December 18, 2013
New research from StrongView shows that marketers plan to increase their budgets on activities that increase customer engagement in 2014. However, according to StrongView's "2014 Marketing Trends Survey," those same marketers don't believe they have quick access to high quality, comprehensive data, which may thwart their efforts.
The survey results underscore the challenges presented by big data now available to marketers. According to a news release, while brands are capturing more customer and industry data than ever before, marketers report common problems in accessing and leveraging it in the most meaningful ways. However, these challenges are not stopping those marketers from increasing their spending on customer engagement: 93 percent plan to increase or maintain marketing budgets for the year. This is up from 89 percent in 2013.
Email marketing, social media marketing, search marketing, display marketing and mobile marketing top the list of areas for increased spending in 2014.
"While we saw a strong desire to engage with customers at a more personal and meaningful level in our survey this year, marketers remain hampered and frustrated by an inability to access and leverage all the data being generated by a growing number of marketing channels," said Shawn Myers, vice president of marketing at StrongView. "Effectively engaging customers with what we call 'Present Tense Marketing' requires an in-depth understanding of the customer's context at a particular moment in time, and that can only be achieved with the strategic use of all available data."
Survey highlights
More highlights from the survey include:
New data challenges
In last year's StrongView 2013 Marketing Trends Survey, marketers reported facing challenges with managing data and integrating it with other channels. This latest survey goes further to uncover the biggest challenges to leveraging data, with quality (22 percent), latency in its availability to marketers (16 percent) and lack of strategy (15 percent) topping the list.
Data access and the ability to specifically leverage web behavior (34 percent), shopping behavior (25 percent) and customer sentiment (23 percent) were particularly vexing to marketers. Demographics (53 percent), purchase history (49 percent) and web behavioral data (31 percent) were used most often in campaigns. The challenges surrounding the use and understanding of data were highly noted in responses to almost every question, according to StrongView.
Increasing engagement a major initiative
Across channels, marketers report that a key objective in 2014 will be to increase engagement with customers, primarily by creating campaigns with higher degrees of relevancy based on contextual clues. StrongView recommends that marketers achieve relevancy by developing campaigns that adopt the tenets of "Present Tense Marketing," whereby marketers adapt in real time to a customer's present tense or current state, putting the next marketing action in the proper context of their activities.
Email marketing remains strong
Email and search marketing channels remain principal avenues for marketers to reach customers, with social media marketing continuing to rise in importance. More than 50 percent of marketers plan budget increases in email and 46 percent in social marketing in 2014; 41 percent of marketers plan to increase search spending, up from 39.8 percent in 2013.
Respondents reported intentions to increase spending for automated email programs such as lifecycle (34 percent) and triggered events (38 percent). Of the marketers who plan to increase spend on lifecycle email marketing programs, 57 percent plan to focus on loyalty programs with 50 percent indicating a focus on winback efforts and 53 percent on welcoming new customers. These and other data support marketers' plans to make strides in customer engagement in the coming year.
Valuable social platforms
While the investment in social channels overall to engage customers is set to increase in 2014 (46 percent), marketers overwhelmingly name the largest social platforms as their most valuable channels.
Facebook ranked among the top three by 81 percent of marketers, Twitter by 67 percent, YouTube by 48 percent and LinkedIn by 44 percent. Pinterest, though noted as valuable to some degree by more than 85 percent of respondents, was listed as a top three most valuable channel by less than 13 percent of marketers. Instagram was only ranked in the top three by 10 percent of marketers, though 86 percent saw some value.
Read more about marketing trends and statistics.