Apply software-inspired management concepts to accelerate modern marketing
In many ways, modern marketing has more in common with the software profession than it does with classic marketing management. As surprising as that may sound, it's the natural result of the world going digital. Marketing must move faster, adapt more quickly to market feedback, and manage an increasingly complex set of customer experience touchpoints. All of these challenges are shaped by the dynamics of software-from the growing number of technologies in our own organizations to the global forces of the Internet at large.
But you can turn that to your advantage. And you don't need to be technical to do it.
Hacking Marketing will show you how to conquer those challenges by adapting successful management frameworks from the software industry to the practice of marketing for any business in a digital world. You'll learn about agile and lean management methodologies, innovation techniques used by high-growth technology companies that any organization can apply, pragmatic approaches for scaling up marketing in a fragmented and constantly shifting environment, and strategies to unleash the full potential of talent in a digital age.
Marketing responsibilities and tactics have changed dramatically over the past decade. This book now updates marketing management to better serve this rapidly evolving discipline.
- Increase the tempo of marketing's responsiveness without chaos or burnout
- Design "continuous" marketing programs and campaigns that constantly evolve
- Drive growth with more marketing experiments while actually reducing risk
- Architect marketing capabilities in layers to better scale and adapt to change
- Balance strategic focus with the ability to harness emergent opportunities
As a marketer and a manager, Hacking Marketing will expand your mental models for how to lead marketing in a digital world where everything-including marketing-flows with the speed and adaptability of software.
Autorentext
SCOTT BRINKER is the editor of the popular Chief Marketing Technologist blog (chiefmartec.com), where he covers topics at the intersection of marketing and technology, and he is the program chair of the MarTech conference series. He is also the cofounder and CTO of ion interactive, a marketing software company that serves leading brands such as Dell, DHL, Dun & Bradstreet, eHealth, General Mills, Iron Mountain, Paychex, Pearson, and Symantec.
Klappentext
Marketing management is racing to keep pace with the technological advances that are disrupting how customers connect and interact with brands. Instead of planning and producing a few big campaigns, marketers today must design and operate an explosion of continuous marketing touchpoints that evolve as quickly as their organization can manage. Marketing's speed, adaptability, and ability to balance innovation and scalability in this highly fluid, digital environment have become key factors in a company's competitiveness.
How can marketing managers master these new dynamics? In many ways, modern marketing now shares a surprising number of characteristics with contemporary software development. Hacking Marketing reveals the fascinating parallels between these two disciplinesand shows how marketers, even with no technical background, can borrow and adapt successful ideas from software management to lead marketing more effectively in a digital world.
Written by one of the industry's foremost experts on the interplay between marketing and technology, Hacking Marketing is a nontechnical guide to managing marketing with a new generation of digitally native practices and frameworks. In a conversational style, it walks through pragmatic solutions to the challenges of increasing agility without losing strategic focus, accelerating marketing experimentation without sacrificing scalable operations, and empowering a more independent and distributed workforce without disconnecting executive leadership.
Whether you're an experienced marketing manager updating your skill set or a newcomer looking to gain a foothold in the current marketplace, keep this one-of-a-kind resource of convenient, authoritative information at your side for its:
- Thoroughly clarifying primer on agile marketing, including fundamental concepts of iterative and incremental management, workflow strategies, team dynamics, and more
- Practical guidance for shaping marketing programs in a world of digital experience touchpoints, including working in perpetual beta, collaborative design, interactive content, and big testing
- Everyday tactics for managing the dichotomy between innovation and scalability, including a two-pronged approach to stability and agility, an easy-to-use pace layering model, and strategies for avoiding the pitfalls of complexity
Hacking Marketing expands your mind-set and skill set for cutting-edge marketing leadership in a digital world where everything flows with the speed and adaptability of software.
Inhalt
Introduction ix
I Marketing Digital Software 1
1 Hacking is a Good Thing 3
2 Marketing is a Digital Profession 9
3 What Exactly Are Digital Dynamics? 15
4 Marketing is Now Deeply Entwined with Software 25
5 Marketers Are Software Creators Now 31
6 Parallel Revolutions in Software and Marketing 37
7 Adapting Ideas from Software to Marketing 47
II Agility 53
8 The Origins of Agile Marketing 55
9 From Big Waterfalls to Small Sprints 65
10 Increasing Marketing's Management Metabolism 75
11 Think Big, but Implement Incrementally 85
12 Iteration = Continuous Testing and Experimentation 95
13 Visualizing Work and Workflow to Prevent Chaos 105
14 Tasks as Stories along the Buyer's Journey 117
15 Agile Teams and Agile Teamwork 129
16 Balancing Strategy, Quality, and Agility 143
17 Adapting Processes, Not Just Productions 155
III Innovation 161
18 Moving Marketing from Communications to Experiences 163
19 Marketing in Perpetual Beta with an Innovation Pipeline 173
20 Collaborative Designs and the Quest for New Ideas 183
21 Big Testing is More Important Than Big Data 193
IV Scalability 205
22 Bimodal Marketing: Balancing Innovation and Scalability 207
23 Platform Thinking and Pace Layering for Marketing 219
24 Taming Essential and Accidental Complexity in Marketing 233
V Talent 245
25 Chasing the Myth of the 10× Marketer 247
Notes 255
Acknowledgments 263
About the Author 267
Index 269