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A stakeholder through the heart.

Why your senior execs are ruining your marketing and what you can do about it.

Chapter 1:
The problem

This is a time of head-snapping change. Everywhere you look.

Disruption.

Upheaval.

Cool new shit.

But very, very few things have changed as much as marketing has.

I won’t list them all here.

Ok I will.

digital, search, social, content marketing, mobile, AI, marketing automation, data visualization, the cloud, inbound, analytics, big data, journey mapping, predictive analytics, data enrichment, attribution modelling, lead nurturing, data onboarding, programmatic advertising, real-time bidding, native advertising, SEO, PPC, CRO, CRM, ABM, APIs, KPIs…

That’s a lot of change.

But, underneath all this change, one thing has, unfortunately, stayed the same.

And it just might be the number one obstacle to great marketing in most companies.

This obstacle is preventing you from doing great things.

It’s befuddling your best strategies, watering down your strongest brews and spoiling your most brilliant executions.

I think you know what I’m talking about…

They’re ruining your marketing.

Everybody kind of understands this.

But it just keeps happening.

Chapter 2:
The reasons

We’re all old enough to realize that this is part of the game.

Senior executives—people who often rose to their positions without thinking much about marketing—have now found themselves in a position to judge it.

And the more marketing changes, the less likely they are to understand the new world you’re working in.

They didn’t just come of age in the old world, they succeeded in it.

So they’re tied even more closely to the way things used to be done.

And that’s where the pain comes in.

Because these senior executives are over-ruling the people who do think about the new kinds of marketing.

A lot.

Every day.

And have done for years.

Simply by virtue of their senior position in your company, these stakeholders will second-guess your judgement, undermine your decisions and kill your best ideas—often without even thinking that much about it.

And you know whose fault it is?

Because your stakeholders are doing their best.

They've been asked to make a call on your marketing and they're making that call as best they can.

And what any non-marketer will do when asked to judge marketing is to think:

"How much does this look and feel like the marketing I've grown up with?"

If the answer is, "A lot", they're likely to like it.

If the answer is, "Whoah. This doesn't look and feel like marketing," they're likely to kill it. (Or revise it into oblivion).

To expect them to do otherwise is the first mistake.

Because it's not their job to be marketing experts; to insist on great marketing and know it when they see it.

That's your job.

(Your agency’s job too if you’re working with one).

And it's also our job—together—to help your stakeholders want the right things.

We do that by getting aligned with them before you ask them to sign off that awesome video or blog series or content strategy.

This job—the job of getting in sync with your stakeholders—may be the most important job you do.

If you fail at it, you've consigned yourself to rejection after rejection.

To seeing great work eroded into ho-hum.

To watching original ideas turn into mediocrity.

(Or, much worse, to seeing yourself give up—and stop even looking for outstanding ideas).

But if you succeed at syncing up with your stakeholders, the sky isn't even the limit.

Great becomes possible again.

Work becomes fun again.

Marketing becomes exciting again.

Think about it this way: having to navigate the obstacle course of stakeholder approval is not a barrier to doing your job.

So it’s worth having a strategy for doing it.

Chapter 3:
Some ideas

7 Ways to Turn Stakeholders into Supporters

Here are seven deceptively simple-sounding things you can do to get stakeholders on-side and create the conditions for insanely great work:

1. Have a vision

It’s no good asking for ‘freedom’—you need to be clear about exactly what you want to do with that freedom.

Clarify exactly how you plan to leap out of the ‘me-too’ pack you’re jostling around with.

Capture that vision in a short, clear strategy statement. Here’s a structure you can use:

  • Everybody in our market does X and Y
  • If we don’t do X and Y—in fact, if we do the opposite: A and B—these good things will follow (list good things).
  • Here’s what we need from you in order to do these things
  • Here’s how we’ll prove it’s working

2. Get a champion

You just jumped from the business of marketing to the business of change—the hardest business on Earth.

