Building Capabilities for B2B Marketing Leadership ... · PDF fileBuilding Capabilities for...

16
Perspective Building Capabilities for B2B Marketing Leadership Insights from Building Product Manufacturers Matthew Egol Yogesh Pandit David Perpich

Transcript of Building Capabilities for B2B Marketing Leadership ... · PDF fileBuilding Capabilities for...

Perspective

Building Capabilities for B2B Marketing LeadershipInsights from Building Product Manufacturers

Matthew EgolYogesh PanditDavid Perpich

Booz & Company

Contact Information

AmsterdamPeter [email protected]

ChicagoMatt [email protected]

ClevelandLes [email protected]

Steven [email protected]

John [email protected]

DallasJose Gregorio [email protected]

LondonRichard [email protected]

MumbaiAbhishek [email protected]

MunichGregor [email protected]

New YorkMatthew [email protected]

Yogesh [email protected]

David PerpichSenior [email protected]

San FranciscoDouglas [email protected]

1Booz & Company 1

EXECUTIVESUMMARY

The nature of business-to-business (B2B) marketing is changing. What was once primarily a tactical function supporting the sales force is transforming into a strategic partner. Even as B2B marketers are under significant pressure to do more with less, they must address a broad set of requirements beyond brand advertising, trade shows, and getting the company’s product catalog in front of target customers. In addition to these core activities, leading B2B marketers are now playing a more strategic role in building customer insights, developing integrated campaigns across traditional media and new digital platforms, and supporting relationship-building programs with key purchasing decision makers and those that influence product specifications.

The economic downturn has accel-erated these shifts, as leading B2B marketers seek to not only cut costs but also grow stronger. Despite cost pressures, an emerging set of B2B marketing leaders are preserving their focus on building new capa-bilities to position themselves for superior performance as the economy bounces back.

To build insights into B2B marketing leadership, Booz & Company recently studied building product manufactur-ers (BPMs) to better understand shifts in their marketing objectives, spend-ing priorities, and focus on capability-building efforts. BPMs were chosen for this initial wave of research because the residential and commer-cial construction sectors have been hit particularly hard by the recession.

Booz & Company2 Booz & Company22

Efficiently and effectively reaching a fragmented set of customers has historically been a challenge for B2B marketers. For years, companies relied on brand advertising, direct mail of their product catalogs, and a network of dealers and distribu-tors to reach their diffuse customer segments. While the emergence of digital media platforms has opened up new opportunities to interact directly with end customers, many B2B companies have been slow to react, compared with business-to-consumer (B2C) marketers.

When the economic downturn began in the fall of 2008, B2B companies came under intense pressure to cut costs. After all, the recession hit the B2B sector with full force; busi-ness spending plunged 19 percent between June 2008 and June 2009, compared with a 1.9 percent drop in consumer spending.1

These cost pressures helped expose the capability gaps between leading and average B2B marketing orga-nizations. C-suite directives to “do more with less” forced marketers to prioritize their investments, accel-erating an ongoing shift to digital-enabled marketing programs that promise higher returns on invest-

ment by generating more efficient and effective ways of distributing product information to end custom-ers and influencers, while creating higher-quality leads for dealers and distributors.

The recession also brought a new level of awareness inside B2B orga-nizations that new capabilities are needed to manage the integration of traditional marketing platforms, such as print trade journals, with emerging digital channels. Today, B2B firms are taking their cue from leading marketers in developing these capabilities:

• Cross-functional processes to manage integrated marketing programs

• Database marketing and other technology skills to personalize interactions with customers, dis-tributors, and those who influence purchasing decisions

• Collaborative approaches with agencies and media companies to generate branded content

Booz & Company is working with clients to develop a better understanding of how leaders are building these new capabilities and what is required to successfully navigate the transformation. In late 2008 and early 2009, we teamed with the Association of National Advertisers (ANA), with which Booz & Company has enjoyed a

Key Findings

• Successful marketing investments focus on building sustained capabilities, as opposed to executing a series of campaigns.

• Building product marketers with more advanced capabilities have graduated from playing a tactical role to driving growth strategy for their companies, but even leaders recognize that there is much room for improvement.

• Leaders are focusing more than non-leaders on driving traffic to their websites and building direct relationships with customers to drive leads for their dealers and distributors.

