, which of the following do you feel you can accurately measure?
47%
39%
31%
29%
27%
20%
14%
4%
2%Other
None of the above
Engagement Scores by
prospect/customers…
Quantity of SQLs
Thought leadership/perception
Pipeline target
Revenue Target
Quantity of MQLs
Awareness Growth
Fig D: What are the primary cycles you currently work to?
4%
12%
24%
27%
43%
Yearly
Quarterly
Monthly
Weekly
Daily
11. 11Technology Marketing Research 2015
Targeting
Do the TMs use different marketing tactics for different job titles? They do and across nearly all the ways they
try to influence the ITDMs (content, email, events, advertising etc.).
Fig E: Thinking of the previous tactics, which do you use for different audiences/job roles?
Telemarketing
Social
Research qual, quant, audience seg…
Print advertising
PR
Other
Online advertising
None
Events online webinar, demo, etc.
Events offline roundtables, seminar, etc.
Email marketing
Direct Marketing post mailing
Content syndication
IT Technical
Business Level
Board Level
18% 18%
22%
33%
29% 29%
44%
29%
27%
20%
16%
24%
21%
4%
2%
6%
33%
39%
39%
4%
31%
27%
29%
22%
24%
29%
45%
31%
16%
20%
20%
27%
18%
22%
20%
24%
20%
Marketing technology choices
What has been your organisation’s greatest marketing technology investment
Other
Social tools
Not sure
Content Management platform
Analytics
CRM
Email delivery/marketing platform
Automation 37%
24%
20%
14%
14%
6%
6%
2%
Marketing technology has seen a lot of investment in recent years, not least
from technology marketers. Our research identified the categories getting
the most investment. Top of the list came marketing automation, email
delivery platforms and CRM (first chart), though it wasn’t the same story when
respondents told us about how effective each had been in helping them hit
their objectives (second chart).
In each category, the leading suppliers were clear:
CRM – Salesforce.com
Email delivery/marketing platform – Marketo
Marketing automation – Marketo
Analytics – Google Analytics
Social tools - Hootsuite
The exception was in content management systems. Our view is that while
WordPress has evolved into the most common CMS, even among publishers
known for needing robust platforms, the enterprise CMS market is still
fragmented, with a mix of specialist platforms, use of other marketing software,
consumer-grade platforms and self-build bespoke.
There is one important footnote on
the media channels our respondents
mentioned. (For a comprehensive
look at technology media and B2B
technology marketing see our
report: Future of B2B Technology
Media report 2015.) Cost and reach
came out as the clear priorities,
above even editorial style and
guaranteed response (Fig F).
This is in line with the growth
in spend on areas such as
programmatic advertising and
network-based media spend
over traditional first-party media
purchases. Their lower unit cost
enables a larger audience to be
reached.
Social tools
Analytics
Content Management Platform
Automation
Email delivery/Marketing platform
CRM
How effective has the implementation of the following factors been in terms of enabling
you to hit your objectives? (Marked out of 10.)
7.0
7.0
6.8
6.4
6.2
5.8
Fig F: What factors do you consider when
deciding on which media tactics to use?
59%
63%
47%
39%
6%
10%Other
No special factors
Guaranteed Response
Editorial Style
Reach
Cost
12. 12Technology Marketing Research 2015
Social
Social media isn’t universally used
by our sample (Fig G).
This could be a factor of age – we
expect younger marketers to be
more active on social media – but
also it’s an improvement on our
snapshot two years ago, when 53
per cent of respondents told us
social was ‘Not very important’.
An IBM study on B2B marketing
released in March 20153
found
that both Millennial and Gen X
buyers tend to value social media
contacts with vendors more than
do Baby Boomers. The survey
found that 41 per cent of younger
Millennials (21 to 25 years of age)
use social media to connect with
vendors. Among older Millennials
(ages 26 to 34), only 18 per cent
prefer to do so.
Also different is the rise of
Facebook, where every kind
of audience – not least B2B
technology – can be targeted.
Facebook has moved from third
to clear first place for our TMs.
Twitter remains second. The big
loser is LinkedIn, falling from first
to third place.
Looking more broadly at the
numbers around social media
platforms, it’s not that LinkedIn
is doing badly – it is growing as
a company – just that for our
audience it is doing less well than
Twitter and especially Facebook.
