Stop Being Handcuffed by Technology
Company Added
Company Removed
Apply to Request List

Stop Being Handcuffed by Technology

Stop Being Handcuffed by Technology

About a year ago the 2020 Marketing Technology Supergraphic was released.

What strikes us about this update, aside from being floored by the staggering number of providers and how the category has grown exponentially since 2011, is the growth of both the “data” (+25.5%) and “management” (+15.2%) categories. We’re not surprised by the figures, but it legitimizes the issue facing most marketers today: the overwhelming amount of data and the inability to manage it. 

Data is not going away, nor is the requirement that companies and marketers, in particular, get smarter and smarter about how to use it. What we can change is how we manage everything.

So often, we build complex systems to manage what we cannot manage ourselves. In the martech space, we almost celebrate the fact that there needs to be a system to manage the systems: the holy “martech stack” and the emergence of the Marketing Ops role itself. 

The issue as we see it at Silvercrest is that brands and agencies are handcuffed to their existing technologies because of the fear of dismantling what they have fashioned together. For example, there are relationships to consider. There is the lead time and research to find new partners. There is the issue of contract terms. There is a potential backlash if the new technology doesn’t transition or work smoothly. There are the time and money needed to customize a new platform to your brand’s needs. There is the laborious approval process. There are a host of reasons not to make any changes. And thus, the status quo continues.

Breaking Free

The problem is that being handcuffed to your legacy technologies doesn’t really make life easier, as evidenced by the fact that managing those technologies is a critical area of growth.

It doesn’t take an in-depth analysis to identify that a multitude of partners does not equate to efficiency. Not only is there undoubtedly overlap in capabilities, but there is also likely to be underuse of a particular platform. Additionally, silos and experts in one platform or discipline create convoluted and cobbled-together workflows.

One approach to a solution would be to challenge your marketing team to find efficiencies within the current martech stack. Set a goal to reduce the number of vendors/partners by 50%, and see how creatively the team can maximize a particular partner's set of services. Not only will consolidating save on fees, but also it will hopefully streamline and standardize reporting, at least within that section of the marketing mix, facilitating a more cohesive optimization analysis.

Another option would be to seek out a single ecosystem to handle all of your marketing technology. Even if your brand doesn't adopt an entire platform, the overarching goal should be to bundle as many services as possible to find those efficiencies, saving time from managing disparate systems and creating value in streamlined processes.

We believe the real reason brands and marketers are afraid to make changes is twofold. First of all, they pride themselves in the Frankenstein they have built. And second, they are terrified about what will happen if they dismantle it.

The problem is that just because something functions doesn’t mean it is optimal. Let's go back to the 2020 Marketing Technology Landscape reference. Who really wants to have to manage all of that?

The Key

Our challenge to all the marketers out there is to take an honest look at the systems and workflows you have stitched together and ask yourself: Could there be a better way? Could you save yourself time, money and headaches in the long term if you weren’t handcuffed to your existing technologies? Could that be worth your time and energy now, for future benefit?


Silvercrest is a single solution.  The leader in marketing technology.
Get the Advantage.

SPONSORED BY:

Learn More

Published: May 11th, 2021

Share this Feature

Comments:

comments powered by Disqus
Share This Page

Subscribe to our Newsletters