• As companies increase their spending on digital platforms, they expect media companies to become more important partners.

COST CONCERNS HASTEN CHANGE

3Booz & Company

multiyear relationship focused on building successful marketing models, to conduct a joint survey of marketing effectiveness across B2B sectors.2

To extend this initial research, Booz & Company recently partnered with Hanley Wood, a leading B2B media and information company serving the construction market, to conduct a marketing leadership study of 72 BPMs. BPMs were our first choice for an industry-specific treatment because they represent a large and leading component of U.S. economic activity. In addition, the sheer mag-nitude of the downturn in construc-

tion markets has forced BPMs to move rapidly in making budget and marketing mix adjustments. This being the case, BPMs provide poten-tial ahead-of-the-curve insights for other B2B sectors.

As part of our BPM research with Hanley Wood, we developed the Booz & Company Marketing Leadership Index to help B2B marketing executives identify the capabilities that distinguish lead-ers from non-leaders (see “Research Methodology,” page 12). Given their excellence in marketing, leaders provide insights into marketing best practices and establish forward-

looking trends in strategic priorities, spending, and investments in new capabilities.

For our marketing leadership study, we defined BPM marketing lead-ers as those who excel at both “foundational” and “exceptional” capabilities. We defined foundational capabilities as those that represent the “table stakes” attributes of tradi-tional marketing programs: sales and marketing collateral, dealer/distribu-tor programs, customer training and development, event marketing, and customer insights (see Exhibit 1).

Note: n=72. Neutral responses are not included. Totals may vary because of rounding. Source: Booz & Company Marketing Leadership Study (2009)

Exhibit 1 Foundational Marketing Capabilities

50%

50%

50%

. 3 values

100%

100%

75%

75%

25%

lines

lines

. 5 values

25%100%

100%

75%

75%

50%

50%

. 4 values

100%

100%

25%

25%

75%

75%

. 7 values

100% 25% lin

100% 25%

75%

75% lin

50%

50%

. 8 values

100% 25% lin

100% 25%

75%

75% lin

50%

50%

. 6 values

lin

100% 25%75% lin50%

100%

. 2 values

50%

100% 50%

50%100%

75% 50%100%

. 1 value

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

44

40

43

43

38 55

62

7026

7

17

54

50

11

15

13

15

18

16

4

8

1

19

15

26

19Customer Training & Development

Event Marketing

Sales & Marketing Collateral

Dealer/Distributor Programs

Customer Insights

6

4

8

22

11

SATISFACTION WITH STRENGTH OF COMPANY'S FOUNDATIONAL MARKETING CAPABILITIES (% AGREE/DISAGREE)

Strongly Disagree

Disagree Somewhat

Agree Somewhat

Strongly Agree

Booz & Company4

Exceptional capabilities are the leading-edge skills required to take advantage of the shift to digital—multi-platform media campaigns, data/lead management, search engine optimization/search engine marketing, and direct marketing (see Exhibit 2).

The Booz & Company Marketing Leadership Index scored BPM survey respondents based on the sophis-tication of their foundational and

exceptional capabilities. While companies scored higher on average for foundational capabilities, there was still significant room improve-ment among all BPMs. The range in scores for exceptional capabilities was even wider.

We defined leaders as those with positive scores on both dimensions of the Booz & Company Marketing Leadership Index (i.e., for both foun-dational and exceptional capabili-

ties). Based on this criterion, roughly one-third of BPMs were classified as marketing leaders (see Exhibit 3).

With these findings in hand, we were able to distinguish how leaders differed from the rest of the pack when it came to setting priorities for marketing innovation, balancing marketing budgets, and planning their spending levels for the near term.

