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Marketers, turn your data literacy into a data superpowerThe concept of data literacy didn't exist when I started my career in marketing in the mid-1990s. We had few marketing channels, all of which were offline, and we had to track them manually in spreadsheets. We distributed leads to our sales team on a floppy disk. We sent coupons to prospects, and every day I had to go to the mailbox to see which coupons came back filled out. As scarce as it was, data was still extremely important back then. ![]() Denise Persson, chief marketing officer at Snowflake Today, marketers have access to a massive amount of data through multiple channels, both offline and online. New channels are constantly emerging, and each becomes its own data track. However, all of that data goes into different applications and systems, making it very difficult to get a complete picture of what is really going on. We are all striving to reach a real-time, 360-degree view of customers. This is the foundation for personalisation, timing and relevance: how do you send the right offer to the right prospect at the right time? The more you can master the timing and the relevance, the greater impact you’re going to have with your marketing investments. With inaccurate or incomplete data, you get a skewed picture of potential consumers. If you create the wrong offers at the wrong time, all of your marketing will go to waste. Researchers Rex Briggs and Greg Stuart looked at more than $1bn of marketing spend by 30 major corporations, and found that 47% of the advertising campaigns didn’t work. That’s 53% of marketing spend wasted. So how do you reduce the waste and increase the return? It comes down to data literacy — how well you can read, work with, scrutinise and communicate with data. If you have access to all of the data, and the ability to analyse and make smart decisions based on it, then your marketing efforts will likely succeed. The challenge of fragmented data In a recent survey, 36% of company leaders said that of all of their departments, sales/marketing showed the best performance in utilising data-driven insights for strategic purposes. But over the past two decades, marketers have faced an uphill battle in trying to be data-driven. A proliferation of marketing tools are now used to engage customers over complex customer journeys. Customers expect to have a seamless experience across an ever-expanding set of channels. And organisations face an explosion of data, all stored in silos, that need to be integrated in order to derive insight and smart decisions. All of these trends have created fragmented data, which is a major barrier to data-driven insights. In a 2020 report, 47% of executives surveyed said their top digital customer experience challenge was “siloed systems and/or fragmented customer data.” Thanks to recent developments in cloud and advanced technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI), we're finally entering an age of integrated data. We can now access and analyse all the relevant data available to gain a complete view of customers and tie our marketing investments to business outcomes. This represents the biggest transformational moment for marketers since the birth of digital marketing in the 1990s. It's a bigger step-change than social media. While technology tools in 2021 allow marketers to connect with customers and prospects with 10 times the precision and business impact, the art of applying these new tools is what separates good companies from great companies. Over the past five years, I’ve been able to use data to do things I couldn’t previously imagine. I've also had the opportunity to advise CMOs at customer organisations about how to use data to transform their marketing organisations and businesses. Here's my advice to others:
About the authorDenise Persson, chief marketing officer at Snowflake |