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Growing, optimizing, and winning with marketing tech: GrowthBeat


We’ve got global brands talking one-on-one with Joe Schmo on mobile messaging apps. Guilds and alliances for trading mobile users. Marketing automated via Twitter and Facebook. Big data marketing platforms that predict the future, and big marketing platforms, period, that include everything including social, mobile, and apps.

It’s all coming in the context of a flood of new marketing tech companies.

A flood of new marketing tech companies

Above: A flood of new marketing tech companies

Image Credit: Scott Brinker

What’s going on here?

What we’ve traditionally called marketing, the art of convincing people to consider parting with their hard-earned time, attention, or dollars for the sake of you, your product, or your service, is adding a hell of a lot of science. There’s science in knowing your prospect or customer, learning what he or she does with or around your offering, understanding how your users interact with your product, and endlessly optimizing what you’re doing, how your product works, what messages engage, and how you can be more relevant to your customers’ needs.

device_dataThat’s growth. That’s marketing tech.

That’s what we’re talking about at our new GrowthBeat event, August 5-6 in San Francisco.

NOTE: Buy one of the first 50 tickets and save $300!

That growth in increasingly happening at finer and finer scale, with very granular data driving very personal conversations with individual users and buyers, and automation technology that allows a brand to scale one-to-many marketing to one-to-one marketing, at global scale.

It all takes data, and it all takes technology, and it all takes a basic re-wiring of what we think of as marketing.

Customer journeys have replaced marketing campaigns, Salesforce says. Conversations are the new clicks. Demographics about who and where are limiting, IBM says: The new demographics is what people do. And all that data which is pouring in is significant. In fact, it’s the difference between corporate life and death.

The bottom third of marketers achieve below two percent conversion rates, Adobe says. The top fifth hit nine percent conversion rates and just keep going, thanks to outsized investments in data, optimization, and integration with the entire organization.

marketing appsIn other words, marketing isn’t just about marketing anymore. It’s about product design. It’s about technology. It’s about the customer, more than ever before.

But that flood of tools and concurrent flood of data brings its own problems.

Without a single system to tie it together, like a Beckon or an Origami, marketers are bombarded with separate and disconnected chunks of data in Excel, in multitudes of dashboards, in PDFs, and on the back of yesterday’s lunchtime napkin. And the result is that drowning-in-data CMOs are actually using data less in day-to-day decision-making than they did a year ago.

That’s why we’re running GrowthBeat this year for the first time ever.

We’re bringing in some of the best and brightest in modern digital marketing to unclutter the landscape, simplify the functions, clarify the goals, and point the way to success. That includes the Chief MarTec himself, Scott Brinker. Salesforce VP of product marketing Gordon Evans will be speaking. VCs who invest in growth and marketing technologies will be there, as will Adam Marchick, CEO of the first mobile-focused marketing automation system, Kahuna.

(Maybe you’ll even want to speak at the conference — let us know!)

We’ll have sessions on user acquisition. Retention. Driving business on mobile. Using social for more than saying hello. Knowing what metrics to track, and which to ignore. Picking the right data to collect, and how to identify influencers who can unlock social networks’ vast potential for bringing you business.

Even more importantly, every attendee will be a growth focused marketer, product manager, or CxO who has his or her own story to share, compare, and provide insight and feedback for your marketing tech journey.

The event is on August 5-6 in San Francisco. Grab your tickets now and save $300.



International Business Machines Corporation, abbreviated IBM and nicknamed Big Blue (for its official corporate color), is a global technology and innovation company headquartered in the Northeast US. IBM is the largest technology and ... read more »

With more than 100,000 customers, salesforce.com is the enterprise cloud computing company that is leading the shift to the social enterprise. Social enterprises leverage social, mobile and open cloud technologies to put customers at t... read more »

Whether it's a smartphone or tablet app, a game, a video, a digital magazine, a website, or an online experience, chances are that it was touched by Adobe technology. Our tools and services enable our customers to create groundbreaking... read more »

Facebook is the world's largest social network, with over 1.15 billion monthly active users. Facebook was founded by Mark Zuckerberg in February 2004, initially as an exclusive network for Harvard students. It was a huge hit: in 2 w... read more »

Twitter is a real-time information network that connects you to the latest information about what you find interesting. Simply find the public streams you find most compelling and follow the conversations. At the heart of Twitter ar... read more »

Google's innovative search technologies connect millions of people around the world with information every day. Founded in 1998 by Stanford Ph.D. students Larry Page and Sergey Brin, Google today is a top web property in all major glob... read more »