Covid Has Catapulted Digital Marketing To A More Strategic Position Within Local Organisations

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Shifting In The Right Direction With Digital Marketing
Roan Mackintosh, MD of Incubeta MEA.

As we become more reliant on all things digital to drive sales, Incubeta says it is seeing digital marketing teams being asked to deliver upwards of 200% more with the same budget. Unless board-level support is offered, Chief Marketing Officers (CMOs) are being set up for failure.

Although it was already on a positive trajectory, Covid has catapulted digital marketing to a much more strategic position within local organisations. However, while there have been huge gains from the shift, the growing reliance on the discipline to bolster shaky pandemic sales is placing added pressure on CMOs and their teams.

‘While the importance of digital marketing has been growing continuously over the last few years, there is no doubt that Covid has supercharged the shift in how it is being seen within organisations. Digital used to be an afterthought, seldom mentioned at a steerco level and often commanding less than five percent of the overall marketing budget,’ explained Roan Mackintosh, MD of Incubeta MEA.

What’s more, Mackintosh said there have been many instances where, realising that their traditional sales channels aren’t performing, boards have placed unrealistic expectations on their digital teams.

‘We have sometimes seen digital teams being asked to deliver 200 percent more on the same budget. This has been one of the unfortunate results of Covid as companies have seen their normal sales channels decimated and are now putting all of their hope into a digital miracle,’ Mackintosh said.

The shift in digital marketing requires inter-departmental support. ‘A CMO’s success is based on organisational buy-in. Throwing budget at digital without the collaborative support of the organisation is setting up the CMO and their team for failure. Increased budget holds very little value if it’s rolled out in isolation,’ said Chelsea Owens, Business Unit Director at Incubeta.

Fortunately, the Incubeta team has seen a marked improvement from local companies that are beginning to acknowledge the role digital marketing has played in building sustainability.

‘The shift in digital marketing has brought the digital teams and leaders closer to the centre of the business. As you shift your strategy to move closer towards customer centricity, it makes sense that the digital marketing teams move closer to the centre of your business. We are finally seeing meaningful change, where CMOs are taking their seat at the boardroom table,’ said Mackintosh.

Those who get it right prosper

Mackintosh points to the Checkers’ digital offering, Sixty60, Cape Union Mart and Hyundai, as examples of how local organisations have successfully fast-tracked their digital marketing initiatives, but also ensured organisational changes to support the shift.

‘We have seen massive changes in how leaders approach digital marketing. We are seeing interdepartmental meetings which never happened before. Merchandising is sitting down with the marketing team and for the first time and asking how they can support their digital efforts,’ he explained.

According to Mackintosh, a lack of synergy between departments also has a big impact on digital agencies and how effectively they can help marketing teams deliver. ‘We can ensure that people explore and engage with the product offering online, but if a customer lands on the add-to-cart webpage and the company doesn’t have the product in their size or in the colour variant that they want, you won’t just lose a sale, you’ll damage the brand experience,’ he explained.

A privacy-first future demands a new way of operating

Mackintosh said another change has been the extension of the marketing team’s remit ‘Marketing leaders must now also focus on conversion rate optimisation. It’s no longer just about getting people to the website, it’s about having content that resonates with the customers. The websites are so important that in some instances we are advising clients to throw out old ones and start from scratch.’

Looking at the interaction between paid and organic search is also on the agenda for a privacy-first future. Mackintosh said CMOs must focus more on their content strategy to ensure better organic ranking, which can then be leveraged for paid search. He recommended fresh content, like blogs, to help keep the relevance high and boost the paid efforts, but again he warns that effective SEO will require a closer working relationship with the IT department.

Owens explained that better communication with clients’ IT departments also means her team is exposed to more backend conversation data and warehouse data. She said this is vital in the looming cookieless environment where digital teams will depend more on first party audiences and measurement frameworks.

Good news for local CMOs

‘With the right investments made in the right places, local companies can reach whole new markets that they may not have before – this is especially the case when one looks at the mobile penetration and the increasing sophistication of the South African consumer, relevant to international markets. The growing boldness of the digital brand managers is showing results. A fail fast mentality is allowing brands to try new things quickly and aggressively, and if they don’t work, then they move on to the next opportunity,’ he said.

Finally, Owens pointed out that partnership is key. ‘Breaking down the silos within the organisation and accessing support is a critical requirement for CMOs. But so is having an agile and trusted digital marketing partner who is given the autonomy to shift budgets so they can take advantage of trends,’ she said.

INCUBETA
www.incubeta.com