As
marketing
executives
start
developing
next
year’s
budget,
a
question
on
everyone’s
mind
is
“How
do
I
best
justify
the
dollars
spent
on
my
marketing
activities?”
According
to
our
nationwide
survey
of
over
40
software
executives,
the
need
to
prove
value
from
every
marketing
dollar
is
critical
–
making
return
on
investment
(ROI)
the
key
pressure
that
marketing
executives
are
feeling
in
today’s
economy.
So
what
does
this
mean
as
you
begin
to
plan
your
annual
marketing
activities?
The
most
successful
marketing
executives
take
ROI
into
account
at
a
very
early
stage
in
their
planning
and
integrate
measurement
into
their
ongoing
operations
through
a
concept
called
Lifecycle
MeasurementSM.
Lifecycle
Measurement
is
the
ongoing
process
of
applying
research
and
metrics
to
all
marketing
activities
in
order
to
determine
return
on
investment
and
added
value.
It
provides
the
ability
to
measure
success
across
programs
and
at
critical
milestones
in
your
marketing
plan.
No
matter
how
large
or
small
your
marketing
budget,
Lifecycle
Measurement
can
and
should
be
taken
into
account.
It
begins
with
research
and
ends
with
an
objective
assessment
of
the
costs
and
gains
associated
with
key
marketing
activities.
At
the
early
stages
it
helps
you
identify
where
to
put
marketing
dollars
and
facilitates
buy-in
at
all
levels.
Once
you
begin
implementing
programs
it
helps
you
refine
your
approach
and
guide
you
in
making
appropriate
adjustments
to
ensure
success.
What
Matters
Most
in
Lifecycle
Measurement?
·
Assessment.
At
the
onset
of
any
activity,
assessing
the
landscape
is
critical
and
research
plays
a
key
role.
Assessing
the
landscape
through
research
takes
the
guesswork
out
of
planning
and
helps
the
“fuzzy
front-end”
of
marketing
planning
take
shape.
Both
internal
and
external
research
help
to:
·
Define
your
competitive
battlefield;
·
Identify
and
clarify
true
market
and
customer
needs;
and,
·
Characterize
your
company’s
buying
cycle.
Research
also
helps
remove
any
ambiguity
about
your
competition,
customers,
markets
and
the
buying
process.
You
will
gain
concrete
proof
on
who
your
competition
truly
is,
what
they
are
selling,
where
they
are
promoting
their
products
and
services,
and
how
they
are
selling
them.
Use
research
to
get
closer
to
your
customer
and
discover
the
real
problem
that
your
product
or
service
solves
for
your
customers,
along
with
the
specific
features
that
customers
really
want.
Use
data
uncovered
through
research
to
help
align
marketing
with
sales
through
a
thorough
understanding
of
the
sales
and
buying
processes,
including
identifying
influencers
and
decision
makers.
A
wide
range
of
both
formal
and
informal
research
methodologies
can
be
put
into
place
to
capture
internal
and
external
data.
The
information
gathered
from
research
will
help
steer
decisions,
drive
marketing
activities
and
set
metrics
that
matter.
Most
importantly,
the
research
money
spent
will
help
you
increase
the
benefits
of
other
marketing
activities.
Many
companies
are
using
a
variety
of
formal
and
informal
tactics
to
gather
and
analyze
customer
and
market
data
including:
·
Quarterly
customer
reviews
·
Greater
leverage
of
user
conferences
·
In-depth
interviews
with
key
customers,
using
objective
third
parties
·
Customer
advisory
councils
·
Focus
groups
·
Online
surveys
·
Executive
interviews
with
potential
customers
·
Getting
the
executive
team
on
the
road
·
Meeting
with
industry
analysts
·
Secondary
research
reports
·
Win/loss
analysis,
and
more.
·
Metrics.
In
today’s
market,
zeroing
in
on
the
vital
few
things
that
matter
is
critical.
This
same
theory
applies
to
the
metrics
you
use
for
measuring
success.
Too
often
we
take
a
broad
stroke
at
defining
measurement
metrics
and
miss
the
mark
in
achieving
objectives
–
or
we
forge
ahead
without
any
metrics
leaving
ourselves
open
to
criticism
as
we
try
and
prove
success.
Through
the
assessment
phase
of
Lifecycle
Measurement
you
will
uncover
and
define
the
critical
few
metrics
that
tie
back
not
only
to
your
marketing
objectives
but
also
to
your
company’s
corporate
strategy.
For
example,
after
your
assessment
you
can
understand
the
specific
demographics
that
will
help
you
fine-tune
and
pin-point
the
exact
target
audience
for
your
buying
cycle,
and/or
learn
what
messages
parallel
your
customer’s
requirements.
You
can
learn
how
to
reach
your
customers
by
understanding
what
publications
they
read,
what
conferences
they
attend
and
which
analysts
are
important
to
them.
