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Question 1: I'm in Marketing. IT doesn't get it. They can't or won't respond quick enough
for our internet marketing strategy. In short … they’re non-creative
geek-weenies.
Question 2: I'm in IT.
They're KBs! (knuckle-boneheads). They are never realistic when it comes to
their expectations. My budget has been shrunk 40% (which they don’t seem to care
about or consider) and they don't even include me in their online marketing
strategy until they need it executed.
Answered by: Dana VanDen Heuvel
- a business weblog consultant who helps individuals and
companies develop and deploy weblog strategies. |
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This is not an atypical of relationships between
corporate IT and Marketing.
What’s really being talked about is:
Bridging the
Chasm Between IT and Internet Marketing
During the late ’80s and early ’90s, many companies, in an effort to facilitate
the creation of their internet presence, shifted control of the website and
internet technologies from their IT department to their marketing, or e-commerce
department. “They wanted us to be fast, nimble, and completely unencumbered by
the bureaucratic processes that existed in the IT department,” said one
e-commerce director. Many executives were sold on the idea that current IT
department procedures simply wouldn’t fly in the internet space – we needed to
be much, much faster than that.
For many
companies, this proved to be a great strategy. Nimble e-commerce groups created
websites and strategies quickly and started producing almost immediate results.
However, this approach has lost its luster over the past few years as IT
departments are finding their budgets shrinking and staff stagnating. In some
companies where the IT department has not had a significant hand in internet
strategy and website development, a great deal of animosity has grown on the
part of IT managers toward anything “internet,” including internet marketing.
Migrating from an exclusionary mindset to a collaborative mindset is not
something that comes easily to some companies. Egos, politics, logistics, and
relationships are usually altered in the process. Countless companies are still
hobbled by the lack of communication between IT and marketing, inefficient
vendor relationships, and archaic processes, all of which compromise customer
service. Sure, there are positives to the aforementioned separatist strategy,
but there are countless negatives, as many companies have recently discovered.
The tide is slowly turning toward cooperation as marketers realize they cannot
go it alone anymore in the internet space
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the customers and the technology simply move too fast.
Who’s to blame for this? Both marketing leaders who
do not understand the need for soliciting cross-functional support and IT
leaders who fail to bridge communication gaps across functional teams play a
role in creating the gap that separates IT from marketing.
A new study recently done in the UK by CatchFIRE Systems reported that nearly
three quarters of IT departments are not involved in the initial planning stages
of online marketing campaigns, leading to 24% of UK organizations suffering from
web overloads and site crashes. Sound familiar? It does to me, I can recall
bringing down our web servers SEVERAL times when we began doing e-mail marketing
before I thought to involve the IT department.
The study goes on to indicate that almost 75% of those organizations surveyed
admitted to not knowing how many users the corporate website could support.
Even worse, over 60% were unaware of how many users were leaving websites with
incomplete transactions, and barely 1 in 10 could put a figure on the consequent
monetary losses to their organization. These statistics underscore the basic
problem: how can we act as goodwill ambassadors to our customers when we do not
have an adequate technical understanding of the tools that are at our disposal?
Any good sales manager knows how many calls the sales staff can make in a day,
week, or month. Yet, the average marketing manager hasn’t taken the time to
inquire about how many visitors the website can handle in a day. This status
quo clearly indicates the need for increased contact between IT and marketing.
Results and relations would improve appreciably if marketing were to send a
representative to IT project meetings and IT were to assign a technical liaison
to each marketing team. Even involving an IT developer in a weekly sales and
marketing planning meeting will have a beneficial impact. While the developer
may have little understanding of marketing concepts like CPM, CPA, ROMI, and
what have you, at least he can give an honest answer on whether your current CRM
technology can handle the sales management mandates or reporting requirements.
The average IT person can also bring your meeting back to earth in a hurry when
you casually suggest launching your next product via a worldwide webcast of a
real-time speech from your CEO and an exclusive Rolling Stones concert to
millions of viewers.