Don’t even try to go it alone.

Instead, establish a power base. Starting with a single, smart, powerful stakeholder who gets what you’re trying to do and commits to helping you do it.

Don’t use your champion as a battering ram. Use him or her as:

a mentor.

an idea tester.

a door opener.

a credibility builder.

(And, yes, that battering ram may occasionally come in handy too).

3. Build and defend your cred

If you don’t yet have the positioning or credibility or clout inside your company, your primary job is to earn it. Pretty much at all costs.

(If you’ve lost your cred, you know what it feels like. It’s not just a shitty feeling, it’s crippling).

Creating (or turning around) your positioning in your company is hard—but it’s not impossible. It comes from things like this:

  • Consistently making strong recommendations based on evidence.
  • Communicating these recommendations in a clear, compelling way.
  • Defending those decisions against ill-argued attacks (firmly and diplomatically).
  • Losing graciously, when you lose (show you’re a team player).

Your positioning as a smart, strategic specialist is your most important asset as a marketer. You damage this positioning whenever you do one of two things:

Make ill-considered, off-brand or frivolous recommendations.
Let your good, strong recommendations go down in flames without a fight.

Here’s the key: Every stakeholder interaction is important.

Each interaction either puts a shiny penny in your Piggy Bank of Cred or takes one out (or shatters the whole damn hog).

4. Become your company’s customer advocate

As powerful as your stakeholders may be, there’s someone even more powerful who out-ranks them all: the customer.

Great marketers are customer advocates within the company.

Their lawyer.

Their union rep.

If everything you do is done in the service of your customers and prospects, you’ve seized the highest ground in any internal debate.

But you have to be right about what the customer wants.

And that’s where number 5 comes in…

5. Be the data

Marketing is a data game. Business is a data game. Hunches are fun. But, in a functional culture, the data wins.

Because data isn’t a bunch of statistics. Data is your customers telling you everything you need to know about themselves.

Live the data.

Breathe the data.

Be the data.

If you do that, only the supremely arrogant will relish arguing with you.

But you have to own the data.

Know what works. Know the metrics that prove it works.

Then get everyone to agree on these metrics.

Once you’ve done that, the best course must prevail (whether or not it’s the one you initially backed).

6. Market your successes

Because you’re close to the data, your wins will be obvious to you.

Because everyone else is not, your wins will barely be visible to them.

Unless you make them visible.

This doesn’t mean bragging.

It means reporting.

Early and often.

Success is the magic juice that earns you more freedom. When you get some, sprinkle it everywhere, sharing credit wherever it’s due.

7. Be prepared to quit (or be fired)

You may find yourself in a company where you’ve lost your cred and just can’t get it back—no one is listening any more.

Or you may be in a dysfunctional culture where the data—and the solid arguments built on the data—don’t win.

Or you’re stuck under a bully. Or a very small thinker trapped in a very big job.

No matter how much energy and passion and data you bring to this thing, your chances of success are slim.

(Yes, you could wait out the bullies and dullards—but if they were hired and promoted, there may be more right behind them).

It’s a tough call but you’ll know when it’s the right one.

Remember this: you’re bloody good at this. You deserve to be in a place that lets you prove that.

So that’s the 7-step plan.

Clearly, it’s no magic wand (quite the opposite, really, it’s hard work).

If you take this path, and succeed, you will do amazing, market-moving, business-changing, career-zooming things.

Things that will give you far more pride than the easy, un-opposed wins.

Things that turn the ‘me-too’ marketing conveyor belt…

…into a great and glorious career that is worth every ounce of your time and talent and energy.

This is the high road of marketing.

And the people on it are having way, way more fun than the people stuck on the low road.

Chapter 4:
Conclusion

Go forth and align.

Get your stakeholders on board. Fire them up.

Show them you’re fired up.

Challenge them to raise their game.

And do it in the most compelling way possible: by raising yours.

Let's do this.