Source: Booz & Company Marketing Leadership Study (2009)

Exhibit 3 Booz & Company Marketing Leadership Index

50%

50%

50%

. 3 values

100%

100%

75%

75%

25%

lines

lines

. 5 values

25%100%

100%

75%

75%

50%

50%

. 4 values

100%

100%

25%

25%

75%

75%

. 7 values

100% 25% lin

100% 25%

75%

75% lin

50%

50%

. 8 values

100% 25% lin

100% 25%

75%

75% lin

50%

50%

. 6 values

lin

100% 25%75% lin50%

100%

. 2 values

50%

100% 50%

50%100%

75% 50%100%

. 1 value

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

INDEXED SUM OF INDIVIDUAL SCORES (STRONGLY AGREE = +2, AGREE +1, DISAGREE -1, STRONGLY DISAGREE -2)

Exceptional Score

Foundational Score

“Leaders”

-100

-80

-60

-40

-20

0

20

40

60

80

100

-100 -80 -60 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100

Leaders

Non-Leaders

Note: n=72. Neutral responses are not included. Totals may vary because of rounding. Source: Booz & Company Marketing Leadership Study (2009)

Exhibit 2 Exceptional Marketing Capabilities

50%

50%

50%

. 3 values

100%

100%

75%

75%

25%

lines

lines

. 5 values

25%100%

100%

75%

75%

50%

50%

. 4 values

100%

100%

25%

25%

75%

75%

. 7 values

100% 25% lin

100% 25%

75%

75% lin

50%

50%

. 8 values

100% 25% lin

100% 25%

75%

75% lin

50%

50%

. 6 values

lin

100% 25%75% lin50%

100%

. 2 values

50%

100% 50%

50%100%

75% 50%100%

. 1 value

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

SATISFACTION WITH STRENGTH OF COMPANY'S EXCEPTIONAL MARKETING CAPABILITIES (% AGREE/DISAGREE)

31

40

18

15

46

49

35

26

24

19

22

2624

21

Direct Marketing

Multi-Platform Media Campaigns

Data/Lead Management

Search Engine Optimization/Search Engine Marketing

10

14

50

43

33

34 18

6

20

8

Strongly Disagree

Disagree Somewhat

Agree Somewhat

Strongly Agree

5Booz & Company 5

Although most B2B marketers have historically struggled with customer fragmentation, few have been as challenged as those in the building products industry. Potential customers number in the hundreds of thousands, and direct contact with end buyers is often impeded by multi-tier distribution networks of distributors, dealers, and retailers. In addition, BPMs also need to market to influencers—architects and others who recommend specific products. BPM marketers currently seek to reach these customers and influencers primarily by taking out ads or by developing sales and marketing collateral such as catalogs to be handed out at trade shows or distributed via direct mail.

But over time, BPMs have begun to refine their focus for marketing innovation. The emergence of the Internet has allowed them to expand the scope of their interactions with end customers and influencers

by building direct conversations through e-mail and company-owned websites, where they can acquire information on customers and publish virtual versions of their catalogs and other targeted content.

Today, the vast majority of BPMs we surveyed agree on the most critical marketing objectives—driving traffic to their website (85 percent), increasing brand awareness through advertising (83 percent), and building direct relationships with customers (83 percent).

To support these objectives, BPMs are investing in a broad set of marketing programs, including a diverse mix of paid media adver-tising and other “below-the-line” marketing programs—the marketing services industry’s term for anything in the marketing budget that histori-cally fell below the line item for paid media. For BPMs, below- the-line marketing accounts for

PRIORITIES FOR MARKETING INNOVATION

Booz & Company6

three-quarters of spending, encom-passing spending categories such as direct marketing, events, trade programs, sales and marketing col-lateral, company websites, and the purchase of keywords from Google and other search platforms (see Exhibit 4).

As marketers step up their efforts to get closer to the customer, the marketing mix is shifting in favor of digital advertising, search, direct marketing (including digital forms such as e-mail), and company websites. However, despite recent pressures on traditional advertis-ing, paid media’s share of the budget is expected to remain stable, underscoring the essential role that advertising plays in promoting brand awareness and driving audiences to company websites.

In fact, parallel shifts in marketing mix are occurring. First, paid media

is migrating to digital, but as part of an integrated marketing campaign that combines print, digital, and events for maximum impact in build-ing brands and driving sales. Second, BPMs are simultaneously pursuing other initiatives through their spend-ing on below-the-line marketing programs.

This shift is even more pronounced for leading BPM marketers (see Exhibit 5). For instance, leaders place a much greater emphasis on driving traffic to their own or dealer/distributor websites. Similarly, build-ing customer contacts and expand-ing their customer database is a much higher priority for leaders than non-leaders. Given leaders’ strengths in data management and direct mar-keting, this is not surprising. Leaders also focus more effort on digital innovation, as they invest in new capabilities to fully tap the potential of online and mobile marketing to

forge deeper customer relationships and better target the delivery of information and promotional offers to decision makers and influencers.

