Despite hype to the contrary, B2B brands are not using first-party data to drive email, personalization and other marketing chores, judging by “Revtech Rises to Meet the Moment,” a
study conducted this autumn by Dun & Bradstreet, working with Censuswide Research.
This problem will worsen as third-party data sources are increasingly cut off, even in B2B. Half of the
respondents are still using third-party data.
At present, B2B brands deploy first-party data for these purposes:
- Marketing segmentation —
41%
- Sales outreach — 37%
- Advertising — 36%
- Analytics — 36%
- Email automation — 35%
- Personalization of web content — 33%
- Sales territory planning — 33%
What are the main obstacles to use of first-party data?
- The cost of new technology — 23%
- Disrupting current operations
— 21%
- Gaining executive support — 20%
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It apparently it is no small chore to integrate first-party data throughout an organization. The
respondents report that:
- First-party data is integrated consistently into systems and platforms across the organization, and is shared broadly so anyone on the GTM team has a view
into an account — 37.2%
- First-party data is integrated into the systems/platforms that need it, not shared broadly but the people/teams that need it have it —
30.1%
- First-party data is scattered and siloed — 30.7%
The answer, the study suggests, is in Revtech, a technology that
will “allow revenue teams to integrate data and insights, build audiences, activate campaigns, personalize engaging experiences, and measure results.”
Meanwhile, B2B brands
use these data attributes to drive a personalized experience:
- Predictive indicators — 57%
- Basic contact
information such as name and company name — 55%
- First-party data such as website behavior and which content they consumed —
54%
- Intent data — 51%
- Third-party data from outside providers — 50%
Remote workplaces are an obstacle to identifying in-market buyers for 76%. But that’s no excuse, as some companies are simply “not using the data attributes that are necessary to
drive effective personalization,” the study notes.
Meanwhile, 64% of market leaders — those on top of their game — have complete confidence in their ability to deliver a
personalized experience across all digital channels, including email, websites, social, chatbots, video, SEO, PPC and other channels.
Sadly, only small percentages of the remainder are
confident in these areas:
- Having timely customer data (website engagement, buying behavior) — 34%
- Segmenting their sales/,marketing data —
33%
- Prioritizing in-market buyers based on behavior (intent), or propensity to buy — 32%
- Identifying in-market buyers —
26%
Censuswide Research surveyed 605 marketing decision-makers between September 9 and October 1. Dun & Bradstreet was not identified in the survey.