|
| |

E-Journal Distributed monthly |
|
 |
IN THIS ISSUE ...
Get to know Sourabh Kothari, Principal Strategist, Webcasting and Rich Media, for ON24, as he shares his thoughts on sales lead generation and webcasts…Learn key marketing functions that utilize technology to create true marketing integration…David Rich of George P. Johnson discusses key facts about experience marketing…Mike Carlton of Carlton Associates asks if advertising agencies are losing their relevance…The 2008 Global TMT Predictions reports sponsored by Deloitte, LLP, claim market segmentation will play a key role in creating new product target markets…and don't miss out on our upcoming CLOSE event where sales and marketing executives will join forces to brainstorm best practices to drive sales effectiveness through closer alignment and integration.
|
Editor's Cut
Get To Know a CMO
Integrated Marketing
Hype vs. Fact
Relevance and Reinvention
CLOSE Audit
The Download
Upcoming Events
Join the Conversation |
|
|
|
|
Kwasi Neale-May got some mail the other day, reminding him about an upcoming doctor's appointment. The correspondence went on to remind him of some prescriptions he needed to pick up. Click here to meet Kwasi.
Kwasi is Donovan Neale-May's dog – and the un-official CMO Council mascot – and leveraging his name in this simple slice of personalization wrapped around a pet supply publication caught the eye of the CMO Council's executive director and made the consumer side of him take a look. It made the marketer side of him smile because someone got it right. This company leveraged their data about his buying patterns, about his likes and dislikes, and about his four-legged-friend to engage in a conversation.
I point to a paragraph in our recently released report, The Power of Personalization. "Messaging to the mass market in general is simply not going to cut through the clutter and deluge of direct mail, advertising, Internet, email and cold calling overtures. Customers are looking for a sign that the companies solicit them know something about them, and actually care about and understand their personal circumstances and dynamics. And, savvy customers today are very good at tuning out commercial noise and being more selective in who they do they business with."
It wasn't just the dog's name that embraced this customer; it was the fact that there was a targeted message reminding Donovan that Kwasi might almost be out of Heart Guard tablets. This veterinarian figured out how to do what many marketers haven't – how to leverage customer data to deliver targeted, relevant and appreciated personalization messages to effectively reach and engage the consumer. There is great power and promise in personalization to be sure. But the reality is that few are truly leveraging these technologies and services to aggregate customer data to create deeper bonds between customer and vendor.
Personalization - and all of its challenges, successes, strategies and practices - will become a large platform focus for the CMO Council in 2008. To kick things off, I would invite you to download the Power of Personalization report, now available on the CMO Council website. I especially call attention to this report as it is, essentially, one of the many starting points that all lead the CMO Council as a whole to our yearly Summit, the CMO Council Summit Elite Retreat.
This year, we will be gathering in Northern California on December 10 – 11 to analyze, evaluate and pursue new revenue sources, segments and strategies through our theme, "Routes to Revenue." In the coming months, we will be releasing more and more information about this event and will keep you up to date on speakers and participants of this event. In the mean time, I challenge each of you to take a long look at these routes. Personalization can certainly lay a pathway to revenue as it can more wholly embrace the customer in engagement and conversation. But do you know how to get on that route…and once you're on it, do you know if you are heading in the right direction? Let the conversation begin!
|
|
 |
 |
|
back to top |
MAXIMIZE AND QUALIFY YOUR SALES LEAD GENERATION EFFORTS WITH WEBCASTING
by Sourabh Kothari, Principal Strategist, Webcasting and Rich Media, for ON24
On a recent webcast hosted by ON24, marketing professionals were surveyed on the quality of information available to them about their prospective clients. Over 20% claimed they knew their target market extremely well, with detailed information about decision-makers' names and titles. But in today's B2B sales environment, no matter how effective your sales team is, a name and a title is not enough to sell to well-informed corporate clients. They are not going to tell you what they want. They expect you to know what they're looking for before you call them.
Traditional marketing initiatives do not collect this level of detail about your prospective clients, and there's nothing in your marketing mix that is truly interactive. You need better information. You need to know how your company's solutions meet their specific needs, and how soon they're willing to implement these solutions. You need an interactive marketing tool that gathers client-specific information without intrusion.
Webcasts bring prospects to your doorstep without any direct contact. By inviting your prospects to a webcast, you can capture information required to create customized sales pitches that meet their specific needs. While addressing a large audience, webcasts allow you to engage each individual prospect one-on-one, providing valuable, detailed information on each webcast participant. Thus, webcasts allow your prospects to sell themselves to you.