In terms of overall investment, the majority of leaders currently spend the equivalent of more than 4 percent of sales on marketing. By comparison, two-thirds of non-leaders spend the equivalent of only 1 to 3 percent of sales on marketing, a significant difference. Leaders are sustaining higher levels of spend-ing on marketing in the downturn, recognizing that building winning capabilities requires investment and that they have an opportunity to grow stronger even as they cut costs.

Moving forward, both groups expect their marketing budgets to increase as the economy rebounds and the construction market recovers (see Exhibit 6).

7Booz & Company

Source: Booz & Company Marketing Leadership Study (2009)

Exhibit 4 Shift to More Direct Points of Contact

50%

50%

50%

. 3 values

100%

100%

75%

75%

25%

lines

lines

. 5 values

25%100%

100%

75%

75%

50%

50%

. 4 values

100%

100%

25%

25%

75%

75%

. 7 values

100% 25% lin

100% 25%

75%

75% lin

50%

50%

. 8 values

100% 25% lin

100% 25%

75%

75% lin

50%

50%

. 6 values

lin

100% 25%75% lin50%

100%

. 2 values

50%

100% 50%

50%100%

75% 50%100%

. 1 value

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

BPMS’ MARKETING BUDGETS—2010 VS. 2012 (ESTIMATED % ALLOCATION OF TOTAL MARKETING BUDGET)

18%19%

14%13%

9%11%

8% 9%

4%3%

20%

Trade Programs & PromotionsCompany WebsitesDirect MarketingPaid Search

Digital Advertising

Traditional Advertising

Other2012

100%

2%

17% Developing Sales & Marketing Collateral

Events

6%5%

19%

2010

100%

3%

21%

Paid Media

Below the Line(i.e., other than

paid media)

Note: BPM leaders n=33, BPM non-leaders n=39. Source: Booz & Company Marketing Leadership Study (2009)

Exhibit 5 BPM Leaders’ Marketing Priorities

50%

50%

50%

. 3 values

100%

100%

75%

75%

25%

lines

lines

. 5 values

25%100%

100%

75%

75%

50%

50%

. 4 values

100%

100%

25%

25%

75%

75%

. 7 values

100% 25% lin

100% 25%

75%

75% lin

50%

50%

. 8 values

100% 25% lin

100% 25%

75%

75% lin

50%

50%

. 6 values

lin

100% 25%75% lin50%

100%

. 2 values

50%

100% 50%

50%100%

75% 50%100%

. 1 value

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

KEY FOCUS OF FIRMS’ MARKETING OBJECTIVES—LEADERS VS. NON-LEADERS (% WHO REPLIED “AGREE” OR “STRONGLY AGREE” TO EACH STATEMENT)

Driving website traffic through print/digital adv. 100%69% +31%

Increasing brand awareness through advertising 91%79% +12%

Building direct relationships with building pros 85%82% +3%

Building customer contacts and growing our database 85%62% +23%

Driving qualified leads for our sales force 85%67% +18%

Training and professional education programs 85%72% +13%

Developing custom content for branding 82%74% +8%

Building deeper insights into our customer base 82%69% +13%

Event and face-to-face marketing 79%69% +10%

Building innovation around digital media 73%62% +11%

Driving traffic to dealers/dist. through print/dig. adv. 70%46% +24%

Building trial and repeat usage 61%54% +7%

Difference between Leaders and Non-LeadersNon-Leaders Leaders

Note: BPM leaders n=33, BPM non-leaders n=39. Source: Booz & Company Marketing Leadership Study (2009)

