Aren Kabarajian
June 12, 2023
7 minutes
Marketing spend only continues to increase as the current technology landscape introduces more channels marketers can use to reach consumers. It’s estimated that 82% of the US population uses social media, and 94% of households have connected TVs.
Today’s marketers have more channels to manage than ever before, whether it’s email, ads, push notifications, SMS messages, or on-site personalization. Combining these channels into multi-channel or omnichannel experiences adds further complexity.
Many companies are increasingly adopting Customer Data Platforms (CDPs) to power marketing team channels. Unfortunately, CDP implementations often under-deliver because many companies fail to structure a plan for use case deployment. In this blog post, I’ll share the strategic framework we use at Actable to guarantee success in all CDP deployments by mapping out use cases.
First, it’s important to define a Use Case Roadmap. Here at Actable, we think of a Use Case Roadmap as a phased use case implementation plan over a concrete period of time. Generally, we design use case roadmaps to have increasing complexity up until the use case return on investment is no longer justified by the work required to achieve it.
A thorough roadmap also includes details around the added value of use cases and details of business benefits to help contextualize the main goals of each section of deployment. Here’s an example use case roadmap we’ve used previously at Actable.
Immature CDP adoption efforts are often characterized by use cases launched in isolation. This presents a risk of deployment fragmentation with customer data. Enterprise alignment around a use case roadmap provides visibility into broader goals.
This cohesion is important, but completing a use case without the infrastructure to measure the benefit is an additional risk. Proper planning outlines success metrics that can be linked back to business goals. This allows stakeholders to work on key analytical capabilities before launching use cases. A use case roadmap helps you understand the effort required to reach your use cases and outline intentional measurement.
Whether you’re considering implementing a Legacy CDP or a Composable CDP, a use case roadmap will help streamline your execution so you can maximize your investment. There are several phases to an effective use case roadmap, and each builds on the previous one.
Documenting goals is an essential foundational step in building a use case plan. This begins with identifying the stakeholders who are involved in setting those goals and interviewing them. With a thought-out interview process, your marketing platform operators will have a much more effective use case implementation.
Focus areas for these interviews should include:
This framework aims to outline clear parameters to standardize your objectives and align your goals.
When it comes to CDP deployments, there are three core outcomes that organizations are looking to drive:
Figuring out which factor is most important to your business will provide greater clarity as you align teams and prioritize use cases.
As a CDP is being implemented, getting started on use cases often requires inter-departmental collaboration and alignment. Developing a Use Case Roadmap provides a springboard for that inter-departmental alignment. You should facilitate this by involving key team members from analytics, data engineering, marketing, and marketing operations. This makes it much more of an organizational priority.
Figuring out which use cases to prioritize when implementing your CDP can be very challenging. You should prioritize use cases against ease of execution (Effort) and expected return (Benefit).
An exercise to help assist this is scoring each use case on a High, Medium, or Low Scale and averaging those results for both descriptors.
Low Lift: Using technology and infrastructure that already exists.
Medium Lift: Use Cases that can be implemented with a certain amount of work to prepare for launch.
High Lift: Use Cases with activation capabilities that have a longer timeline but will add large incremental value.
This exercise will help you establish a baseline to prioritize your use cases that lead to early success. Frontloading quick wins will jumpstart the adoption process so you can build momentum to tackle your more complex use cases.
Some examples of use cases that apply here are creating central suppression audiences for a brand, expanding an email journey to deliver at various omnichannel levels, or leveraging recommendation models to engage users when they arrive on-site.
The value proposition of CDPs is clear because organizations are increasingly looking for ways to activate their existing first-party data. Whether you’re considering implementing a Legacy CDP or a Composable CDP, a use case roadmap will help streamline your execution so you can maximize your investment.
Bio: Aren Kabarajian is a Marketing Solutions Specialist at Actable. Aren is responsible for helping global brands better organize, analyze, and activate their first-party customer data. Prior to joining Actable, Aren worked extensively in the programmatic media space and was a machine learning consultant for the largest transit system in the US. Aren has a Masters Degree in Applied Urban Science & Informatics from New York University.