Why agile marketing is the future of digital advertising

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For years there's been a gulf in working style between digital marketers and traditional brand managers. Digital marketers (and arguably all marketers) now work faster, with more flexibility, and with accelerating complexities to deal with -- their currency is response, action, and ultimately sales. Brand managers tend to work to a longer timeline, create carefully researched strategies, and set rules and guidelines -- their currency is insight and brand asset value. Both roles are crucial. Now, with the power of social media and the emergence of agile marketing, there's a golden opportunity for both teams to get closer and achieve much more.

 

A collaborative relationship between brand managers and digital marketers begins with addressing key questions:

  • Where should brand management and digital marketing meet?
  • Can marketing activity creation, approval, and implementation get more efficient and effective?
  • How can digital marketers see brand management systems as a help and not a hindrance?
  • How can brand managers strike the right balance between brand guidance and control and the marketer's freedom to iterate, innovate, and implement more effectively?
  • How can brand managers "get" digital?

If we can close the gap and answer these questions, both teams will be more successful, and the organization will be more effective overall.

The answer to all these questions is to evolve brand management with the support of digital marketers. Keep the discipline of the current brand management systems, but add two new crucial elements. First, integrate social media moderation. Second, instill an agile marketing approach and mindset. Taking a closer look at each element in more depth, we can see how they relate and how this serves up a powerful new opportunity.

 

Comments

Simon Ward
Simon Ward September 4, 2012 at 4:50 PM

Hey Greg,
Thanks for the detailed and relaly considered psoting - appreciate the good feedback and agree with you. love the comment around synchronising work without the BS - it's a cultural and working process change both agency and client side to make it happen.
Good luck and on we go!
Simon.

Greg Morell
Greg Morell September 1, 2012 at 6:56 PM

I really appreciated your post and the comments as well. I agree that Social is the poster-child for Agile Marketing. Getting brand management (and really all marketing functions) to learn to leverage Social is a good first step. But as you state, that is only a first step, and while Social might be a catalyst for larger behavioral and cultural changes in how marketers and agencies work, its going to take a real effort to bring true agility to how the work gets done.

We at AgencyAgile are developing Agile collaboration frameworks that create the right environments and behaviors to bring better, more efficient, and more meaningful coordination and communication between marketing functions (brand, media, web, social, CRM, search, etc.) and agencies.

One of the challenges of getting to true Agile Marketing is that each discipline and marketing agency works in its own rhythms and cycles. Each marketing function, each agency, is both a producer of ideas and information as well as a consumer, both push and pull, within a brand's marketing ecosystem. We are developing a set of common Agile communication and planning methods that all parties can use to provide and consume the right information, in the right way, at the right time.

What we endeavor to do is to synchronize the work efforts without a lot of BS and wasted documentation; and to actually reduce the overhead required to manage the communications that we see in today's silo (by function) teams. We strive to make collaboration useful, while driving down time-to-market, and reducing risks from "big bets.”

As you state, the market is moving much faster now, and we need to speed up our abilities to inspire (plan), execute (produce), and inform (gather intelligence). The key to getting the entire ecosystem becoming more Agile is to create a framework that supports really valuable collaboration yet allows each function or agency participate in a way that compliments their own creative/production processes; and an environment that celebrates the creativity and talent of the team members (but not as individuals, as a team?)

Getting this right is really important.

Simon Ward
Simon Ward August 15, 2012 at 10:35 PM

Hi Will, thanks for the comment and glad you agree with the article, much appreciated! I'll be sure to check out "Little Bets" as i was not aware of it but sounds spot on. I do agree, while the subject of agile Marketing is growing, it;s actually easier to "get" the meaning of the term but much harder to put it into practice ... the key without doubt is changing the culture and mindset as well as the processes in many large companies.
Thansk again and stay in touch!
Simon.

Will Price
Will Price August 15, 2012 at 8:20 PM

Simon, at Flite we completely agree with your approach. In May, we hosted Flite's Agile Marketing Summit and had a keynote from Peter Sims, the author of Little Bets. Peter's a real leader in thinking through the application of agile, iterative approaches and the book is a Flite "Bible" on how to frame the issues.

Waterfall marketing is misaligned with the pace, cadence, and real-time nature of today's world. Moving, like developers, from water fall to agile is fundamental to improving the value of marketing. The big questions are organizational in nature - how do ecosystems calcified along serial, water fall processes break and reform along more agile lines?

Thanks for thoughtful post.