“If AEP is so wonderful, why aren’t we seeing any value?”

In this last post of a series leading up to Adobe Summit (check out my first and second), I recommend another eBook. I wrote this one because the question in the headline has been posed to us more than once, by folks investigating our CDP services: “Why aren’t we seeing value?”

There are simple answers, but what’s needed by those struggling with AEP is more than an explanation.

What’s needed is a playbook.

Here it is. Pretty much anything you’ll need to know to extract tremendous marketing and sales value out of Adobe’s category-leading customer data platform (CDP). It’s yours free, so follow this link to get started!

Also, if you plan to attend Summit and any of the topics I’ve blogged about are of interest to you, look me up!

Why I love Adobe’s Content Supply Chain solution (and you should too!)

I’ve loved Adobe Workfront for many years, and even posted here four years ago with this news: Adobe to buy Workfront: A big win for marketing throughput. As a primarily customer data wonk, you might be surprised that I’ve fawned over this workflow tool. But data is data. And these two experiences from early in my career helped me understand the value of democratized data to accelerate sluggish production processes:

  1. While working at my very first marketing firm I used a then-new technique to boost the pace of print production by 20%
  2. A short time later I helped my brother, who founded and led a precision machined parts factory, to completely rethink how products are produced, greatly improving revenue and profits.

The technique that unlocked these improvements was the same for both. It was a workflow optimization approach called the Theory of Constraints, as described in the worldwide best selling business book, The Goal.

My older brother, Brian, was a brilliant business operator. He has sadly passed away, but not before telling me that The Goal was “The best business book I’ve ever read.” That’s extremely high praise, if you talk to anyone who worked with him.

Join Me At Adobe Summit

In keeping with a theme I started with my last post here, Going to Adobe Summit? Here’s one reason I’d love to connect with you there, I’ve co-written an eBook that resurrects the thinking of a business leader whose lessons may be overlooked by modern marketers. That would be a shame.

In this eBook, I examine the innovations of The Goal‘s author, Eliyahu M. Goldratt, through the lens of solving the vexing challenge of Content Supply Chain. It turns out the data coming out of Adobe Workfront is perfect for using the Theory of Constraints to identify and fix workflow bottlenecks.

I invite you to see for yourself. You can download this free eBook here.

And if you’re attending Adobe Summit, seek me out. I’d love to talk about this important digital marketing tool and the concept that can turbocharge it.

Going to Adobe Summit? Here’s one reason I’d love to connect with you there

Two things you might not now know about me: I’m mildly dyslexic, and I’ve been in marketing technology for decades. That second point is relevant here because, in an industry full of folks much younger than me, I’ve come to realize my long career is of unexpected value.

Along with many modern business books, I have a home library of wisdom from great thinkers that the years have mostly pushed to obscurity. I’m thinking now of a book co-written by another marketing elder, sadly now departed, who taught and published out of a college at Northwestern University. I had the pleasure of seeing Don E. Schulz, PhD speak live.

Predicting Our Measurable World

At the presentation, sponsored by the American Marketing Association in the early 1990s, he told me and a room of mostly ad professionals that their careers were about to change dramatically. I leaned forward to learn more.

(I was a direct response consultant at the time, definitely a second class citizen in the room. I was used to it, especially within the very ad agency that employed me at the time — and which eventually pushed me out because I wanted our marketing success to be measured by more than just the number of Addy awards handed out at lavish, self-congratulatory banquets reminiscent of the Oscar Awards event I’ll be watching tomorrow night.)

The men and women seated around me in their fine silk and wool suits were fully invested in things staying exactly as they had been for decades. They didn’t like what Dr. Schulz had to say.

He announced to a stunned audience that the power dynamics of broadcast marketing was about to reverse, much like the nearby Chicago River that historically had flowed in one direction but through engineering had completely reversed its flow.

Yes, that dramatic a change.

And instead of the flow of water, he was talking about cash.

The way he explained it, ad agencies, which all happily followed the Mad Men business model of producing ads for the masses (and earning 15% commisions on every magazine, radio and television ad bought on those channels), was going to be decimated by internet technology that would soon place more power into the hands of consumers.

He talked about targeted marketing. I leaned forward even farther in my chair.

Instead of “spraying and praying” — telling everyone who would listen about the latest product showcased in their shiny ads — there would be a marketplace where consumers looking for a type of product would anonymously advertise their intent. He called this middle business that would manage the market of interest and intent an “infomediary.” It would gather the products via the internet and, only once the consumer had found one of interest, would it reveal this prospective buyer’s identity to the brand.

The details back then were sketchy. But years later Google, through its AdWords program, would become that middle business. Intent would be “advertised” by the keywords consumers typed into the search bar. And much of the wealth that had flowed to ad agencies would be captured by this massive and efficient infomediary, giving consumers unprecedented power and choice.

An Anti-Mad-Man Who Predicted CDPs

The audience was visibly upset. Where folks would start by politely raising their hands to get more details, by the end I distinctly recall some of them leaping to their feet to ask their questions in urgent tones.

I found it quite entertaining.

Just as Schulz didn’t have the specifics about Google that night, he didn’t mention in the book he co-authored the concept of a Customer Data Platform (CDP). But in that book, Measuring Brand Communication ROI, he created a brilliant framework for measuring the dollar impact of CDPs on brand value and revenue.

Although his book is long out of print, you can read about about his framework in my eBook. You can download it here.

And watch this space for additional reasons why I’d love to talk to you in two weeks at Adobe Summit.