Technology is a big part of how data gets used in ad targeting. Here's a reprint of a recent post that examines the relationship between marketers and ad-tech vendors:I was fortunate
enough to speak to a leading CMO the other day, and it opened my eyes to the problem
marketers have with tech. Every other headline will extol the virtues of a platform or tool -- and every other survey pours scorn on marketers that have yet to see the error of their traditional ways
and invest in the most modern gizmo.
Until you have talked with a CMO about the complexities of technology and the sheer deluge of information they are confronted with, it's difficult to
see it from their point of view. Once you can see it from their perspective, however, it's enough to make you wonder whether there is a problem in the first place and whether, just sometimes, the
tools they are using are sufficient for what they need.
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It also makes you ask a more fundamental question: When will someone conduct a survey that shows CMOs actually get the technology
they're supposed to be buying? When will someone put the shoe on the other foot and suggest it's the vendors who are often at fault for why more CMOs are not being a hasty path to their door?
So the feedback I got was that a couple of years ago, a CMO would get maybe one call a day from vendors, and perhaps half a dozen a week. Today they're getting half a dozen or more every day, as
every eager salesperson tries to push them up their conversion funnel.
Not only is it unmanageable -- but again, the feedback is that while some salespeople are very accomplished at explaining
what they have to sell, many are not. Some can be patronizing with their sales patter. The majority find it hard to grasp that the CMO they're talking to probably knows a lot more about the field than
they do. It's that age-old need that salespeople often miss out on: nature's equation is two ears and one mouth, so always listen twice as hard as you talk.
The picture that I was opened
up to, then, was patronizing salespeople who cannot frame what they're selling in normal terms. There always has to be some newfangled description that makes CMOs furrow their brows in confusion.
This problem is not always the case -- there are excellent professionals out there, but it seems they are in danger of being drowned out by the dross.
Top marketing executives have been
around long enough to know snake oil when it's presented to them -- and they've been on the end of so many calls that go all around the woods until they realize the other person is actually trying to
sell something pretty simple, if only that would be how they explained it.
This was summed up by to me as young salespeople simply trying to sell tools on the basis of their go-faster stripes
rather than getting down to detail and showing a CMO what their tech can do and how it can be built around the CMO's business.
This point is crucial. In the age of the cloud, there seems to be
a step back by some vendors from personal service.
Not everyone wants to tap into the same tools in the same way. Some prefer to have a team come in and build a system around how they operate
so it suits them, rather than the other thousands of users who log in to the cloud each day.
This isn't based on a massive survey -- just a conversation that, alongside some others, confirms
that it would be useful for researchers to just put the boot on the other foot. Instead of lambasting CMOs for not "getting it" and choosing to stick with what they know best, maybe a survey is needed
to look at why this amazing technology is not always selling in the numbers it would if more marketers took the bait on sales calls.