But first and foremost, you need to make sure you understand the value marketers can bring to your organisation.
In our current climate, marketing is not an expendable cost; it’s an essential profit-making investment. To understand the skills you should look for, understanding and accepting this, is a critical first step. But what skills deliver this value, and how do you go about recruiting a marketing professional who has them?
Despite the hype, the expansion of technology and data haven’t reduced the need for skilled marketers. What they have done is enable qualified marketers to demonstrate the effectiveness of marketing activities, for example, by analysing conversion rates, search engine rankings and attribution modelling. This in turn means they are able to increase the efficiency of these activities.
With more than 4,000 marketing technology products available, finding someone who knows how to collate, interrogate and interpret the relevant data is more important than hands-on technical skills or experience with specific software. However, a good understanding of GDPR and other data protection legislation is vital if you want to avoid the type of ‘data disaster’ two-thirds of chief marketing officers admit to having experienced.
Whilst the ability to decipher data into insights is important, insights alone won’t drive organisational success. That requires a customer-centric, problem solving ethos, something Sameer Rahman, Chair of the CIM Wales Board, learned quite early on in his marketing career: “Customers can give you the evolution but not the revolution. Marketers need to look at what consumers are struggling with and find a way to solve the problem, not look for direct answers from the consumer.”
Sameer explains that while data can give you a direction, it’s up to the individual to come up with the magic: “You need to bring out and be in touch with their emotions.” This is precisely why technology is not a substitute for an empathetic marketing professional.
Marketers who can challenge assumptions, explore different options and make innovative suggestions can have a huge impact on business growth. They are usually better at adapting to change too.
In our recent article for Business News Wales on Why Marketing Generalists are the answer to business growth, we talked about how the elevated strategic importance of marketers has created a shift from specialist to generalist marketing roles.
Having the relevant specialised marketing skills or industrial knowledge in-house can be invaluable, but to drive long-term success it is better to employ a more strategic marketing professional with good generalist knowledge, otherwise known as ‘a T-shaped marketer’.
Sameer says it’s this that has really helped his career. Now Group Director of Data Science at Edit, he explains: “You’ve got to have depth of knowledge in one area, but you need the breadth of commercial awareness, leadership, knowledge of the business and to know about every aspect of marketing to some degree.”
In our experience, specific expertise – in digital marketing for example – is less important than generalist knowledge. The fact that only 39% of senior marketing professionals believe their organisation’s digital strategy is aligned with their business, operational and marketing objectives is a good illustration of why.
To create change, marketers need to be able to bring people on-board with what they are doing and this means being able to interact with people at all levels of the business and successfully communicate the role of marketing. As Sameer says: “Internal engagement is very important; if marketers don’t make the whole organisation understand the value they bring, they’re going to struggle against the more tangible people.”
By bridging the gap between business functions and improving internal communication, marketers can help increase employee satisfaction, improve productivity and raise the external profile of the company.
Commercial acumen is an essential skill if marketers want to demonstrate ROI and, ultimately, prove the value of marketing. Without financial know-how, marketers won’t be able to speak the board’s language or show the impact marketing has on organisational profitability.
As Sameer says, marketers: “need to portray marketing as a profit centre not a cost centre”.
When it comes to finding a marketing professional with these skills, our top tips are:
We’re pleased to able to offer in-depth screening of candidates as part of our recruitment service. If you’re looking for a highly skilled marketing professional, please get in touch to find out how we can help.
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