
B2B brands are at least reasonably proficient at
automation, judging by the State of B2B Marketing Automation, a study from Act-On, conducted in partnership with Ascend2.
Of the companies polled, 34% rate themselves as very successful
at automation, and 62% as somewhat so. Only 4% say they are unsuccessful.
And brands are increasing their marketing automation budgets — 19%
significantly and 56% moderately — for a total of 75%.
How far have they gotten with automation? They say they are:
- Partially automated —
49%
- Mostly automated — 40%
- Fully automated — 11%
Yet they face many
challenges:
- Creating an overall strategy — 51%
- Collecting quality data — 49%
- Allocating budget and resources — 43%
- Integrating technologies/data — 42%
- Building effective customer/buying journeys —
41%
- Identifying better metrics to gauge success — 34%
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Email tops the uses of B2B marketing automation:
- Email
marketing — 57%
- Social media management — 47%
- Content management —
39%
- Paid ads — 34%
- SMS marketing — 33%
- Landing pages —
30%
- Live chat — 29%
- Campaign tracking — 29%
- Workflows/visualization — 25%
- Account-based marketing — 29%
- Sales funnel communications — 23%
- SEO efforts —
23%
- Dynamic web forms — 21%
- Push notifications — 19%
- Lead
scoring — 17%
These are their primary goals for the year ahead:
- Improve data quality — 44%
- Identify your ideal customers (or best
prospects) — 41%
- Increase personalization — 38%
- Decrease costs — 35%
- Create or optimize overall strategy —
33%
- Integrate technologies/data — 29%
- Increase automation across the customer journey — 29%
- Identify better metrics to
gauge success — 22%
B2B companies are also using AI for:
- Targeting audiences — 43%
- Analytics and reporting —
41%
- Personalization — 36%
- Email marketing — 35%
- Content
creation — 35%
- Customer service — 29%
- Lead generation and qualification — 37%
Meanwhile, 33%
strongly agree that automation helps them build effective customer journeys, while 59% somewhat agree, and 49% strongly disagree.
Act-On and Ascend2 surveyed 207 B2B
marketing professionals across various industries. Of these, 44% are at the C-level/executive level, 43% are VP/director/manager level, and 13% are at the non-management level.