Qualifying Leads From The Very First "Click"
Start by sending well-crafted marketing e-mails for the webcast to your prospects. Keep the emphasis on the upcoming event (the call to action), but your sole intent (apart from brand awareness, of course) is to entice them just enough to click on the link to register for the webcast.
As soon as your prospects click on that link, they have graduated to "lead" status. Using Lead Scoring technology (such as that provided by ON24), you can begin ranking your prospects immediately. Each point of contact with your prospect provides you with greater clarity on their readiness to purchase your services/products. Let us begin with the very first step: Event Registration.
When a prospect registers for an event, they voluntarily provide crucial information that will help indicate the quality of the lead. There are certain key indicators that can help determine if the person registering is in fact a decision-maker for your service/product. Registration details such as Title, Role, and Industry should help differentiate top prospects even before they attend your live event.
Identifying Your Top Leads At "Showtime"
As you plan your live events, try implementing a few simple steps to significantly increase the quality of your leads. These tips help you to determine which leads your sales team should call first, and provide them with the information they need while the lead is still "hot".
Certain key indicators will immediately let you know if a "lead" is genuinely interested in your services/products or if they are "just browsing". A few common examples include the duration of attendance, which will tell you how long you were able to capture their interest; the downloading of presentation materials, indicating exactly what content your participants are interested in; and responses to polls and surveys, which gives your prospects the opportunity to voice exactly what solution they are looking for, and how soon they need it implemented.
Smaller Bites Are Easier To Swallow
Of course, the most certain way of judging a participant's interest is by asking them directly. But don't wait until the end of your live event to do this in a lengthy survey. Consider placing a brief 3-question survey at the beginning or middle of your event. Take your survey apart and offer it as poll questions that are incorporated into your presentation. Discuss the results of these poll questions real-time with your audience to encourage greater participation.
Remember, some participants may leave the webcast before the end of your presentation. Pushing out a short survey and a few quick polls allows for greater feedback at times when your audience's interest level is at its peak.
Your Leads Will Tell You When They're Ready
Following the live event, your lead scoring options increase dramatically. You've already collected all the information that you need. All you need to do is identify which registration details or poll responses (or any other user action) help you determine the quality of a lead. You can assign scores to any number of specific elements, creating a ranking order for all your leads into neatly defined "buckets"(i.e. from "Strong" to "Weak").
As you progress through your program, you can adjust scores and weights for any lead scoring element and re-rank your leads accordingly. You can also add new elements that you had not originally anticipated as determinants of lead quality. You can even score leads across multiple events, helping you determine if a particular webcast campaign has improved the quality of your leads.
Immediately after a live event has concluded, you can tell your sales team which leads are ready to be contacted, and which ones will require a little more effort. This can significantly increase your lead conversion rate while dramatically shortening your sales cycle.
Archived Webcasts: The Gift That Keeps On Giving
Typically, you spend all of your marketing effort on promoting a live webcast. Most of your attendees will watch the live broadcast, with a good portion viewing the archive one or two weeks afterward. But then you're on to the next webcast and the previous webcast is stored on your website somewhere. Hidden from view and no longer providing value to you.
When working with our customers, we recognized that archived webcasts could generate leads for months. In order to extend the shelf life of this content, ON24 launched Insight24, a B2B directory of webcasts, videos and podcasts. Insight24 enables marketers like you to further maximize the ROI of your webcasts by reaching new audiences who are specifically looking for your content.
The thing to remember is that the value of a webcast does not end with its live presentation. It can continue on in cyber space.
Now ask yourself - Have you maximized the value of your webcast leads from beginning to end?
|
About Sourabh Kothari:
Sourabh Kothari is Principal Strategist, Webcasting and Rich Media, for ON24. Sourabh is responsible for overseeing ON24's client services support group and providing counsel to clients regarding their webcasting programs.
ON24 is the global leader of webcasting and rich media marketing solutions. Over 600 global organizations rely on ON24 for their corporate and marketing initiatives, such as lead generation, conferences and events, product launches, global communications and more. These customers include Business Objects, Cisco, HP, IBM, Environmental Protection Agency, CMP Media, and more.

|
 |
 |
|
back to top |
DO YOU NEED INTEGRATED MARKETING?
