The latest news from the Mad Marketer Online Community. To be successful in today's high-tech landscape, marketers have to pretty much forget everything they know about traditional marketing. That may be a gross overstatement but, nevertheless, the point is that marketers need to rethink their takes on marketing to accommodate the ever-evolving world of technology and how it drives sales.
Let's be honest: If you're consistently producing large amounts of copy for a creative agency, it's not a matter of if—but when—you run out of creative fuel. It happens to just about everyone. One week, you'll be cruising along with a full content calendar and plenty of ideas, and the next, you'll find your well of creative ideas has run dry. The trick is to not get discouraged when this happens but, rather, to embrace the creative struggle. This job forces you to be resilient and resourceful, too.
There are many moving parts to take into consideration with every one of your marketing campaigns. Whether it's obtaining actionable data insights to gain a clearer understanding of your target market, segmenting your audience to engender personalized campaigns, or trying to successfully collaborate with your sales department to gain a rounded view of the buying cycle, there's a great deal of legwork that goes into launching an effective campaign.
Knowledge, as they say, is power. And a growing number of businesses and marketing departments now understand the value of leveraging data to more effectively engage customers. But, as you're probably already aware, this kind of thing is not as easy as it sounds. An infographic recently released by a marketing platform and media optimization company called Yieldr tells the story. On the surface, an agile marketing team is about what it sounds like: a marketing team that's sufficiently flexible and comparatively unencumbered by bureaucracy that it can respond better to trends in the field and get the most out of these. But there's a lot more to it than the surface definition, and that's a point worth noting for those companies that want to make an agile marketing team a reality. |
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