The primary challenge for any reasonably large technology company with global presence, marketing in a business-to-business (B2B) channel environment, is making sure that marketing assets that are created centrally for global use can actually be deployed locally. Most companies would also like to see substantial content development and deployment at a country level to boost the local sales efforts. So, how do you do that in today's resource-constrained environment? This is where a global channel marketing automation platform and concierge services come in.
In today's resource constrained environment the constant focus is on greater accountability and ROI tracking from marketing investments. Traditionally, an army of marketing resources is needed not only to develop campaigns, but also to execute them and track results. Surprisingly, very few organizations take a structured approach to marketing and few apply marketing automation or, indeed, sufficient resources to their campaigns. As a result, they resort to running impromptu campaigns that are insufficiently strategized and coordinated to drive predictable results or report ROI on a central or global level. As a result, far too much channel marketing investment ends up being questioned.
And to complicate this further, lack of insight at global level into country-by-country activities leaves the last mile in a cloak of invisibility, where it’s impossible to see whether content is touching prospects or customers via channel partners. This inability to monitor campaign results and ROI leads to further poor decisions regarding the future of campaigns: how can the marketing teams know which horizontal or broad-brush campaigns can be leveraged globally, and which are better suited to a vertical market approach (e.g. education or retail) that will need to be developed locally.
In fact, there is a relatively simple fix for this problem. The goal of loading global marketing assets and then allowing different countries to augment these with local content can be easily addressed with a well-structured and systematic channel marketing automation program. These are the core elements to look for:
* Group and Role Management- Your channel marketing automation platform should allow you to set up different groups, e.g., global, country or territory teams, as well as assign specific roles in the process to channel partners, channel marketing managers, distribution managers, or channel account managers.
* Setting Access Rules- The channel marketing automation platform should allow you to set access rules, i.e., define who can upload, edit, view and use content and campaigns for marketing activities.
* Assignment of Campaigns by Access Rights- You should also be able to assign certain campaigns and assets to certain groups and roles. This graded access and rights management capability is critical for your channel marketing automation platform, because providing personalized campaign access significantly improves partner experience, creates greater control and better reporting.
* Content Localization- Once you have uploaded global campaigns to the channel automation platform, your local country teams should be able to access this content to localize or customize it - without, of course, being able to change the master copies and assets. The ability to copy existing material from a global library, and create a local content library is a must-have capability for your channel marketing automation platform
* Campaign Usage- Your channel marketing automation platform should be able to track detailed usage reports that show who is accessing your global content, who is creating local campaigns, and how they are working. This knowledge can be applied in many ways, for example in ‘reverse engineering’ local campaigns. You might be able to take a successful local campaign and go global or regional with that materia...