I consider myself something of a digital media traditionalist, but some folks think of me as a disrupter. As with anything in life, the opinion is in the eye of the beholder. Let me
explain.
I view digital media as a toy. Media is like Legos. It’s fun to play with. You can create so many different things, and while there are certainly plans you can
follow, you can also have free play and construct original things.
To me, that's the core of optimization. Optimization tells you that what you built can be changed.
Optimization is flexibility and freedom to craft new ways of engaging your audience even after you’ve already done the upfront media planning to identify how, when, where, and with what message
you are going to engage with them.
I find it interesting, and maybe even a little bit funny, that most big companies don’t think of optimization in this way. They view optimization
as a dirty word.
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Most big enterprise companies talk about dashboards and marketing performance reviews in terms of monthly or quarterly business reviews. I tend to think of optimization as
multiple touches per week in a more agile fashion.
Agile is nothing more than being nimble and relying on access to data to engage as a team and make decisions. Being agile means you
make decisions and read the results. If you are optimizing for a response-oriented or direct-marketing campaign, your data is more immediate and based on engagement. f you are optimizing a
brand campaign, you are looking at reach, targeted delivery, and website traffic to help you understand the short-term impact while you wait for longer-term brand metrics. In both cases, there's
data to be reviewed and decisions to be made.
Enterprise marketing teams are not typically set up to think like this. They often have many campaigns live and many initiatives in motion
at the same time, so resources are stretched. Smaller companies are more focused, probably running tighter campaign architectures with more immediate access to data.
The trick in a
big company is to set up the structure like a small one and create little teams empowered to look at data, make decisions and move forward accordingly. In that way, the teams get set up for
optimization, and the concept transforms from a dirty word into a motivator to drive ROI.
I find that teams who feel empowered, and who are created to act like little start-ups, are the
teams who win.
Allowing teams to make decisions and supporting them, even if they turn out to be incorrect, is how you fuel growth. That last point is key. You will note I didn't
say “allowing teams to be wrong.” Empowerment does not mean you're OK with being wrong. Wrong implies that a mistake was made.
Being incorrect is different. It
means you empowered someone to make an informed decision, and that decision turned out to be incorrect, so you go back and make a different decision based on that additional input of data.
Decisions can be undone.
Being incorrect is part of optimization, and that's probably why companies view it as a dirty word. They have confused optimization and empowerment with allowing
people to be wrong.
Sit back as we enter the new year and think about whether you are empowering your teams to be incorrect, allowed to look at data and make optimizations, or whether you are
stifling their chance to take ownership and lead. A little loosening of the decision-making process can have a positive exponential impact -- and optimization may no longer be a dirty word.