We have all read plenty of articles about “good data”,  how important it is and “good data” is like gasoline in your car…. so on and so forth.   But how many businesses can definitively stand behind the data they sell you?  At Oceanos, we believe we have cured bad data.  The past few years of research and investment into our List Optimizer™ software seem to be really paying off.

So, how do we make “good data”?

Oceanos, does not own any data. We have partnered with dozens of data providers and based on your requirements, we pick the best vendor and buy the data for you.  But this data is just the raw material, like crude oil.  We run this raw data through a detailed process of refinement identifying bad email addresses and correcting phone numbers.  In addition, we run a whole phone verification process on your file and also standardize the postal addresses.   At the end of this process we produce a certificate called the Oceanos “Data Audit Certificate”.   The certificate tells you what we started off with and what we have done to get it right.  It proves what we have done to get to “good data”.  You will be surprised how the data gets modified as we refine it and will learn many times that we have corrected 50 – 60% of the file.  These steps result in a clean list that enables you to target your message to the right audience.

View the Oceanos Data Audit Certificate:  http://www.oceanosinc.com/objects/pdfs/DataAuditCertificate.pdf

Give us a chance to do business with you and try out the Data Audit Certificate yourself.  Good data is not a theory anymore, good data is a daily practice at Oceanos.

If you are interested in learning how Oceanos can  guarantee “good data”, feel free to contact Raghu Prabhu, Vice President and Chief Technology Officer at rprabhu@oceanosinc.com

 

 

Brian Kardon, former Chief Marketing Officer of Eloqua, our guest author shares 5 Tips on Ways to Improve Marketing’s Impact on Revenue

How are you measuring marketing’s performance?

If you are like most marketers, you are proud of all the ways you measure marketing – pageviews, visits, visitors, click-through rates, open rates, bouncebacks, unsubscribes, size/growth of the database, cost per lead, etc.   The list is nearly endless.

But are you measuring the things that your CEO and CFO care most about: marketing’s contribution to revenue? Is your marketing team respected in the organization for generating new sales-ready leads and building pipeline?  Do you work closely with the sales team to understand conversion rates and pipeline velocity?   If not, you are revenude.

Rev-e-nude:

The sensation of vulnerability a marketer feels when all the marketing jargon has been stripped away to reveal no real ability to tie the marketing budget to actual revenue.

Here are 5 ways to avoid being in the revenude:

1.       Align marketing spend and campaigns to closed deals

How do you determine the effectiveness of your marketing programs?  Successful marketers measure what matters, not what is easiest to measure.  You are never revenude when you understand how your investments lead to revenue.  In most organizations, the campaign analytics are in one data silo and the pipeline and closed deal information is in another.  You need to close the loop and tie the two together.

2.       Consistency matters

Take a lesson from your CFO and VP of Sales.  They present the same charts week after week.  The data certainly changes, but the format and the “what” they report never varies.  That consistency builds credibility and sets the right expectations. What does Marketing typically present?  Well, one week it’s the big trade show, the next week it’s an ad campaign.  Sure, you want to show off your team’s latest triumphs.  But the most successful marketers effectively communicate what metrics are most important, and then report on them consistently.

3.       Get the CFO involved

No, I am not crazy.  The CFO can be your best friend – just ask the CMO who was able to get millions more in spending because he worked with his CFO to make the case for more marketing investments to the CEO.  The CFO is the company’s “gold standard” for credibility.  Engage with the CFO as you are developing your metrics.  What could be better than when the CEO turns to his CFO and asks “What do you think of the marketing budget”, the CFO responds, “I like what I see!”  Be open to new ways of thinking.

4.     Have the discipline to act on your analysis

The point of marketing measurement is to take action.  Don’t be afraid to kill marketing programs that are not working and doubling efforts on those that are.  In the land of marketing, all campaigns are not above average.  Take action.  Each time you act, you are optimizing your marketing investments and improving performance.

5.     Benchmark your performance

It’s hard to know how you’re doing if you have nothing to compare it to.  The two most important things to benchmark are: 1) conversion rates between stages (inquiry > MQL > SAL >SQL > Won) and 2) the number of days between stages. Be on the lookout for good benchmark data, especially conversion rates.  Sirius Decisions has some good data. There are other sources like Marketing Sherpa,Marketing Profs and Eloqua.

Most marketers are on a journey of continuous improvement.  No matter where you are on your journey, the destination must include measuring marketing impact on revenue. If you can do that, you will never be revenude again.

© List Intelligence™ Blog Oceanos, Inc.