Tech Marketers Confront Budget and ROI Pressures: IDC Provides Guidance for Organizational Transformation
18 Sep 2008
FRAMINGHAM, Mass.,
September 18, 2008 – The IDC CMO Advisory Practice projects that IT vendor
marketing budgets will expand by 3.5% for the full year 2008, below the level
of investment increases of the previous three years. IDC analysts are observing
that many marketing executives are now exploring broader and more sweeping
marketing organizational changes, as they seek to increase the return on their
efforts and attempt to get marketing better aligned with the content
requirements of sales teams, partners, prospects, and customers.
Richard Vancil, vice president of IDC's Executive Advisory
Group, noted some key trends emerging within the tech marketing community.
"The 2008 decline in budget growth was expected, given the tech economy.
But the real story is behind the numbers: tech marketers are getting more input
from all sides that greater transformation is required. Much of the corporate
marketing agenda across the tech vendor community is really disconnected with
the information or content wants and needs of the key constituents of
marketing. The sales teams have never really climbed 'on board' to marketing's
agenda. And in IDC's research with technical and business buyers, we see that
most elements of the classic tech marketing agenda continue to fall short of
how those buyers want to consume information today."
"IDC has specific guidance for organizational
change," noted Vancil. "We are guiding clients toward an expanded
Sales Enablement function with an emphasis on content alignment. We are also
advocating that management teams staff and execute a larger Campaign Management
function so that unilateral and un-coordinated product marketing can be better
tied into integrated themes. Finally, we are advising senior marketers to
consider additional budget shifts. Our latest research shows that only about
one-third of the average marketing budget is executed in the field geographies:
the rest is centralized within corporate marketing and product-line marketing
budgets. Our guidance is that even where these centralized budgets are 'owned'
by corporate or product marketers; they should be allocated and 'spent' by the
regions. We'd like to see the regional spend figure approach 50% of the
total."
The new insights and analysis are from IDC's CMO Advisory
Practice, the tech industry's most comprehensive benchmarking and advisory
offering for tech marketing leadership. IDC's sixth annual Technology Marketing
Benchmarks Survey, completed in September 2008 provides insight into the
management techniques and investment strategies based on IDC's unique access to
the world's largest and most influential technology marketing leaders.
In the forthcoming study, Marketing Investment Planner
2009: Benchmarks and Key Performance Indicators, IDC provides a
comprehensive analysis of qualitative and quantitative marketing investment
priorities, marketing-mix decisions, and operational and organization
information for many of the world's leading and most influential technology
vendors. This study is based on surveys and interviews conducted with senior
marketing executives of the leading IT hardware, software, and services
vendors, including Adobe, Cisco, HP, IBM, Intel, SAP, Symantec, and Xerox;
representing over $400 billion in IT revenues and over $15 billion in marketing
spending. The Tech Marketing Benchmarks analysis is the cornerstone of the IDC
CMO Advisory Practice, a research service that provides analysis and insight to
IT marketers to improve the productivity and efficiency of their marketing
practice.
About IDC's CMO
Advisory Practice
The CMO Advisory Practice provides IT marketing executives
with the industry's most respected marketing benchmarks, research-based advice,
and peer-networking, to strengthen planning, operational, and market-execution
decisions.
The CMO Advisory Practice is a part of IDC’s Executive
Advisory Group which provides Sales, Marketing, and Market Intelligence executives
with critical insights and research-based information to plan investments,
prepare operations, mobilize resources, and measure results. Members also
access the collective knowledge of peer-level managers to gain the insights of
fellow practitioners.
For more information on the IDC CMO Advisory Service,
contact Michelle Blondin at IDC: mblondin@idc.com
Contact
For more information, contact:
Richard Vancil
rvancil@idc.com
508-935-4327
Michelle Blondin
mblondin@idc.com
508-988-7579
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