If you’re considering marketing automation as a solution for your business, you’ll soon learn that getting things up and running is a complex task. It requires the coordination of many disciplines and overlapping dependencies. For example, you’ll need to consider the following:
Once you get started, many other sub-projects will add themselves to this list. These can stir up whirlpools among your stakeholders, creating distracting discussions and subsequent delays. With that in mind, you’ll need clear priorities. The first iteration should be as simple as possible. Leave optimization and diversification to subsequent efforts.
No customer is impressed by automation. To her, there is nothing compelling about it at all. Customers care about content, so your first priority should be capturing their attention and offering something of value. One of the tools that can help you craft engaging content is the customer persona. If done thoughtfully, persona research provides a frame of reference, not just for content writers, but also for:
Content strategists. Where do we find our audience? How do we tell our story? Nurture journey architects. How do we encourage leads to discover solutions for themselves? Will the journey surface qualified leads effectively? Interactive developers. How can we use the best technologies to simplify, support, and enhance the experience for leads?
The next important task is to define the first journey, the starting point, and the minimum viable product. One of the great benefits that come with an automation platform (once it is operational) is that your marketing campaigns can be observed, tested, measured, and improved.
In order to get that first journey launched, you’ll need to identify the most basic conversation you will have with your customers. It’s tempting to have your journey account for every one-off and corner case (we are conditioned to look for exceptions and to illuminate them). But try to resist this urge. Plan for the first journey to serve the simplest need and target the largest behavior set—whether it’s 80 percent of your audience or even 50 percent.
One way to look at this philosophy is from a Six Sigma planning approach:
When planning your first marketing automation program, it can be a challenge to focus on today without losing sight of tomorrow. New ideas will abound, and future concerns will surface. You’ll need to compartmentalize the planning conversation into short, medium, and long-term thinking. Dive into the short-term challenges as they must be overcome to begin the program. Use the medium-term concerns to help shape a scalable solution. And let long-term thinking help you recognize and plan for big ideas that are before their time. This approach will help you manage scope, control costs, and make the necessary short-term decisions with the long-run ROI in mind.