Lucy Shelley
Jan 22, 2024

Most marketers feel out of touch with customer data—what went wrong?

Despite a growing number of tools and user touchpoints, new research has found that 81% of marketers can’t access customer data to inform campaigns.

Photo: Getty Inmages.
Photo: Getty Inmages.

B2C marketers are behind where they should be in terms of understanding their audiences, and much of this comes down to the use of and access to data.

Research from customer data platform Plinc revealed over four in five (81%) senior marketers in UK-based B2C brands can’t easily access the customer data they need to inform campaigns, causing frustration, burdensome processes and a negative impact on results. 

Nearly two-thirds (61.5%) revealed their core customer data is updated once per week or less frequently, diminishing the relevance and impact of their campaigns. 

Frustrating processes add to the current stresses felt by marketers, particularly during the pitch process which leaves half of marketers (50%) burning out.

With inflation rates at a 15-year high causing business costs to soar along with the prices consumers pay, personalisation has become a lynchpin for increasing customer retention rates. Yet, disjointed and inaccessible customer data is affecting these efforts, with over two-fifths (44%) believing their personalisation is unsophisticated and impacting the effectiveness of campaigns.

Only 23% of marketing professionals strongly believe senior leadership recognises customer marketing’s impact on business growth, with ‘proving their value to protect budgets’ reported as their greatest source of stress. Inadequate resources and funding are restricting over two thirds (68%) from driving business growth, the research found. 

The lack of resources means over a third (36%) of marketers admit they’re still four or more years away from achieving a true customer-first approach.

“Ultimately, the lack of access to customer data has made the role of customer marketing fraught with uncertainties, challenges and stressors,” said Stuart Russell, Chief Strategy Officer at Plinc. “Yet, there is a way marketers can alleviate the concerns keeping them up at night. 

“It starts with marketers educating businesses on the wider value of customer data. Not just for marketing activity—but for product development, customer experience initiatives, customer support and beyond. Through instilling a true ‘customer-first’ mentality throughout a business, marketers can start to optimise their campaigns whilst also demonstrating business impact.”

Of course, every (good) B2C brand cares about its customers, but that doesn’t make them customer-first. The report argued that most businesses today are customer-led.

It concluded: “If you are looking to achieve a customer-first approach, the onus should be on enabling agility. Identifying valuable insights and acting on them quickly to optimise your programs is the only way to deliver truly data-driven marketing.” 

 

Source:
Performance Marketing World

Related Articles

Just Published

1 hour ago

Nissan launches 90s-inspired video game ahead of ...

Dark Horses collaborated with illustrator Kentaro Yoshida and Electric Studios to create the game.

2 hours ago

Stagwell revenue rises 6% in Q1

Besides the US and the UK, all other geographies which includes APAC grew by 43.6%

18 hours ago

Agency Report Cards 2024: We grade 25 APAC networks

The grades are in for Campaign Asia's 22nd annual evaluation of APAC agency networks. Subscribe to read our detailed analyses.

19 hours ago

Agency Report Card 2024: BBDO

Amid challenging markets, BBDO is leaning on its creative capabilities while developing new technology skills to adapt to the new world of marketing, but this is still a work in progress.