Principal
New York
Marketing spend is often one of the largest line-items in a P&L, typically ranging from 5% to 15% of revenues depending upon the industry, company size, and maturity. The fact that its impact is notoriously difficult to measure often causes the CMO/CFO relationship to be one of the most strained in the C-Suite.
Marketing can often be painted as a cost center, rather than a profit center. In times of uncertainty when companies face pressure to pull back expenditure or rethink budgets altogether, marketing cost becomes an easy target. CMOs often struggle to resist such budget cuts if they cannot articulate the real impact and ROI of marketing cost, and whether marketing spending can be dialed down to finance cost-cutting efforts — or if it is an essential investment that must be safeguarded to avoid negative topline impact.
The answer lies in effective measurement: if CMOs can assign a true ROI to Marketing cost, they can inspire confidence in the decision-making process for marketing allocation, even in trying times.
Common Challenges
Marketers often struggle to answer several key questions, including:
In trying to answer these questions, marketers must address two key obstacles:
The ability to overcome these challenges and assign a true ROI to marketing lies in accurate marketing measurement. Organizations must leverage a set of comprehensive measurement methodologies and an effective operating model to accomplish this. In this article, we’ll discuss an approach to utilizing certain methodologies that make up a portion of BCG’s Holistic Marketing Measurement approach.
Measurement Methodologies: The “four-legged stool” of marketing measurement
We have found that there is no “one-size-fits-all” solution. Marketing is, after all, part science and part art. In our experience, it is best practice is to combine multiple measurement methodologies to triangulate results and validate impact from different perspectives. Four specific perspectives comprise what BCG refers to as the “Four-Legged Stool of Marketing Measurement.”
Better Together: Combining methodologies to create a holistic view
Too often, marketers fall into the trap of leveraging whichever measurement tool is most readily available. Reliance on a single method, however, introduces bias and significant risk. When a tool is used in isolation, its strengths and limitations can paint an incomplete picture.
By integrating all of these methodologies, marketers can gain a more comprehensive, accurate assessment of their performance. This holistic view enables more informed and strategic decision-making, ensuring that all aspects are considered.
Here is an example of how to use the Four-Legged Stool Framework to validate and calibrate the output from a Model:
Provide an effective operating model
In addition to building a cohesive measurement framework, organizations must enable their teams with an effective operating model. As with any digital transformation, each measurement journey is different, shaped around an organization’s starting point, circumstances, and goals. But most successful transformations are connected by a single thread: they dedicate 10% of the effort to algorithms, 20% to data and technological backbone, and 70% to business and people transformation. BCG has found that this "10/20/70 rule" leads to such positive results that it forms the core of our approach to digital and AI transformations.
To successfully capture the value of elevated marketing measurement, we suggest taking the same approach. That is, most of the resources should be dedicated to people. This can be accomplished by focusing on three areas:
Tangible, measurable benefits
Recently, BCG X.Growth and X.Delivery collaborated to build and deploy a holistic measurement approach for a leading MedTech company. The work was comprised of three main modules designed to work together to measure and enhance total marketing impact:
These modules were designed to work together to measure and enhance total marketing impact. We helped uncover a $75M profit opportunity (+6%) through reallocating budget.
Use a holistic approach to measure and optimize marketing spend
In today's economic climate, effective marketing spend measurement is not just beneficial: it is essential. By adopting a comprehensive, multi-faceted approach, CMOs can transform marketing from a perceived cost center into a demonstrable profit center. The “Four-Legged Stool” framework, which encompasses modeling, incrementality experiments, customer insights, and execution metrics, provides a powerful and comprehensive method to triangulate and validate marketing ROI. When integrated within an effective operating model, this approach enables more strategic decision-making. Embracing this holistic strategy ensures that marketing efforts are accurately measured, optimally allocated, and ultimately drive significant business value.