Wednesday, April 1, 2015

New Oracle Marketing Cloud Release Aims to Balance the Marketer's Two Very Different Constituents

Editor's Note: Today's Modern Marketing Experience product keynote revealed some big news. Chris Lynch, Senior Director of Product Marketing for Oracle Marketing Cloud, provides the details:

Last night at Modern Marketing Experience, we heard about the delicate balancing act facing many marketing leaders today. On one hand, you can become maniacally focused on providing an amazing customer experience for each customer. But because that's often a long-term endeavor, you can put yourself at risk of not hitting your revenue goals this week, month, or quarter.

On the other hand, you can pour all of your focus into the latest revenue number for your CEO or board, but anger a lot of customers in the process as you value quantity over quality in your interactions with customers. It's the classic Wall Street versus Main Street dilemma. And with a few exceptions where a company was architected for top-line growth rather than profitability, most companies of all sizes confront this dichotomy every day.

This morning, at the product keynote of Modern Marketing Experience, the Oracle Marketing Cloud product leadership shared our vision for how the marketer can balance both the revenue requirements they have now, while delivering the individualized customer experience they know will drive their sustained differentiation over time. Rooted in this forward-looking vision actually rests immense practicality: We sought to address a variety of things the marketer can do now that will delight customers and grow revenue now.

Connect Data and Behaviors to Real Customers with the Oracle ID Graph

Today, most customers move between devices and channels with great fluidity. Customers may research a product on their mobile device, but go and complete a purchase on their desktop computer. In fact, 85% of marketers say their biggest challenge to providing seamless cross-channel marketing is customer data that is unavailable or spread across multiple sources.

If marketers take a traditional data warehouse approach of trying to collect each piece of data that gets generated—with consumers generating close to 3 billion terabytes a year—they will drive themselves nuts. Instead, the greater focus should be on letting the data live where it wants to live, and tying it to the right person so you can provide a better experience.

To support that vision, this morning the Oracle Marketing Cloud announced the Oracle ID Graph. A joint technology used across the Oracle Marketing Cloud and Oracle Data Cloud, the Oracle ID Graph pulls together the many IDs across marketing channels and devices that comprise a given person, and enables marketers to tie their interactions to an actionable customer profile. This ID enables the marketer to orchestrate a relevant, personalized experience for each individual across marketing channels.

What's an example of the ID Graph at work? Many customers today prefer to research a potential purchase on one device, but purchase on another. With the Oracle ID Graph, customers are more likely to receive a relevant experience as they move between these devices and connect with the right product or service. For example, if a customer uses a desktop browser to search for flights to New York, an airline marketer can ensure a relevant ad appears for a flight promotion when that same customer switches to their mobile device. This results in a higher conversion rate and more optimized budgets.

Another example of the Oracle Marketing Cloud's ability to bring the offline and online world. Today, around 95% of shopping still occurs offline in the store. With the recent acquisition of Oracle Datalogix, we can bridge that data into our cross-channel orchestration efforts. For example, if a retailer struggles to engage a customer over email, they can append offline purchase data from Oracle Datalogix and use that to target those customers with relevant display advertising that's orchestrated inside Oracle Cross-Channel Marketing for consumers.

Orchestrate Real-Time Experiences

Customer "journeys" are all the rage in digital marketing circles these days. It's a nice idea. You build a set of steps for customers, and they engage with your brand in compelling ways as they move along their journey. The problem is that most of these journey tools don't adapt fast enough to customer behavior. Customers move from channel-to-channel without much predictability, and they pivot and move in different directions. In fact, only 12% of customers today believe their marketing is real-time enough to drive adequate business results.

Today we announced the addition of Rapid Retargeter. Part of Oracle Cross-Channel Marketing for consumers, this allows the marketer to orchestrate a relevant cross-channel interaction when customers, through their actions, reach a certain inflection point. For example, after abandoning an online shopping cart, a customer may receive an email reminder of the cart's contents or see a display advertising campaign to reinforce the marketer's brand during that phase of product consideration. What's different about Rapid Retargeter than traditional retargeting tools is that it offers the marketer both speed and breadth; it helps marketing adapt to the customer experience in minutes, while ensuring that action is coordinated across different marketing channels.

Embrace Openness: Tap Into Marketing Ecosystem As You Need It

When you attend digital marketing conferences these days, there's always a big focus on the sheer volume of technology a marketer must manage. It's almost become passe for speakers to mention the dizzying landscape images from Chiefmartec.com or LUMA Partners.

It's often implied this ecosystem is a bad thing: a bunch of salesy tech vendors looking to dream up standalone market categories and a bunch of analysts looking to tell you how "disruptive" it all is. But this ecosystem holds lots of promise if you can find a way to make it work for you. Part of that starts with boiling it down to its basics.

If you look at most digital marketing technology today, it comes down to three things. They either provide 1) marketing data, 2) marketing applications, or 3) paid media. To help marketers organize this landscape, today we announced the addition of AppCloud Connect. Part of the Oracle Marketing Cloud's ecosystem, AppCloud Connect provides an open set of frameworks and technologies to pull in the data, apps, and media a marketer relies on today.

What can be accomplished with AppCloud Connect? One example we demonstrated on stage today was with web conferencing platform WebEx. AppCloud Connect empowered us to create an app that runs on top of Oracle's Cross-Channel Marketing solution for businesses. Right within the context of a campaign canvas, we can orchestrate WebEx as a key inflection point in the customer lifecycle.

AppCloud Connect, and the virtue of having an OpenPlatform, also allowed us to announce key integrations with other Oracle technologies, such as Oracle Commerce and Oracle WebCenter Sites.

Empower Marketing to Lead the Customer Experience

If marketers want to balance the needs of Main Street and Wall Street, they need to think holistically about the customer experience. Although the Oracle Marketing Cloud wants to adapt faster to customer demands and help customers deliver more integrated marketing, the other thing our open platform approach enables us to do is extend into the larger customer experience. With our open platform, we've already built integrations into Oracle Commerce, Oracle Service Cloud, and Oracle Sales Cloud.

Research indicates that this is where marketers want to go. Indeed, according to Gartner, nearly 90% of marketers believe that delivering a world-class customer experience will be the centerpiece of their long-term differentiation. In those organizations where a Chief Customer Offer or Customer Experience Offer title exists, nearly 60% of these leaders report in through marketing.

Marketers will lead this charge, and we want to provide an open platform to help them do it.

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