B2B marketers are seem reasonably satisfied with their tech stacks. But they face challenges when adding new systems, according to Marketing Technology Implementation From the B2B Perspective, a
study by RollWorks, in partnership with Ascend2.
Of the companies polled, 52% say their marketing technology is very good at improving performance. But 44% feel it is only somewhat
effective, and 4% say it is unsuccessful.
That leaves “48% of those surveyed reporting less-than-adequate technology stacks under delivering on goals set for them,” the study
notes.
Their main challenges are:
- Executing a strategy — 43%
- Determining appropriate technologies — 43%
- Budget constraints —
37%
- Internal adoption — 34%
- Training staff — 34%
- Integration with existing stack — 33%
- Organizational buy-in —
28%
- Attribution — 12%
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But those hurdles aren’t stopping them — 79% are increasing their budget for adding new marketing technology this year, 20%
significantly and 59% moderately. Only 6% expect a decrease, and 15% foresee no change.
The respondents list these goals:
- Improving marketing technology —
49%
- Improving data quality — 41%
- Improving customer journey — 39%
- Increasing ROI — 32%
- Streamlining workflows —
28%
- Improving marketing attribution — 26%
- Integrating data — 25%
- Accommodating a new product or service — 23%
- Removing
redundancies — 9%
And which technologies do they see as having the most impact on marketing strategy in the next year? They include:
- Real-time marketing —
43%
- Artificial intelligence (AI) — 41%
- Customer Data Platforms (CDP) — 35%
- Analytics — 35%
- Data consolidated —
28%
- Programmatic — 26%
- Multi-touch attribution — 24%
- Blockchain — 21%
- Voice search — 15%
The
respondents believe in regular evaluation of technology—39% at least quarterly, 32% at least monthly and 19% twice annually. In addition, 7% believe in doing it once annually, and 3% at other
frequencies.
What do firms look for when evaluating new marketing technologies?
- Ease of use —47%
- Ability to customize — 37%
- Insights and
analysis — 35%
- Ability to automate — 34%
- Associated costs — 33%
- Ability to integrate with existing stack — 30%
- Scalability
— 28%
- Data governance — 21%
- Dashboards and visualization — 11%
In a related finding, 91% agree it is essential for a new marketing
technology to be easily implemented into the existing stack, with 52% strongly concurring.
Ascend2 surveyed a panel of marketing influencers and research subscribers.