4-Cs Series: Complexity and Campaign Marketing (it’s harder than a Rubik’s Cube)
Katrina Lamb | August 30th, 2010Filed under: Managers View | Tags: 4-Cs, applying science to its campaign marketing process, campaign marketing, complexity, consumer segments and product types, hypercube, multiple dimensions, predictive models, promotions, Rubik's Cube, scientific marketing, targeted messages for specific geographic markets | No Comments »
Veteran marketing managers can tell war stories of battles fought to secure marketing budgets – the pitches and cajoling to focus C-suite attention on the strategic and the tactical importance of effective marketing campaigns. Getting something close to the budget you want may be just cause for heaving a big sigh of relief, but these days few marketing managers will be found clinking glasses of Veuve Clicquot in celebration. Once the budget is in hand the real work begins. The economic downturn has put constraints on the total number of dollars you have to spread among competing projects, but it has done nothing to constrain the nearly limitless ways those dollars can be allocated. “Do more with less” is the mantra of the day. To make those scarcer dollars go further means relying on more than traditional finger-in-the-wind gut instincts to tell you what campaigns will work and what campaigns won’t work. Campaign marketing – the art of pulling together targeted messages for specific geographic markets, consumer segments and product types – is in need of a healthy dose of scientific rigor. Read the rest of this entry »