By Chris Wiesen
Today's Marketing departments
are being asked to deliver
stronger results with fewer
dollars. Finding new ways
to increase your marketing
effectiveness is becoming
more of a necessity rather
than a desire. Developing an
"Integrated Marketing" strategy
leverages technology and
process change management
that can dramatically improve
your Marketing ROI.
Why Do You Need Integrated
Marketing?
Because Integrated Marketing provides an
enterprise approach to the way you plan,
budget, create, collaborate, communicate,
execute, settle and evaluate your marketing
strategies and tactics. Integrated Marketing
facilitates visibility to your results while
reducing administration costs and
minimizing errors. More importantly,
Integrated Marketing can create a
competitive advantage for your company
in the marketplace!
Brand Marketing Managers are constantly
seeking new and innovative ways to
accelerate demand for their products or
services. Their goal is to connect with
customers to build long-term, profitable
relationships. To actually do this, you
must plan and implement marketing
campaigns that create demand across
all customer segments in a measurable
way. Streamlining the various marketing
processes will improve efficiency, lower
overall costs and improve your
Marketing ROI.
There are many tools available for today's
marketing professionals but leveraging
all components of the marketing process
without using technology has proven to be
very difficult. Let's examine some of the
Key Marketing Functions where utilizing
technology to create true integration can
provide a substantial benefit for marketers:
Marketing Resource Management
Integrating MRM across your enterprise
offers the ability to manage and
optimize the use of internal and external
marketing resources. It also allows you to
collaboratively develop strategic marketing
plans and budgets, manage and account
for all marketing spending, develop and
compare multiple marketing scenarios
to identify the best marketing strategy,
provide a centralized view to manage and
schedule all relevant enterprise marketing
activities, centrally develop and manage
marketing collaterals via a Digital Asset
Library, and better manage and distribute
marketing funds to your Channel Partners.
Segment and List Management
Provide a centralized view of all relevant
customer data. This integrated capability
will empower business users to manage
customer and prospect data without the
traditional dependencies on IT. Marketing
attributes define and leverage unique
customer profile information to target and
personalize specific marketing messages.
You must be able to quickly identify and
segment customers to target. Utilize list
management to generate target lists in the
support of marketing campaign activities.
Campaign Management
Successfully connect with customers to
drive demand for products and services.
Analyze, plan, develop, execute and
measure campaign activities through
all inbound and outbound interaction
channels. Collaborate with internal
and external team members to manage
resources to plan, develop, and execute
coordinated, multichannel inbound and
outbound campaign activities. This
results in an ability to build long-term
customer relationships with relevant
and personalized customer interactions.
Leverage Call Center, E-Marketing and
E-Commerce where appropriate to drive
customer demand.
Lead Management
Seamlessly manage processes between sales
and marketing organizations. Generate
highly qualified leads and follow up on
every lead to closure. Increase the lead
conversion rates and the lead cycle times.
Automate the lead distribution process
to the best qualified sales representatives,
brokers, agents and / or partner agents.
Utilize closed-loop lead monitoring to
maximize effectiveness throughout the
entire lead life-cycle process.
Trade Promotion Management
Optimize TPM for the use of trade funds
to generate end-customer demand and
increase profitability for planned products.
Use a centralized planning approach
with full visibility into all
enterprise marketing activities.
Leverage integration
to Supply Chain and
Demand Planning to
develop accurate sales
volume forecasts.
Leverage integration
to Financials for
accurate accruals
and deduction
validation. Use
TPM analytics to
close the loop on
planned and actual
trade activities and
effectiveness.
Marketing Budgets
Integration of Marketing budgets and
actual expenses to your financial system
can offer huge benefits. Automate the
payment, settlement and redemption
processes eliminates the need for complex
excel spreadsheets to manage individual
campaign expenses. Financial evaluation
is critical for evaluating which campaigns
are successful and which are not. Having
financial visibility in real time can provide
the opportunity to cancel campaigns early
on and redirect funds to more effective
opportunities.
Marketing Analytics: Convert
reports and data into actionable insights.
Leverage powerful marketing analytic
capabilities that will help empower
marketers to make smart business
decisions. Use predictive analysis
where possible to anticipate customer
behaviors and identify hidden trends and
patterns. Use customer analytics to gain
insights into customer profiles, behaviors
and profitability. Understand product
profitability and the selling correlations to
drive increased product demand. Use Key
Performance Indicators (KPI's) to manage
all marketing activities against a set of
goals and targets.
