You worked hard on developing your strategy and designing great creative. Now you have to go to the CFO and get his approval to start rolling it out.

But then he axes 25% out of plan, just because he could. You knew a cut was coming, except this time it was 15 percentage points worse than the 10% you were expecting. Now you have to spend all night reworking your plan so you can begin executing in the morning.

How often do marketers face this dilemma? Too often. You develop a great strategic and creative plan—yet can't gain approval for the funding.

So this article will suggest four steps that will help you gain approval on your next great strategy.

Marketers know how to speak the language of their external customers. But they often forget that when selling to their internal customers—the CFO and CEO—they have to speak their language. The CFO and the CEO just want to know how it will drive results to the bottom line. Their top priority—driving tangible results—isn't your top priority, which is delivering great creative.

And this is where many marketers often fail. We seem to forget that selling to internal customers is much different from selling to external customers. Internal customers want the sauce along with the potatoes. They make their decisions not on the content but more on the impact this investment will have on the bottom line. They have to have the numbers.

So, how should we respond?

We have to start speaking the language of our internal customers. We have to stop putting plans in place that simply show how the money is going to be spent. Instead, we need to think the way they think and communicate the way they want to be communicated to.

They like to see five key components to any investment plan. And we need to deliver our marketing investment plan using their outline:

  1. Develop and put in place a plan showing how our activities will deliver incremental revenue (and profit).

  2. Execute according to that plan.

  3. Report on the actual results and compare against plan.

  4. Report on what we learned from initial results in order to drive better results the next time.

  5. Go back to step 1, above.

In other words, we have to continuously plan our results, prove them and then improve them.

Ignite the left side of your brain

Marketers are typically very good at developing a plan, as in step one above, especially when it comes to detailing the expenses. But to deliver what CFOs and CEOs require, we also need to deliver on the remaining four actions. This means that marketers who traditionally exercise the right, creative sides of their brains now have to start getting the synapses firing on the left side. (And no—beer only helps after hours.)

Below are four key steps to improving your ability to deliver measurable results in a way that even your CFO will approve.

Step 1: Determine the definition of success and how you will measure whether you have succeeded or not.

Think of defining and measuring success by answering these five questions:

  1. How you will define success in each of the relevant areas?
  2. What are the numbers that you will need to collect?
  3. How will you collect them?
  4. How accurately will you collect them?
  5. How often will you collect them?

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Guy Powell

Guy R. Powell is president of demandROMI, a marketing ROI and effectiveness consulting firm. You can reach him via www.demandromi.com or directly at gpowell@demandromi.com.