customer segments. The intuitive graphical use interface lets users quickly assemble a full range of campaigns, from one-time offers to fully integrated, event-driven marketing campaigns that span months.
Broader Market Forces: The Rise of e-Marketing
Although MarketSoft began its product line by focusing on lead management, lead management is only one of many possible products that a marketing vice president might buy. MarketSoft’s customers are seeing a broader need for e-marketing a more comprehensive approach to electronically enabled marketing efforts. This comprehensive approach ties together the various elements of marketing processed (of which lead management is part) into a holistic, efficient end-to end system. These broader market forces drove MarketSoft to create its other products and will play a role in MarketSoft’s future growth strategy.
Four Trends Driving the Rise of E-Marketing
Four trends underpin the rise of e-marketing. The first two reflect shifts in the overall business environment and business culture. The latter two reflect the negative and positive impact of the Internet on Marketing. The confluence of these trends is driving the creation and adoption of rigorous e-marking tools, such as the products of MarketSoft and of its competitors.
Increased Need of Differentiation
May of MarketSoft’s customers face a marketplace that is more fast paced and fiercely competitive than before. Global competition, new technologies, and rapid changes in the economic environment make the world a more competitive arena. This competition brings an increased need for differentiation. Marketing helps companies achieve this differentiation.
Rising Demand or Marketing the Measurement of Return on Investment
New information technologies for the back office (e.g., enterprise resource planning) have created a business culture based on objective measurement – expenditures and investments are now judged for expected tangible results. As all other parts of the firm have implemented systems to enhance productivity and measure return on investment, marketing vice presidents are realizing they need measurement of return on investment on their realm as well.
Internet-Created Rising Volumes of Leads
Previously, many companies found that ad hoc lead management was fairly manageable albeit disjointed. But the Internet makes lead generation much easier. The proliferation of the Internet has exponentially increased the number of lead that a given firm receives (Web/e-mail inquiries) For example, Toyata generates 1.5 million leads per month from its Web site alone. Homegrown systems cannot scale to coordinate this type of volume growth.
Increased Adoption of Internet Technologies to Solve Problems
Lead management is especially suited to the Web because of the fundamentally distributed nature of leads generation and leads usage. Internet architectures support many-to many mapping from multiple channels of lead generation (e-mail, customer databases, and Web) to multiple users of leads (sales, marketing, and forecasting). In contrast, the traditional client/server architecture is not built with this wide dispersion in mind.
Three Components of e-Marketing
customer segments. The intuitive graphical use interface lets users quickly assemble a full range of campaigns, from one-time offers to fully integrated, event-driven marketing campaigns that span months.
Broader Market Forces: The Rise of e-Marketing
Although MarketSoft began its product line by focusing on lead management, lead management is only one of many possible products that a marketing vice president might buy. MarketSoft’s customers are seeing a broader need for e-marketing a more comprehensive approach to electronically enabled marketing efforts. This comprehensive approach ties together the various elements of marketing processed (of which lead management is part) into a holistic, efficient end-to end system. These broader market forces drove MarketSoft to create its other products and will play a role in MarketSoft’s future growth strategy.
Four Trends Driving the Rise of E-Marketing
Four trends underpin the rise of e-marketing. The first two reflect shifts in the overall business environment and business culture. The latter two reflect the negative and positive impact of the Internet on Marketing. The confluence of these trends is driving the creation and adoption of rigorous e-marking tools, such as the products of MarketSoft and of its competitors.
Increased Need of Differentiation
May of MarketSoft’s customers face a marketplace that is more fast paced and fiercely competitive than before. Global competition, new technologies, and rapid changes in the economic environment make the world a more competitive arena. This competition brings an increased need for differentiation. Marketing helps companies achieve this differentiation.
Rising Demand or Marketing the Measurement of Return on Investment
New information technologies for the back office (e.g., enterprise resource planning) have created a business culture based on objective measurement – expenditures and investments are now judged for expected tangible results. As all other parts of the firm have implemented systems to enhance productivity and measure return on investment, marketing vice presidents are realizing they need measurement of return on investment on their realm as well.
Internet-Created Rising Volumes of Leads
Previously, many companies found that ad hoc lead management was fairly manageable albeit disjointed. But the Internet makes lead generation much easier. The proliferation of the Internet has exponentially increased the number of lead that a given firm receives (Web/e-mail inquiries) For example, Toyata generates 1.5 million leads per month from its Web site alone. Homegrown systems cannot scale to coordinate this type of volume growth.
Increased Adoption of Internet Technologies to Solve Problems
Lead management is especially suited to the Web because of the fundamentally distributed nature of leads generation and leads usage. Internet architectures support many-to many mapping from multiple channels of lead generation (e-mail, customer databases, and Web) to multiple users of leads (sales, marketing, and forecasting). In contrast, the traditional client/server architecture is not built with this wide dispersion in mind.
Three Components of e-Marketing
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..