Integrated Marketing requires you define
a corporate strategy for Knowledge
Management. Think of how you would
set up a centralized repository of your
corporate knowledge that would include
your marketing plans, templates, guidance,
insights, and more. If you were a new
marketing employee, having a centralized
Knowledge Management repository would
be the ideal place to begin learning about
all relevant historical information pertinent
to your company, division, brand, product
or service.
Marketing Dashboards are used as Brand
scorecards and individual campaign
performance KPIs. This enables
consistency in your marketing planning
and execution and improves predictability,
particularly with your marketing budget.
Dashboards are a quick and easy way
to connect brand, sales, and finance,
operations, and logistics users to
marketing processes. This reduces overall
administration time and helps the sales organization focus on results.
Centralized marketing planners and
development tools are helpful in many
functional marketing areas. Standardizing
best practices with appropriate work-flow
and approvals will help define your endto-
end integrated marketing processes.
Senior Management is generally very
supportive of these types of consistent
operational processes that will maximize
your Marketing ROI.
Integrating your marketing processes is
a strategic enabler that will help increase
profit margins through more efficient and
effective marketing.
|
Chris Wiesen is the CRM Solution Principal
for SAP America, which offers solutions that
address the above issues and more. SAP software
enables business process change by providing
greater efficiency, visibility and control across
your marketing initiatives. Contact SAP for
insights into how Integrated Marketing can be
accomplished for your company.
|
 |
 |
|
back to top |
EXPERIENCE MARKETING: HYPE VS. FACT KEY FACTS ABOUT ONE OF MARKETING'S HOTTEST GROWING DISCIPLINES
By David Rich, Senior Vice President, Strategic Marketing/Worldwide, George P. Johnson
Responding to a growing frustration stemming from the mounting volume and clutter of marketing messages, the marketing industry appears to be embracing the power of experience marketing. Yet even as its power is recognized, questions remain about what it is exactly, what distinguishes the good from the bad, and what kind of agency partner is best suited to help you execute.
The recent EventView 2007: North America report - sponsored through a collaboration between the Event Marketing Institute, Meeting Professionals International Foundation and George P. Johnson (GPJ) - reveals that 82% of more than 1,000 senior sales and marketing executives in large enterprises worldwide have implemented some form of experience marketing.
If you are one those who are experimenting with experience marketing or considering doing so, here's a brief overview of the discipline that may prove useful for charting your course:
Definition of Experience Marketing
Experience marketing is the practice of engaging target audiences in personal experiences in which they internalize a sense of how their personal or professional life is improved by the brand. The result is a powerful increase in the depth and volume of brand differentiation, conversion and loyalty.
Isn't Experience Marketing the same as Event Marketing?
Although both share live interactions as a format for communication, there are significant differences between these two forms of marketing.
Traditional event marketing is tactically based and attempts to influence an audience through a largely features and benefits sales approach. It is based on an interruptive model in which the brand inserts its products and services (and information about them) into an audience's professional or personal life.
Experience marketing immerses the audience in a welcome storyline that plays out through physical action and emotional and intellectual interactions that motivate audiences to see themselves as bigger heroes in their own stories.
Traditional event marketing asks something of the individual or audience ("stand in my trade show booth while I tell you what you must know") and often requires the audience to do its own translation of how the features of a brand or product will improve one's lot.
In contrast, experience marketing (even in the trade show setting) requires little of the individual, and instead relies on their own motivation to find their way into the interaction, giving the individual or audience what it has (knowingly or not) longed for in ways that empower them - through co-authorship of an experience that unfolds by their own direction.
Lastly, effective experience marketing is vigilant about being on-brand and more importantly, providing a heightened sense of brand attributes. It's painfully obvious when a traditional event marketing program doesn't work because the experience isn't evocative of the brand or not truly engaging the audience in the right way. Faithfully executed experience marketing prevents this from happening.
Is Experience Marketing Just Product Sampling and Stunts?
If you don't look too deeply you might think that bringing the brand to life means product sampling or headline-making stunts. But while experience marketing can include these tactics, they aren't a necessity and some types need to be avoided.
Product sampling offers participants momentary product exposure but no long lasting brand affinity. Too often, live experiences that use these tactics dangerously dilute the brand by using techniques that are wildly misaligned with the brand's attributes.
Moreover, not all products lend themselves to sampling. Experience marketing however can apply to the promotion of any product or service, and always does so in a faithful context of the brand and the life of the audience.
So it's not necessarily about sampling, nor about stunts for stunt sake; it's about building the brand attributes into the entire experience, in every way possible.
Is Experience Marketing a Stand Alone Discipline?
