Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Data and the problem of plenty

"Won't be nothing, nothing you can measure anymore" - Leonard Cohen : The Future
As I listen in remembrance to one of the greatest pop poet-musicians of all time in the wake of his passing, I am also thinking of the problem of plenty in marketing data today. Namely : the more data there is the less data there is.
That paradox sounds (almost) Cohenesque but it's certainly a lot less than poetic for us practitioners out there !
Marketing data today has immense depth but very little breadth. There is a treasure trove of KPI metrics for each digital 'walled garden'* in your marketing mix but little or nothing by way of the same metrics aggregated for the entire digital mix (let alone the entire overall mix as a combination of online and offline)
(* I borrow the term in this context from an excellent piece by senior and very respected industry leader Gowthaman Ragothaman which you can read here)
Later if not sooner this is likely to place at least some constraint to business growth for these advertising dependent gardens - and which is why I am sure a solution will arrive sooner rather than later ! The recent announcement from Facebook (read here) about the launch of a 'Measurement Council' along with Third Party verification measures is a step in that direction. More will no doubt follow from more players. After all, it is some very important value delivered to their customers (viz. advertisers and agencies) - and as we all know to superior customer value goes the spoils !
Even leaving the whole third party thing to one side , improvement in existing reporting within each single platform is where it can and needs to begin. An obvious if simple example is unduplicated individual person-level reach. Sure, it is complex but something that can be solved given the right commitment and resources. Far more complex problems have been solved after all ! The question is when it will be deemed a necessity rather than an also-good-to-have. I suspect it will be sooner rather than later. One step at a time and the rest follows. This diagram illustrates very roughly how that can unfold. We await that first step !


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