Are you one of those superhero marketing organizations? You know, the "1-800 I need a presentation, brochure, case study, or email campaign NOW" marketing organizations that takes urgent requests and turns on a dime?

Feeling pretty good about your responsiveness? If you said "yes," we'd tell you congrats for being such a terrifically honed tactical machine, but—and, yes, there's a "but"—we'd also tell you it's your own fault if you feel as if you're a hamster on a wheel.

There's a difference between being a service organization to Sales and being a value generator for the company. As marketing professionals, our future depends on being the latter.

Let's clarify the difference.

And, if you decide you are primarily a service organization to Sales and desire to be a value generator, see the five key steps at the end of the article for ideas on how to make the transition.

Service Organization to Sales

You know you're a marketing organization that operates as a service organization if your day-to-day work primarily involves converting inputs (requests) into desired outputs (presentation, campaigns, collateral, etc.) through the appropriate application of resources (talent, information, etc.).

When Marketing acts as a service organization, its objectives and priorities are typically focused on service delivery (time, quality, and budget) and on Sales satisfaction (measured in "qualified leads generated by marketing"). Those types of measures often dominate the conversation between the two organizations, and this type of marketing organization aims to serve and solve tactical problems as efficiently and effectively as possible.

Some marketing organizations that operate in this fashion can be proactive, but ALL marketing functions that operation in this fashion must excel at being reactive. The challenge for these organizations is that it is very difficult to actually measure the contribution and value of Marketing, and the impact of investments in Marketing.

Value Generator

You know you're a value generator if the work you are producing increases the worth of the organization's goods/services, or it is focused on initiatives that create better value for customers, leading to appreciating share of wallet or loyalty, or better value for shareholders who want to see their stake appreciate.

Marketing organizations that act as value generators may be reactive at times, but true value generators are proactive. They believe it is their responsibility to identify, investigate, evaluate, recommend, and prioritize market and customer opportunities.

These marketers focus on improving and implementing changes that will maximize the organization's success and enable it to stay abreast or even ahead of market, customer, and competitor moves.

Product adoption/acceptance, customer acquisition, customer retention, customer growth, market share, etc. tend to dominate the conversations among this group.

Marketing Defined

In 2007, the American Marketing Association (AMA) redefined Marketing as "the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value for customers, clients, partners, and society at large."

Most of us have come to accept that we have the main responsibility of achieving profitable revenue growth derived from acquiring and retaining profitable customers.

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1-800-MARKETING: Transitioning From Service Provider to Value Generator

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Laura Patterson

Laura Patterson is the president of VisionEdge Marketing. A pioneer in Marketing Performance Management, Laura has published four books and she has been recognized for her thought leadership, winning numerous industry awards.