Time for the company CIMO to step into the digital spotlightAvanade released a report on the new CIMO role, which is effectively merging the worlds of IT and marketing. But instead of just bogging you down with the findings, Nicolette Singh, Marketing Lead, Avanade South Africa, talks us through what the new CIMO role actually means... Nicolette Singh, Marketing Lead, Avanade South Africa Are you the company CIMO? Don't shake your head - there's a chance this is you if you're currently known as the Chief Information Officer (CIO) or Chief Marketing Officer (CMO), as the CIMO is essentially a conglomeration of these roles. The reason for the new role? It's simple - the rise of digital businesses means that the role of IT and marketing is changing. Ideally, CMOs and CIOs can work together to create user-centric experiences for customers by marrying great design skills with technology expertise in order to improve the customer experience for today's hyper-connected digital consumer. This means that even if you're still seen as the CIO or CMO, you'll probably take on new responsibilities, as a CIMO role is more a way of thinking in the new digital world than a specific person with new tasks. Singh answers my CIMO-related questions below...
Singh: There have been many reports and research suggesting the IT budget will increasingly move to business decision makers. The roles mostly impacted are that of the CMO and CIO as data-driven decisions, the digital world and 'always on' consumers put new pressure on the business to deliver solutions and feedback faster and more effectively. To succeed in the new digital landscape, marketing and IT must partner and find a common point of view: something Avanade calls the Chief Information Marketing Officer (CIMO) perspective. CMOs and CIOs have individual expertise and experience. But to adopt the CIMO perspective, they must share a unified digital vision. This allows their organisation to harness the combined power of marketing and IT to deliver better digitally-enabled experiences for their customers and other key audiences. The report looks at best practice and how to practically achieve this common goal.
Singh: A recent article by Forbes points out that the internet is the C-suite's top information resource. Executives find it more valuable for locating business-related information than references from colleagues, personal networks, newspapers and magazines, TV and radio, and conferences and trade shows. Members of the C-suite search for information themselves and this is increasingly not outsourced to someone else. The entire buying and servicing cycle has changed. Consumers expect to do more online and if your company can't deliver the basic support across multiple devices and channels, it will soon be left behind by businesses that can engage with customers in this new reality. As audiences migrate to digital channels, brands need to follow. Beyond aligning to new digital areas, digital techniques offer cost-efficiencies for finding, converting and retaining customers. As traditional sources of business advantage erode under-competitive pressures, there's a renewed focus on differentiated brand experiences - often utilising these same digital techniques. Today's chief marketing officers are expected to lead the digital transformation, guiding their organisations to new levels of marketing-driven growth. Many of today's CMOs are expected to reimagine products, services and business models, challenging conventional assumptions about how value is created and delivered. Here, digital marketing becomes the foundation for digital business where the nexus of social, mobile, cloud and rich-information forces amplify new levels of differentiation and competitive advantage.
Singh: The traditional roles of both IT and marketing are changing fast. Global research from the likes of HBR and Gartner is supported by local studies that suggest marketing is taking on a bigger strategic role in this digital world. Companies are looking to the CMO to drive change and help shape a new digital business model, but many CMOs lack the digital marketing expertise to meet the challenge. With the rise of the 'always on' consumer, customer-centric innovation has become a significant differentiator for businesses. However, this type of innovation assumes both consumer and technology understanding. IT has to become more customer-centric and business minded, whereas marketing has to improve its understanding and application of technology. This asks for a new breed of IT-literate marketing experts and business-literate IT professionals.
Singh: The role of the marketer has shifted. Not only are marketers the steward and communicator of the brand, they are now also the steward of interaction and measurement. If today the marketer is using analytics and data in order to better understand customer behaviour, then they have also had to become much more sophisticated in their use of technology. This has put pressure on IT, which historically tended to look after back-end systems. The role of IT has changed from being a steward of the machines to providing a useful and beneficial service to the front office. This is a significant change, and one it is still struggling with. Today, the CMO needs to be very sophisticated in their use of technology in order to understand and measure consumer behaviour. This forces the CIO to become much more responsive to the needs of the CMO, because the expectation is now much higher than in the past. Central to this is the growing budget that marketing has to spend on technology outside of what IT is doing, which is giving the CMO much more control. These changes therefore call for a tighter partnership and greater understanding of the demands these place on the respective roles. Some organisations have responded by introducing a 'Chief Digital Officer' role - a 'best of both worlds' type person that can translate business priorities into technical capabilities. It is also well understood that there's a new breed of marketing professional stepping out - look out for references to 'the rise of the digital CMO'. For many enterprises, there's a mismatch between skills and authority in digital marketing, as CMOs find themselves at a disadvantage among true "digital natives". © Angela Waye – 123RF.com
Singh: It will be a while before most organisations combine the CIO and CMO role to better service digital consumers. For now, it simply talks to a shared vision, a combination of skillsets that involve better use and understanding of consumer insights, data mining, the use of marketing automation tools and breaking through silos to erase seams between channels and experiences. In essence, it is a move to become an 'inbound advocate', shifting from finding customers to getting found. Another critical component involves the use and understanding of data. |