All
of
this
information
is
then
used
to
set
metrics
for
generating
qualified
sales
leads
and
accelerating
the
movement
of
leads
more
rapidly
through
your
sales
cycle.
Make
sure
you
tie
your
metrics
to
corporate
and
marketing
objectives.
If
marketing
must
help
increase
the
number
of
new
customers,
set
your
metrics
around
the
number
of
true
decision-makers
that
an
email
gram
and/or
ad
must
propel
into
the
sales
cycle.
Or,
if
marketing
is
chartered
with
building
awareness
for
a
new
product
launch,
set
the
metrics
for
your
press
relations
campaign
around
the
number
of
mentions
needed
in
key
publications
or
around
the
quality,
size
and
placement
of
a
positive
story
that
reaches
your
target
audience.
Defining
the
critical
few
metrics
that
matter
based
on
the
research
data
gathered
during
your
assessment
simplifies
the
measurement
of
marketing
initiatives.
It
removes
ambiguity
in
proving
achievement
and
also
helps
streamline
the
planning
and
implementation
of
marketing
activities.
Having
well
defined
metrics
helps
you
focus
your
budget
dollars
on
developing
programs
that
achieve
the
objectives
and
on
goals
that
matter.
·
Planning
and
Implementation.
With
Lifecycle
Measurement
in
mind,
the
guesswork
out
of
planning
is
reduced.
“The
dynamics
of
the
last
five
years
have
been
to
throw
a
bunch
of
stuff
out
into
the
market
and
see
what
people
do
with
it,
experiment
and
make
up
value
propositions,”
claims
one
executive.
Lifecycle
Measurement
takes
you
out
of
the
realm
of
shooting
from
the
hip
or
react
mode
to
a
methodical
and
measurable
path
for
achieving
objectives.
Information
gathered
during
the
assessment
phase
will
help
you
allocate
your
budget
dollars
toward
the
critical
marketing
activities
that
really
matter.
Your
research
will
help
you
make
budget
allocation
decisions
based
on
how
the
competition
promoted
their
products,
who
they
are
targeting
and
how
to
reach
critical
decision
makers
in
the
buying
process.
You
will
gain
realistic
data
to
answer
key
planning
questions
such
as:
·
Which,
if
any,
conferences
should
we
attend
and
what
type
of
presence
should
we
have?
·
Is
it
necessary
to
advertise
or
should
we
invest
heavily
in
press
relations?
·
How
much
of
our
marketing
effort
should
be
directed
to
online
versus
print?
·
What
are
the
key
messages
we
need
to
articulate
in
sales
collateral
that
will
delight
our
customers
and
move
them
through
the
sales
cycle?
·
Evaluation.
The
final
component
of
Lifecycle
Measurement
is
constant
evaluation
and
refinement
of
your
programs
and
metrics.
Take
a
pulse
at
various
points
throughout
the
life
of
your
plan
to
measure
how
well
your
programs
are
achieving
objectives.
The
information
you
gain
from
the
failure
of
one
small
activity
can
be
used
to
ensure
the
success
of
future
investments.
Be
sure
to
stay
on
top
of
your
landscape
assessment
and
metrics.
Your
landscape
assessment
provides
you
with
a
snapshot
in
time,
but
over
the
life
of
your
marketing
plans
things
change.
Market
conditions,
competitive
products
and
strategies,
and
buying
patterns
change.
As
a
result,
replenishing
your
assessment
data
can
be
critical
to
continued
achievement
and
maintaining
the
integrity
and
credibility
of
your
marketing
efforts.
Look
over
your
shoulder
throughout
the
year
to
ensure
that
the
premise
from
which
you
made
your
decisions
remains
viable.
Tough
Goals
Demand
Discipline
The
difference
between
successful
and
productive
marketing
efforts
and
those
that
only
marginally
succeed
is
the
ability
to
show
return
on
investment
and
added
value
for
every
marketing
activity.
It
comes
down
to
assigning
specific
and
measurable
goals
of
success
for
each
activity
whether
it
is
the
yearly
marketing
plan
or
a
single
program
so
that
determining
and
evaluating
ROI
will
flow
naturally.
Lifecycle
Measurement
provides
you
with
methodical
and
measurable
path
that
takes
the
guesswork
out
of
marketing
planning
and
the
ambiguity
out
of
demonstrating
a
return
on
investment.
By
applying
the
Lifecycle
Measurement
concept
to
your
planning
you
can
confidently
answer
the
age-old
question
–
“Are
we
deploying
the
best
marketing
weapons
in
the
most
effective
manner?”
©
Article
Copyright 2005 MarketWise
Insights, Inc. and
Smith
&
Suita,
Inc.
All
rights
reserved.
MarketWise
Insights, Inc. Smith
&
Suita,
Inc.
Contact: info@marketwiseinsights.com Contact:
info@smithandsuita.com