Perhaps one indication about
social’s relative immaturity is
that more than twice as many
marketers told us ‘We do not
measure the ROI/effectiveness
of social media campaigns’
as the next closest answer on
measurement criteria, namely
‘engagement’.
Fig G: How active would you say you are in terms of Social Media?
Don't utilize
Seldom use
Very
Occasionally 24%
37%
18%
2%
3
http://www.marketingprofs.com/charts/2015/27408/b2b-buyeing-millennials-vs-gen-x-baby-boomers
13. 13Technology Marketing Research 2015
What does this all mean? As
always, there is a disconnect
between those who are buying
IT and those working for vendors
who are marketing what vendors
sell. Sometimes this difference
isn’t critical – an example would
be in the still maturing area of
social media marketing – but
other times it is.
One example of the latter that our
research highlights is the way TMs
are evaluated – on quarterly or
even shorter cycles. At the same
time, many buyers are working
to much longer purchase cycles,
as they need to for such big and
complex investments.
There is also a dumbing down,
by the whole industry, on the
nature of decision-making and
who does it. It is easy for everyone
to become obsessed with the
CIO – or even the CMO in the very
recent past4
, for some categories.
But IT managers are much more of
a sweet spot.
Even then, IT managers are part of
a team (Fig 6) where different job
roles come to the fore at different
times (Fig 7).
Where should TMs allocate their
budgets? Their own assets are
critical. We saw (Fig 11) that their
websites and content are key.
You could make phone calls and
emails part of that argument too
(Fig 10).
Definitely indisputable is the
importance of a vendor’s pre-
sales/sales account management
people. They’re not what most
people would normally class
as a marketing asset but, in a
world where ‘Our people are our
greatest asset’ is usually a cliché,
in this case it would seem to be
true.
4. Buyers and marketers must be aligned -
some conclusions
4
http://www.computing.co.uk/ctg/news/2350509/transform-2014-cios-will-lose-control-to-the-cmo-as-internet-of-things-and-big-data-explode
14. 14Technology Marketing Research 2015
(i) Synchronise buying cycles and
marketing
This might well be easier said than
done but our research showed
IT decisions take months while
technology marketers have a
much shorter time to show how
effective they and their campaigns
have been. This is a shift that
needs to take place across the
industry.
(ii) Don’t write-off the IT manager
While not the most senior IT
decision-maker, the IT manager
represents the sweet spot for
most technology marketers. By
all means know which job titles
to target at different stages of
the buying journey but don’t be
tempted into ignoring this core
role.
(iii) Owned assets
While it is easy to get wrapped up
in analysing traditional media or
newer social media, what shined
through is the importance of
things any vendor controls. That’s
everything from websites and
email lists to meeting people at
events. As such, tactics for getting
people to those destinations or
in front of your sales team are
important.
(iv) How to contact
Rarely do ITDMs say they never
want to be contacted. What
they do report is shockingly
naïve cold calls or contact
just hours or minutes after an
asset such as a white paper has
been downloaded. Reach out
intelligently to ITDMs with agents
who know what they’re talking
about – who are happy to listen
and be useful. Understand and
nurture before selling.
(v) Europe isn’t all the same
Our research again highlights
that procurement takes place
differently by country. No vendor
should have a European strategy
that doesn’t take that into
account, though we come across
monolithic approaches all too
often.
(vi) Social media – don’t write it
off
Don’t assume social media is a low
priority or even irrelevant for B2B
technology buyers and marketers.
It will rise in importance over the
years and already plays its part
among younger ITDMs. Don’t write
it off before it’s really even got
going.
(vii) Understand your targets
Perhaps above all else, never
make assumptions about ITDMs.
The roles are evolving, as are
the ways ITDMs behave. Keep on
studying, keep on seeking insights,
be open to new ways of reaching
and influencing them.
5. Takeaways: What should tech
marketers do?
15. 15Technology Marketing Research 2015
We contacted European ITDMs in France, Germany and the UK at the start of 2015. We also surveyed a mix of
EMEA marketers working for various technology vendors.
Kingpin adheres to the Market Research Society (MRS) code of conduct. All information is fully protected and
is not weighted in any way.
For more information about our methodology please contact the Kingpin Market Research Team.
6. Appendix