Actually, just the opposite: experience marketing may just be the best enabler of integrated marketing communications in the marketer's tool kit. Companies frustrated by the siloed nature of their marketing channels find that effective experience marketing drives integration because it inherently relies on the natural interdependency among the disciplines. For instance, since pre and post event communications create audiences for face-to-face events and extend their experiences beyond the physical interaction, integrating these tactics isn't a nice-to-have, but a must-have, and professionals in this space plan and execute on this model unfailingly.
Isn't My Advertising Agency the Right Partner in this Space?
Maybe yes, but maybe no. Most successful marketing agencies understand branding, positioning, messaging, segmentation, reach and many other sub-disciplines of the industry. But experience marketing entails several differentiating key characteristics, and therefore requirements, on top of the basics referred to above.
It requires a deep understanding of physical, multi-dimensional, immersive and interactive storytelling combined with motivational psychology. It also requires the competence to marshal an enormous scope of details from development to execution well beyond the typical 30 second spot or print campaign.
Experience marketing is often a one-take world, with no possibility of editing. And while the discipline is a lot more than just logistics, make no mistake, on the ground competence on the execution end of things can make or break the best experience marketing idea.
Why Experience Marketing?
A recent GPJ white paper examining experience marketing makes this argument:
Marketers are facing an unprecedented wave of change that is creating a new imperative about how to create and manage brands. Globalization, near-worldwide connectivity through an ever-expanding array of electronic devices, the lowering of barriers to entry via the Internet and the resulting volume of competition and marketing clutter, as well as the commoditization of nearly everything, makes brand value the ultimate differentiator and competitive advantage.
Thus, marketing efforts that enable brand engagement and offer audiences the opportunity to "live the brand promise" are those that will drive people to buy products, share their experiences virally, demonstrate loyalty to a company and resist competitors' entreaties.
|

About David M. Rich:
David M. Rich is the Senior Vice-President, Strategic Marketing/Worldwide at George P. Johnson, ranked one of Advertising Age's Top 25 marketing agencies and recognized as the premier experience marketing agency in the world. As the leader of GPJ's Program Strategy practice, David leads an international team dedicated to empowering brands to elevate their event marketing programs through smarter event marketing. He is one of the co-authors of a recent GPJ white paper entitled "The Experience Marketing Imperative."
|
 |
 |
|
back to top |
RELEVANCE AND REINVENTION
By Mike Carlton
Mike Carlton poses the questions: Are advertising agencies losing their relevance? And if so, are there ways that agencies can reinvent themselves to recapture that relevance?
Today's world is different. It's a world in which marketers are redefining the role of agencies. The consumer (including B-to-B) has changed. In the past, everything was under control of the agency. Today, the consumer is in charge and they expect one-to-one marketing. It's a complete role reversal.
Various studies have shown that senior executives of marketers tend to view agencies, even their own, quite narrowly. As a result, many marketers have assembled their own teams of outside providers.
A Forrester study shows that only about 50% of marketing executives believe that their agency is capable of handling changes in Internet advertising. Only a third of those executives believe that their agency can help them with consumer generated media.
*******
Rel-e-vance
The dictionary defines relevance as: bearing upon, or connected to, the matter at hand.
The question today is how relevant are advertising agencies to the needs of contemporary marketers? How well do they bear upon marketers' vexing problems. How well are they connected to the interests of marketers?
Could it be that agencies are losing their relevance? And if so, what does it mean. And what can be done about it?
From Whence We Came
The setting for AMC's hit show Mad Men is a Madison Avenue agency in 1960. If you haven't already done so you owe it to yourself to view it. I'm often asked, "Is that the way it really was back then?" My answer is, "Yes."
Obviously, as in any dramatization, Mad Men tends to overstate the intrigue, the smoking, the drinking and the sex. But they were all definitely there. But the lurid stuff is really beside the point.
As an agency practitioner, the important thing to watch is the dynamics between the agency people, the clients and the impact the agency's campaigns had on the marketplace. The show's portrayal of how the agency related to its clients and how the agency's ideas leveraged consumer behavior are quite accurate.
The influence the agency had over the client's economic success cannot be overstated.
This is an excerpt from a White Paper written by Mike Carlton of Carlton Associates, Inc. For the complete article, visit: http://www.carltonassociatesinc.com/wp1.cfm?id=53.
|

About Mike Carlton:
In the 1980s he founded Carlton Associates Incorporated, a consulting firm that focuses on agency business issues and other leadership challenges. He was also a founder of World Systems, a first generation accounting system supplier for agencies, and 600 Monkeys (now a part of Computer Associates), a provider of new technologies for agencies and other professional service firms. In addition, he founded Centre for International Business, which has assisted advertisers and agencies globally.