Exhibit 6 Marketing Budgets as a Percentage of Sales: 2010 vs. 2012

50%

50%

50%

. 3 values

100%

100%

75%

75%

25%

lines

lines

. 5 values

25%100%

100%

75%

75%

50%

50%

. 4 values

100%

100%

25%

25%

75%

75%

. 7 values

100% 25% lin

100% 25%

75%

75% lin

50%

50%

. 8 values

100% 25% lin

100% 25%

75%

75% lin

50%

50%

. 6 values

lin

100% 25%75% lin50%

100%

. 2 values

50%

100% 50%

50%100%

75% 50%100%

. 1 value

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

30%24%

46%

10%

21%

69%

39%

15%

46%

18%

31%

51%

2010 2012

Non-Leaders

Leaders

>6%4%–6%1%–3% >6%4%–6%1%–3%

Booz & Company8

Leaders are defining themselves not by the success of single campaigns, but by the achievement of greater sophistication in the development of marketing capabilities. As a result, they are beginning to play a more strategic role that goes beyond delivering on their historical focus on brand building, events, and traditional direct marketing.

Thanks to a study of B2B market-ers across industries broader than construction that we conducted recently with ANA, we know that investments in best-in-class market-ing capabilities generate substantial market share gains. Some 40 percent of above-average B2B marketers were found to have gained market share, compared with 26 percent of those with below-average capa-bilities, representing a market share gain premium of 54 percent.

Marketers in the top quartile enjoyed an even more pronounced advantage, as 56 percent of those companies recorded gains over the three-year period studied.

The Booz & Company–ANA study revealed that B2B marketers that build more advanced capabilities are much more likely to play a strategic business role within their compa-nies. Most marketing organizations are generally confined to perform-ing tactical functions that support strategic decisions that have already been made. More tactically focused marketing organizations exhibit the characteristics of one of three models:

• Service provider: Provides advertis-ing, promotion, and public rela-tions services at the request of the brand and product/service teams

LEADERS STRESS CAPABILITIES OVER CAMPAIGNS

Some 40 percent of above-average B2B marketers gained market share, compared with 26 percent of those with below-average capabilities.

9Booz & Company 9Booz & Company

• Best practice advisor: Works with the individual businesses to maxi-mize marketing effectiveness and efficiency by bringing best practices to advertising, promotion, public relations, and other activities

• Marketing master: Develops and leads large company-wide mar-keting efforts and helps set the company’s priorities

For a marketing organization to be classified as strategic, the research found that it must fall into one of the following three models:

• Brand builder: Provides efficient marketing services, from commu-nications to creative output and campaign execution, in support of the company’s brands

• Senior counselor: Serves as a primary advisor on marketing strategy to the CEO and the indi-vidual businesses, and leads major advertising, promotions, and public relations campaigns

• Growth champion: Drives the company’s priorities, and leads the development of its brands, prod-ucts, and new businesses

Generally speaking, marketing organizations that fulfill one of these roles are highly influential in affect-ing the company’s strategic decision making. In the marketing leadership study focused on BPMs, conducted with Hanley Wood, close to three-quarters of marketing leaders were identified as playing a strategic busi-ness role within their organizations.

This is substantially higher than for non-leaders and for other B2B indus-try marketers studied in the earlier ANA study (see Exhibit 7).

As B2B marketers continue to experiment with their marketing mix and seek innovative approaches, even leaders see room for improve-ment in their development of winning capabilities. Almost three-quarters of the BPM leaders surveyed in the Booz & Company marketing leadership study said they were look-ing to further scale up their market-ing activities beyond traditional focus areas such as advertising, trade shows, and direct mail.

A number of obstacles potentially stand in their way. The shift to digital marketing requires

Note: BPM leaders n=33, BMP non-leaders n=39, ANA B2B average n=130. Source: Booz & Company and ANA B2B Survey of B2B Marketers (2009); Booz & Company Marketing Leadership Study (2009)

Exhibit 7 Leaders Have a Seat at the Strategy Table

50%

50%

50%

. 3 values

100%

100%

75%

75%

25%

lines

lines

. 5 values

25%100%

100%

75%

75%

50%

50%

. 4 values

100%

100%

25%

25%

75%

75%

. 7 values

100% 25% lin

100% 25%

75%

75% lin

50%

50%

. 8 values

100% 25% lin

100% 25%

75%

75% lin

50%

50%

. 6 values

lin

100% 25%75% lin50%

100%

. 2 values

50%

100% 50%

50%100%

75% 50%100%

. 1 value

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

50%

44%

73%

50%

56%

27%

BPM Non-LeadersBPM Leaders ANA B2B Average

Tactical Functional RoleStrategic Business Role

THE MARKETING ORGANIZATION'S ROLE IN THE COMPANY (RESPONDENTS COULD SELECT ONLY ONE OPTION)

Booz & Company10

significant investments—for exam-ple, in websites, in databases, and in unique content. Moreover, organiza-tional inertia that has set in around traditional marketing methods can often prove difficult to change.

