
Marketers are remarkably
sanguine about their business this year -- despite a plethora of concerns, according to Marketing Trends For A New Era, a study released Friday by SurveyMonkey.
Of those polled, 94% are
optimistic. But 87% are concerned about the elimination of third-party cookies, to name one issue. And 57% fear this will have a major impact.
While the overall outlook is bright,
marketers are more wary about many problems than they were in 2023.
For instance, 50% are challenged by increasing performance expectations. That is 5% more than last year’s
result.
Moreover, 49% are concerned about changes in tools and software, versus 33% in ‘23. In addition, 40% cite tighter deadlines, compared to 29% in the prior
year.
Another 48% are sweating about changes in strategy/directions, up from 39% last year. And 46% have anxiety about the changes in economic outlook, a 5%
increase.
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Oddly, the only worry that has seen improvement is that of reduced budgets—36% are troubled by it, down from 38%.
Thus, you can expect to
see marketers moving ahead on all fronts.
“Every channel is important right now—social, websites, email—even old-school techniques, like sign-up forms, newsletters, and
direct mail are getting dusted off,” the study states.
That said, marketers cite their top goals as:
- More personalized
marketing effects — 55%
- Strengthening relationships with customers — 53%
- Increased adoption of AI — 48%
- Expanded
usage of internal data and insights — 46%
AI is seen as a potentially valuable tool.
From generating content, like blog posts, slides, or social media, to
optimizing SEO and email campaigns; around half of marketers are looking forward to applying AI to all use cases we asked about,” the study says.
The main uses of AI are:
- Optimizing content — 51%
- Creating content — 50%
- Brainstorming
content—45%
- Automating tasks — 43%
- Analyzing data for insights —
41%
- Conducting research — 40%
That aside, marketers rank these factors as essential to their success:
- Access to tools and resources — 44%
- Access to data and insights — 43%
- Innovative company culture —
41%
- Influence in decision-making — 41%
- Autonomy in decision-making — 39%
- Efficient processes —
39%
- Buy-in from stakeholders and leadership — 33%
And one more hopeful thing: 49% have programs in place to
deal with the loss of third-party cookies, and 41% are working on it.
SurveyMonkey Surveyed 1,127 workers in the U.S., including 507 marketing professionals. These include 103 brand
marketers, 278 digital marketers, 119 product marketers and seven general marketers.