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Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

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Page 1: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Revenue Reporting:Your Genie in a Bottle

Page 2: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Today’s Speakers

Jessica KaoSenior Manager, Demand GenGuidespark

Brian GloverSenior Manager, Product MarketingMarketo

Page 3: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Companies lack quantitative metrics to demonstrate impact of marketing spend

Source: The CMO Survey (August 2014), Highlights & Insights Report

Page 4: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

High growth companies rely on analytics for decision making

Source: The 2014 CMO Insights Survey, Accenture

86% of high-growth

companies use data and

analytics to improve

marketing impact

Vs.

65% of low-growth

companies

Page 5: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle
Page 6: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

CMOs commit to mastering analytics

Source: The 2014 CMO Insights Survey, Accenture

Page 7: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Spending on marketing analytics expected to increase 73% in three years

Source: The CMO Survey (August 2014), Highlights & Insights Report

Page 8: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Increasing pressure to prove the value of marketing

Source: The CMO Survey (August 2014), Highlights & Insights Report

Page 9: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle
Page 10: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle
Page 11: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

• Limited resources

• Prioritize what to do

• Prove Marketing Investment and ROI

• Prove Marketing Contribution

• Prove Marketing Matters

Marketers Challenges

Page 12: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

• Overwhelmed by which metrics to choose

• Lack of tools

• Lack of expertise

• Low prioritization

• Not rewarded for reporting over tactics

Reporting can be Daunting

Page 13: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Does it:

• Answer WIIFM

• Use common language and vocab

• Stimulate conversation

How to make marketing metrics matter

Page 14: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

What are the metrics that really matter?

Marketing’s contribution:

• Revenue

• Pipeline

• # of Opportunities

What is Revenue Reporting

Measuring the impact of all marketing strategies and tactics on the companies bottom line = Revenue

Page 15: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

• Provide data to prove marketing is an investment and not a cost center

• Achieve alignment between sales and marketing

• Earn seat at the C-suite table

Power of Revenue Reporting

Page 16: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Cost of NOT doing Revenue Reporting

Page 17: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Cost of NOT doing Revenue Reporting

Let’s Do More

Tradeshows!

Page 18: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Topic Performance: Pipeline and Revenue

Page 19: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Topic Performance: Pipeline and Revenue

• Onboarding had the highest number of successes but lowest

close rate

• Open Enrollment created the most (MT) Pipeline and Revenue

Page 20: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Topic Performance: Pipeline and Revenue

$616,956

$1,869,881

$2,956,106

$1,028,095

$988,188

$195,307

$246,372

$830,615

$285,014

$298,304

$0 $500,000 $1,000,000 $1,500,000 $2,000,000 $2,500,000 $3,000,000 $3,500,000

Compensation Total

Onboarding Total

Open Enrollment Total

Performance Mangagement Total

Wellness Total

(MT) Revenue Won (MT) Pipeline Created

Page 21: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Identify what is not Working

Lowest (MT) Revenue Won to Cost

Page 22: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Compensation (MT) Pipeline and (MT) Revenue derived at the lowest

cost per dollar of pipeline and revenue

$12

$33

$40

$24

$22

$5

$6

$19

$6

$7

$0 $5 $10 $15 $20 $25 $30 $35 $40 $45

Compensation Total

Onboarding Total

Open Enrollment Total

Performance Mangagement Total

Wellness Total

(MT) Revenue Won to Cost (MT) Pipeline to Cost

Pipeline and Revenue to Cost

Page 23: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Channel: Pipeline and Revenue

What is the most successful channel and topic combination?

Identify the highest (MT) Revenue Won to Cost

Page 24: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Addressing the Important Questions with Revenue Reporting: RCA Model

Sourced

Influenced

Page 25: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

How am I doing to plan?

Page 26: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Lead Lifecycle: How do I reach my goal?

Page 27: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Demand Waterfall

Digital-pi.net

Page 28: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Demand Waterfall

Digital-pi.net

Page 29: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

I need more leads!

Digital-pi.net

Page 30: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Shorten late stage sale cycle

Digital-pi.net

Page 31: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Increase quality of leads to sales (MQL)

Digital-pi.net

Page 32: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

• Create reports that lead to actionable insight

• What should you do?• Do more• Do less• Do something different

• Let the data teach you something you don’t know.

