B2B marketing budgets have gone up at least slightly in 2023. But there have been cutbacks in several areas, including personnel, and 66% of marketers are suffering from burnout, according to The
State of B2B Marketing Budgets, a study by Integrate.
Only 11% of U.S respondents are significantly expanding their budgets over those of 2022. Another 34% say they are slightly
higher.
Budgets are being impacted by these factors (or fears):
- Economic recession — 48%
- Competitive forces — 46%
- Rising interest rates — 44%
- Inflation — 42%
- World
geopolitical instability — 29%
- Supply chain disruptions — 27%
- Changing opportunity —
23%
On a practical level, 45% say their main challenge is using data to inform decisions and/or measure marketing performance.
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The marketing
areas most negatively affected by budget/hiring changes, some of which would hit email units, are:
- Content creation/strategy —
49%
- Customer marketing — 44%
- Field or event marketing — 35%
- Marketing
ops/technology — 34%
- Product marketing — 32%
- Communications — 29%
- Demand generation — 25%
- Digital — 25%
- ABM — 20%
- New verticals
— 19%
- Sales enablement — 13%
Drilling down, the areas specifically targeted for less spending are:
- Field or event marketing — 20%
- Content creation/strategy — 18%
- Product marketing/strategy —
18%
- Communications — 18%
The cuts are having an effect. Here is how B2B brands are adapting to layoffs or
budget reductions:
- Travel budget cuts — 51%
- Consolidating teams/jobs — 49%
- Relying
on agencies — 36%
- Relying on contractors — 35%
- Closing offices —
20%
- Other coping strategies — 6%
On the positive side, the main areas of marketing investment are content
marketing strategy, customer marketing and marketing ops/technology. Overall, 68% report meeting or exceeding their growth targets.
Companies are spending more
on:
- Marketing ops/technology — 44%
- Customer marketing — 39%
- Product marketing/strategy —
37%
- Sales enablement — 37%
Given the nature of these initiatives, there should be some money trickling down to email teams.
Of those polled, 67% will focus on buyer-driven cross-channel campaigns, followed by inbound-always on (57), outbound/demand generation (54%) and ABM/ABX (36%).
Most of
the respondents seem satisfied with their martech stack — 28% say it supports them very well and 37% simply say it supports them well.
Another 23% are neutral, while only 12% say martech
is helping them poorly, with 3% saying it does so very poorly.
Some marketers say they suffer from redundancies in their tech stack -- 48% to a great or very great extent and 27% to some
extent.
That said, 33% of marketers surveyed expect their martech stacks to grow through addition of new solutions this year, and 48% say it will stay the same except for
maintenance/upgrades. Another 19% will reduce the size through consolidation/elimination.