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The Five Questions That Kill Marketing Careers MediaPost’s Online Metrics Insider by Pat LaPointe , Tuesday, October 27, 2009 As the planning cycle renews itself, you should be aware of five key questions that have been known to pop up in discussion with CEOs/CFOs, often short-circuiting otherwise brilliant marketing careers.
How you answer these five questions will get you promoted, fired, or worse -- marginalized. If you tend to answer with a dizzying array of highly conceptual (e.g., brand strength rankings compared to 100 other companies) and/or excruciatingly tactical (e.g., cost per conversion on Web site leads) "evidence," stop. Preponderance of evidence doesn't win in the court of business. A credible, structured attempt to answer the underlying financial questions does. The five questions are all answerable, even in the most data-challenged environments. Provided, too, that you build acceptance of the need for some substantial assumptions made in deriving answers -- much the same way you would in building a business case for a new plant, or deploying a new IT infrastructure project. The key is to make the assumptions explicit, clearly defining the boundaries of facts, anecdotes, opinions, and guesses. Think in terms of:
As you push boldly into 2010, remember that 2011 is just around the corner. You may not have been asked these hard questions this year, but who knows who your CFO might talk to next year (me, perhaps??) that will ratchet up his/her expectations. You can prepare by using these five questions as a framework to benchmark where your marketing organization is starting from; as a guide to ensure that sufficient resources are being allocated to promote continual learning and improvement; and as a means of monitoring the performance of your marketing organization.
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