• Embrace being wrong

• Iterate

How do I get started?

Page 33: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

How do I justify the need for reporting when I need reports to justify that need?

Page 34: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Establishing Reporting Vision

Presentation:

• RCA Model

• Reporting Vision

• Establish Sales and Marketing Alignment

• Marketing Goal Contributions

– Revenue

– Pipeline

Page 35: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Data:

• Company Revenue Goals ($)*

• FY

• QTR

• Avg Deal Size ($)*

• Length of Sales Cycle (Days)*

• Avg Close Rate (%)

How to easily set your goals by the end of this week

Who to Talk To:

• Sales

• Sales Ops/CRM

• Finance

Page 36: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

FY15Q1 FY15Q2 FY15Q3 FY15Q4

Rev $10M $25M $25M $40M

Divide by avg deal size $10M/50K $25M/50K $25M/50K $40M/50K

# of Closed Opps 200 500 500 800

Divide by close rate $10M/0.1 $25M/0.1 $25M/0.1 $40M/0.1

Pipeline $100M $250M $250M $400M

# of Open Opps 2000 5000 5000 8000

Quick Calculations – Acme Co.

• $100M Revenue

• $50K Avg Deal Size

• 90 day Sales Cycle

• 10% or 1:10 Close Rate –Determines how much pipeline you need

Page 37: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

FY15Q4 Marketing Sourced (20%)

MarketingInfluenced (40%)

Rev $40M $8M $16M

# of Closed Opps 800 160 320

Pipeline $400M $80M $160M

# of Open Opps 8000 1600 3200

What is Marketing’s Contribution

• Marketing Sourced Goal = First Touch = 20%

• Marketing Influenced Goal = 40%

• 90 day sales cycle = Start FY15Q3

Page 38: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Marketo set up and utilization not optimal

• Acquisition Programs

• Channels

• Progression statuses

• Program structure

• Lead Source

• Scoring

Before R. C. A. – State of Marketo Implementation Oct 2014

SFDC Reporting

• Lots of dashboards

• Lots of time and resources to maintain dashboards

• Not designed with marketers in mind

Page 39: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Marketing Reporting Needs

• Multiple programs influencing a person’s decision to buy (MT)

• Acquisition (FT)

• Dates of entering program/campaign

• Leads characteristic associated with program not the lead as a static field

• Multi-dimensional reporting

Page 40: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

• More engagement and conversations between sales and marketing• Weekly marketing updates at sales team

• Monthly marketing and sales leadership meeting

• Weekly marketing and inside sales meeting

• Monthly marketing report out C-suite

• Intradepartmental changes

• What do we call a success

• How do we measure the impact on pipeline and revenue

Changing the Conversation and Increasing Alignment

Page 41: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

I’m ready to get started today:

• Strategic

• Understand resource needs

• Set aside dedicated time each week

• Set goals

• Tactical

• Audit lead sources

• Audit channels, successes, and program Statuses

• Acquisition programs

So Now What. . . If

Page 42: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

I want to plan ahead for revenue reporting in the future:

• Audit Lead Sources

• Audit Channels, Successes, and Program Statuses

• Acquisition Programs

So Now What. . . if

Page 43: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Huh? I’m overwhelmed:

Then start with this at a minimum

• Create static lists with descriptive nomenclature

• Consistent Nomenclature for Lead Source Detail

• Tradeshow-AABB-021415

• Webinar-Revenue Reporting-021815

• List Purchase-ABC-031414

• Hire/Train designated person

• Ask for Help• Marketo Professional Services

• Hire an Agency: Digital Pi

• Marketo User Group

• Local Linkedin User Group

• Summit 2015

So Now What. . .

Page 44: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

• Revenue reporting empowers your company and your career

• Set goals and measure against them

• Do something different today to address revenue reporting – try Demand Waterfall

Wrap up - summary

Page 45: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Special Thanks:

http://summit.marketo.com/2014/replay/

Resources:

Webinar: Find the Right Marketing Automation

Solution for your Company

http://www.marketo.com/webinars/

(Good explanation of multi-touch attribution)

Demand waterfall spreadsheet available at digital-pi.net

Page 46: Revenue Reporting: Your Genie in a Bottle

Thank You!

Jessica Kao, PhD@[email protected] Manager, Demand GenGuidespark

Brian Glover@[email protected] Manager, Product MarketingMarketo