At the end of the day, your sales and marketing team needs
an embedded IT team member, especially if you are placing a great deal of
emphasis on CRM, internet marketing and your website to drive your sales
numbers. Moreover, if you have designs on ANY integration of your CRM, ERP
systems and your web presence, you’re in a far better position with an IT person
on board than if you try to go it alone or make that integration happen through
the flavor-of-the-month vendor that you’ve hired for the job.
If you’re scratching your head on how to get more involved
with IT, or what all the elements are in the equation, here are 10 points to
consider when engaging your IT department.
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Treat
IT like a partner. Your IT department is not a vendor to which you can give
orders. Seek the department’s input. An IT solution is a tool that requires
technical input and information sharing.
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Embed IT personnel into your team. If possible,
have IT and marketing staffs sit nearby so they can get a sense of each other's
day-to-day activities and concerns. Have an IT person go on several sales calls
to get a better sense of a rep’s daily needs.
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Choose a project champion to lead both the IT and
marketing aspects of a project, regardless of whether they are from the business
or technical side. Also, get executive sponsors from both departments. Nothing
kills an initiative faster than a lack of upper-management support.
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Share funding between all departments that will
realistically benefit from the IT project, rather than placing the financial
burden on a single department.
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Cross-train individuals on
basic technology and marketing skills, or encourage the migration of tech-savvy
marketers or business-savvy techies to the other side.
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Develop shared metrics for
IT and internet marketing. IT is usually concerned about ROI and seeing
projects implemented, while marketing wants leads, sales, and conversion.
Develop metrics in tandem that apply equally to the objectives of each
department.
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Use
collaborative-management tools. By using a project extranet, shared MS project
files, or a project weblog, members of both teams can be kept up- to-date on
projects.
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Build for CRM. Consider
how you will be using the data that you will be collecting, and how it can be
integrated with both existing and future systems, tools, processes, and
initiatives. Don’t collect information in a vacuum, even worse, miss
opportunities to collect it.
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Forge vendor relationships together. If marketing
is going to be using an ASP for e-mail marketing or web analytics, involve the
IT folks in the decision and implementation to extract the most value from the
tools.
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Work out an SLA (Service
Level Agreement) between the parties. IT has many projects on its plate and
marketers are almost never on time. Make sure the SLA requirements and
expectations are clearly and unambiguously defined, along with measurement
criteria, consequences, and performance monitoring contingencies. This will help
keep things honest and serve to sustain consistent levels of expectation.
If
you’re a marketing consultant and you’re reading this thinking, “Whew, glad I
don’t have to deal with that stuff,” think again. If you’re in a meeting with a
client during the advanced stages of an internet marketing campaign that will
have a significant impact on site traffic or the IT infrastructure, you will
need to make sure that your client has involved their IT partner in the planning
of the initiative.
Are
you ready to start working together with your IT department? It’s amazing, how
little it actually takes to build a strong bridge between your IT and marketing
camps, when everyone is focused on the needs of the customer.
Links to article sources and
additional resources on the web:
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Communication Chasm Between IT and Marketing to Blame
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Marketing Campaigns “Can Paralyze Websites”
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MARKETING and IT Don't Talk
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Bridging the Gap: Marketing Versus IT
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The
Weenies vs. the Geeks: Bridging the Gap Between Marketing and IT
About Dana: Dana VanDen Heuvel is a business weblog consultant helping individuals and
companies develop and deploy weblog strategies. He can be reached at
www.blogsavant.com, via e-mail at
dana@blogsavant.com, or via phone at
920-819-0742.
Dana VanDen Heuvel
Interactive Marketing & Sales Technology
920-819-0742 Direct/Cell
dana@danavan.net
www.danavan.net
Visit www.danavan.net/blog for up-to-the-minute insights on Interactive Marketing & Sales Technology.
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