With the recession bringing a renewed focus on operating effi-ciency, many BPMs are embrac-ing a “do it yourself” approach to building new capabilities across their organizations, and market-ing departments are no exception. Although this might seem to pose fundamental challenges to media companies’ relationships with their advertising clients, the reverse is proving true for media companies that are taking a new approach to partnering with marketers. Indeed,

many media companies are striv-ing to reinvent themselves to help advertising clients leverage their digital assets and develop “private-label media,” or their own branded content and electronic media assets.3 Collaborating with and outsourcing capabilities to media companies and agency partners—instead of hiring the necessary talent and making the required investments in new technologies—is one way BPM marketers can better stretch their scarce resources.

The increasingly important role that partnerships play in building new capabilities was underscored by a recent Booz & Company study with the ANA, the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB), and the

American Association of Advertising Agencies (AAAA).4 This research program, called Marketing & Media Ecosystem 2010, included input from more than 250 marketing executives at many B2B and B2C marketers, as well as more than 100 media executives and 100 agency executives. More than half of the marketing executives surveyed said they expected media companies to become even more important direct partners in the future (see Exhibit 8).

The Marketing & Media Ecosystem 2010 study also showed that 91 percent of media companies were already engaging in integrated cam-paign development, lead generation, and other services that went beyond selling traditional advertising.

Note: n=450 (250 marketers, 100 agencies, 100 media companies) Source: Marketing & Media Ecosystem 2010 study, February 2008; Booz & Company analysis

Exhibit 8 Media Companies Perceived as Important Partners

50%

50%

50%

. 3 values

100%

100%

75%

75%

25%

lines

lines

. 5 values

25%100%

100%

75%

75%

50%

50%

. 4 values

100%

100%

25%

25%

75%

75%

. 7 values

100% 25% lin

100% 25%

75%

75% lin

50%

50%

. 8 values

100% 25% lin

100% 25%

75%

75% lin

50%

50%

. 6 values

lin

100% 25%75% lin50%

100%

. 2 values

50%

100% 50%

50%100%

75% 50%100%

. 1 value

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

WHICH DIRECT PARTNERSHIPS WILL BE MORE IMPORTANT IN THE FUTURE? (MARKETERS' RESPONSES)

EXAMPLES OF MARKETING SOLUTIONS PROVIDED BY MEDIA PARTNERS

27%

52%52%52%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

Agencyof Record

% ofRespondents

CommunicationsPlanners

MediaPlanners

MediaCompanies

- Integrated campaign development

- Custom/exclusive content

- Consumer insights

- Behavioral targeting

- Database marketing

- Lead generation

- Word of mouth

- Event marketing

- Training and education programs

11Booz & Company 11Booz & Company

Although the preceding insights highlight potential best practices and trends in B2B marketing, company priorities and strategic situations can vary widely. Depending on their current competitive positioning, resources, and priorities for driving growth, B2B marketers have to identify the most effective marketing solution to meet their needs.

To forge the best path forward, B2B marketing leaders should engage in a three-step process:

• The first step is to identify the specific marketing priorities that

will be most valuable for driving the company’s growth given its unique positioning, and to establish the best way to integrate new approaches into marketing campaigns.

• Next, marketing leaders should devise plans for investing in the key capabilities needed to address these priorities. Leaders recognize that a capability is a combination of analytics, processes, technology, and organization. Building winning capabilities requires addressing all four elements. This demands not only better cross-functional alignment internally but also new ways of working with external partners.

• The last step involves determining which capabilities are best handled in-house and which are best managed through partnerships

with media companies, agencies, and other specialized service providers (e.g., database marketing, marketing mix modeling). Thought must be given to how the company’s organization will adapt to the complexity of managing multiple agency and media company relationships.