His consulting, systems and international work has taken him to agencies and marketers all over the world. The client roster numbers more than 100, including strong, mid-size independent agencies, offices of global agency organizations, as well as successful smaller shops. He currently serves on the advisory or corporate boards of a number of agencies and related firms. |
 |
 |
|
back to top |
CLOSE LAUNCHES FIRST GLOBAL BENCHMARK TO ASSESS THE SALES AND MARKETING ALIGNMENT
There are plenty of theories about how sales and marketing functions link and align. But we want to learn about this directly from the people it most affects: you! The Coalition to Leverage and Optimize Sales Effectiveness (CLOSE) presents the first Sales and Marketing Integration Audit. By aligning sales and marketing, the sales process can become more efficient, can qualify better leads, close bigger deals and sustain longer, more positive relationships with customers. But the reality is that sales and marketing functions in many companies don't align, departments don't interact, and often executives are braced for battle in the blame game rather than working together to move the bottom line.
This is your chance to find your own voice in this discussion and let us know what you really think of the other side.and what you really need from them.
TAKE THE AUDIT
|
|
 |
 |
|
back to top |
THE DOWNLOAD
According to the 2008 Global TMT Predictions reports sponsored by Deloitte, LLP, market segmentation will play a key role in creating new product target markets. The reports consists of a series of three individual reports examining emerging developments and how they will shape the technology, media and telecommunications market. Download a copy of each report in the 2008 Global TMT Industry Predictions series.
http://www.deloitte.com/dtt/article/0,1002,cid%253D187463,00.html
Key trends identified:
- Technology Innovation Blowback: Technology industries are demonstrating increased interest and investment in developing products to reach large, low-income populations in emerging economies. Expect to see at least one of these innovative products, services or management practices be introduced back into Western economies in 2008 and act as a disruptive force.
- Online Advertising: Despite increased spending on online advertising, there is growing antipathy by consumers to the online advertisement and the tracking of online behavior.
- Accessibility as a Business Driver: Demographics are creating new market opportunities for communications services and products. Market segmentation will play a key role in creating new product target markets.
|
|
 |
 |
|
back to top |
UPCOMING EVENTS |
|
|
The CLOSE workshops will bring together 36 executives to form six corporate teams consisting with an equal participant mix drawn from sales, business development, channel, and field, regional and corporate marketing.
Sign up for an upcoming CLOSE workshop near you!
CLOSE Workshop #3: Australia/APAC
Dates: April 16, 2008
Location: Macquarie Graduate School of Management (MGSM)
CLOSE Workshop #4: Brazil
Dates: April 29, 2008
Location: Renaissance Sao Paulo Hotel, Brazil
CLOSE Workshop #5: Northern California
Dates: May 12, 2008
Location: Stanford University, California
CLOSE Workshop #6: Paris
Dates: May 27, 2008
Location: EUROSITES George V, Paris, France
|

|
|
9th Search Engine Strategies New York Conference & Expo
Date: March 17 – 20, 2008
Location: New York
Search Engine Strategies returns to New York for its 9th year with a new focus on the interactive marketplace. The new content line-up includes key market makers from around the world, along with an educational outline designed to address the issues Marketers face each day. From universal and blended search considerations in natural search or SEO, to the latest tactics for managing sophisticated sponsored listing programs, SES has created a social, educational and networking environment for you. more » |
 |
|
CMO Summit Tokyo 2008
Date: March 21, 2008
Location: Tokyo, Japan
A collaboration between the CMO Council and IDG Japan, speakers representing the CMO Council include Masami Takahasi, Executive Director of Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment and Miki Tsusaka, global director of Boston Consulting Group. Topics include discuss the issues of today's marketing and how they relate to the mobile solution. more »
|
 |
 |
 |
|
back to top |
JOIN THE CONVERSATION
If you would like to submit an article or recommend one, please follow these guidelines:
- Maximum 1,000 words
- Microsoft Word format
- Use Arial typeface
- Appropriate Content for Executive Level Audience
- Marketing-Related Content
|
Send your submission as an email attachment to:
Liz Miller
VP, Programs & Operations
CMO Council
mm_content@cmocouncil.org |
 |
 |
|
|
|
|