Do you remember that Dilbert panel where Dilbert follows a building map to find the marketing department? Upon arrival, he finds Grecian columns, a party that would make Bacchus proud, and a sign that says, "Welcome to Marketing. Two drink minimum."

For me, having been on both sides of those Grecian columns, this cartoon sums up a gap between marketing and technology.

The biggest reason for the gap is the cartoon's punch line: Marketing is a highly interactive, social sport. Marketing projects involve not only other marketing team members but also internal clients, customers, partners, freelances, vendors, and agencies.

Until recently, with the exception of uber-geek, multiplayer games, technology wasn't social. Think about it... we primarily have two types of software:

  • Individual "productivity" applications, like PowerPoint and Word, which aren't the tools we use to work together. Rather, we have email (loads of it) and meetings (loads of them, too) to develop our presentations, messages, pitches, and, basically, get work done.

  • Multi-user, "big iron" software, like a CRM systems, which are designed primarily for management tracking and reporting. These also don't help us work together on a new branding campaign, a big deal, an annual event, or the programs that drive all those sales leads.

Marketing projects and workflows need technology that's as social as they are, so marketing can move ahead and automate their projects and standard workflows.

"Collaborative" technology that supports business workflows has been around for a while. Over the last three years, though, things have changed: the Internet as a stable "platform" for software; software-as-a-service providers (like RightNow, WebEx, Salesforce.com, and Intuit's QuickBase) have matured; and new technologies, like AJAX, help deliver a rich, software-like experience via a Web site.

Today, you can get high-quality, collaborative technology sharable internally or across company boundaries, reliably and securely, with no support required from IT. With these advances, marketing has an opportunity to make its daily workflows as collaborative—as engagingly interactive—as marketing campaigns.

So, how do you find project and workflow software to support you and your team? Here are my top five ways to get started:

1. Know your processes. Whatever technology you choose must support your process. That means it needs to make it easier to do what you are actually doing today.

Technology tends toward an overabundance of process. You want a technology that supports what you do today without requiring new behaviors, or added work. Whether you have 5, 10, 100, or 10,000 people working in your organization, you want them to be effective, and supporting them in working the way they work is critical.

Tell your prospective vendors your top workflows and have them show you how their technology will support you and all the people involved in that process. They should be able to answer questions, give you examples of how others have been successful with similar workflows, and even be able to say that they use it themselves for similar workflows.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jana Eggers is the general manager of QuickBase, a division of Intuit Inc. She can be reached at Jana_Eggers@Intuit.com.