B2B marketing organizations are now being held to a higher standard with respect to establishing connections with customers and measuring the effectiveness of campaigns in driving sales. Leaders that take this opportunity to invest in new, market-leading capabilities won’t see the benefits only in terms of increased short-term sales and brand building. They will take their position at the strategy table in shaping their companies’ growth agenda to achieve and sustain superior performance.

IMPLICATIONS FOR B2B MARKETERS

Booz & Company12

RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

As part of our research sponsored by Hanley Wood, we developed the Booz & Company Marketing Leadership Index. The research included survey input from 72 building product manufacturers in varied product categories (e.g., roofing, lighting, electrical, windows), company sizes, residential and commercial focus, and distribution channels. An online survey was used to assess the BPMs’ sophistication in developing nine key marketing capabilities. Five of these were defined as “foundational” capabilities: sales and marketing collateral, dealer/distributor programs, customer training and development, event marketing, and customer insights. Four others—multi-platform media campaigns, data/lead management, search engine optimization/marketing, and direct marketing—were considered “exceptional.”

We then developed a foundational and an exceptional score by adding up each respondent’s scores in both groups of capabilities. Finally, we developed an exceptional score and a foundational score by adding up each respondent’s scores in both groups of capabilities. These scores were then indexed for a maximum possible score on either dimension of 100 and a minimum score of -100. In order for a company to be designated a marketing leader, it had to register positive scores for both foundational and exceptional capabilities.

13Booz & Company 13Booz & Company 13Booz & Company

About the Authors

Matthew Egol is a part-ner in Booz & Company’s consumer, media and digital practice, and is based in New York. He focuses on growth strategy and sales and marketing effectiveness for clients across the market-ing and media ecosystem.

Yogesh Pandit is a principal in Booz & Company’s consumer, media, and digital practice and is based in New York. He focuses on growth strategy, capability building, and sales and marketing effectiveness for clients in the media and consumer industries.

David Perpich is a senior associate with Booz & Company in New York. He specializes in growth strategies and sales and marketing capabilities development for the con-sumer, media, and digital practice.

Endnotes

1 U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, www.bea.gov/national/nipaweb/TableView.asp?SelectedTable=5&FirstYear=2008&LastYear=2009&Freq=Qtr. Accessed November 13, 2009

2 Matthew Ericksen, John Jullens, Gaurav Katarla, The New B2B Marketing Imperative, http://www.booz.com/media/uploads/New_B2B_Marketing_Imperative.pdf.

3 Matthew Egol, Leslie H. Moeller, and Christopher Vollmer, “The Promise of Private-label Media,” s+b, Fall 2009, http://www.strategy-business.com/article/09215?gko=1d7bb&tid=27782251&pg=all.

4 Booz & Company, “Marketing & Media Ecosystem 2010: ANA Annual Meeting CMO Roundtable,” October 2008, www.booz.com/media/file/Marketing_Media_Ecosystem.pdf.

Printed in USA©2009 Booz & Company Inc.

Booz & Company is a leading global management consulting firm, helping the world’s top businesses, governments, and organizations. Our founder, Edwin Booz, defined the profession when he established the first management consulting firm in 1914.

Today, with more than 3,300 people in 59 offices around the world, we bring foresight and knowledge, deep functional expertise, and a practical approach to building capabilities and delivering real impact. We work closely with our clients to create and deliver essential advantage.

For our management magazine strategy+business, visit www.strategy-business.com. Visit www.booz.com to learn more about Booz & Company.

The most recent list of our office addresses and telephone numbers can be found on our website, www.booz.com

Worldwide Offices

AsiaBeijing DelhiHong KongMumbaiSeoulShanghaiTaipeiTokyo

Australia, New Zealand & Southeast AsiaAdelaideAucklandBangkokBrisbaneCanberraJakartaKuala LumpurMelbourneSydney

EuropeAmsterdamBerlinCopenhagen

DublinDüsseldorfFrankfurtHelsinkiLondonMadridMilanMoscowMunichOsloParisRomeStockholmStuttgartViennaWarsawZurich

Middle EastAbu DhabiBeirutCairoDubaiRiyadh

North AmericaAtlantaChicagoClevelandDallasDetroitFlorham ParkHoustonLos AngelesMcLean

Mexico CityNew York CityParsippanySan Francisco

South AmericaBuenos AiresRio de JaneiroSantiagoSão Paulo