State of branding
2017 REPORT

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Introduction
State of branding | report 2017

In December 2016, we surveyed 562 global brand managers and CMOs on the challenges they face, their priorities for the new year, and their approach to technology. Our report aims to provide branding and marketing professionals insights into how brand marketing is evolving in a consumer-centric, digital age.

While the digital landscape has revolutionized many industries, few have changed as drastically as marketing. Faced with new technologies, a multitude of channels and a wealth of data at their disposal, marketing professionals are under increasing pressure to get to grips with the digital landscape in order to retain their edge in a competitive climate.

According to our survey, the top three marketing challenges for our respondents are “proving the ROI of our marketing activities”, “collaborating between departments/offices” and “adapting to changing consumer behaviors”. While proving marketing ROI remains a top challenge, marketing departments are struggling to keep up to pace with changing consumer behaviors.

67% of respondents have buyer personas to help them target and understand their ideal customers, while a vast majority of marketers invest in tools and methods to gain knowledge about their target audience. Clearly, organizations are actively trying to gain more consumer insights.

But when it comes to new channels and technologies, only 43% of respondents said that they are early adopters. What’s more striking is that a clear majority of marketers (65%) stated that they would not be investing in new technologies in 2017, despite all the trend reports surrounding virtual reality, artificial intelligence and beacon technology.

Our report will provide you with an in-depth look at the current state of branding and give you a glimpse of where it’s heading in the future.

Demographics
State of branding | report 2017

  • Industry
  • Consumer Products 27%
  • Marketing Agencies 14%
  • Information Technology & Services 14%
  • Services 9%
  • Industiral and Manufacturing 7%
  • Healthcare and Medical 6%
  • Media and Publishing 6%
  • Ecommerce 6%
  • Non-profit/Government 3%
  • Travel and Tourism 3%
  • Education 3%
  • Telecommunications 2%
  • Other 2%
  • Company size
  • 2-10 5%
  • 11-50 20%
  • 51-200 22%
  • 201-500 15%
  • 501-1000 11%
  • 1001 - 5000 10%
  • 5001-10,000 5%
  • 10,001+ 12%
  • Company type
  • B2B 36%
  • B2C 30%
  • B2B and B2C 29%
  • Non-profit 4%
  • Region
  • North America 78%
  • Europe 13%
  • Asia 4%
  • Africa 2%
  • East Asia & Pacific 2%
  • South America 1%
  • Role
  • C-level executive 11%
  • Vice president 2%
  • Director 23%
  • Manager 44%
  • Individual contributor & Pacific 20%

Goals and Challenges
Top marketing priority

Customer acquisition is the top priority for marketers this year. While brand awareness is still an ongoing objective, more marketers are seeing the need to invest in their customer experience to acquire and retain customers.

Which marketing priority will be your organization’s main focus in 2017?

New customer acquisition

0%

Brand awareness

0%

Customer experience

0%

Customer evangelism

0%

Engagement

0%

Customer retention

0%

Other

0%

Share of voice

0%

Goals and Challenges
Top marketing priority

All marketing teams, regardless of organization type or size, will concentrate on new customer acquisition, 1 brand awareness and customer experience in 2017.
In comparison with B2B and B2C organizations, nonprofit and governmental organizations will focus more on engagement and customer loyalty.

Top marketing priorities by company type

PriorityB2BB2CB2B & B2CNon-profit / Government
1New customer acquisitionNew customer acquisitionNew customer acquisitionEngagement
2Customer experienceBrand awarenessBrand awarenessCustomer retention/loyalty
3Brand awarenessCustomer experienceCustomer experienceNew customer acquisition

B2B

  1. New customer acquisition
  2. Customer experience
  3. Brand awareness

B2C

  1. New customer acquisition
  2. Brand awareness
  3. Customer experience

B2B & B2C

  1. New customer acquisition
  2. Brand awareness
  3. Customer experience

Non-profit / Government

  1. Engagement
  2. Customer retention/loyalty
  3. New customer acquisition

Top marketing priorities by company size

Priority1200201-50005001+
1New customer acquisitionNew customer acquisitionBrand awareness
2Brand awarenessBrand awarenessNew customer acquisition
3Customer experienceCustomer experienceCustomer experience

1-200

  1. New customer acquisition
  2. Brand awareness
  3. Customer experience

201-5000

  1. New customer acquisition
  2. Brand awareness
  3. Customer experience

5001+

  1. Brand awareness
  2. New customer acquisition
  3. Customer experience

Goals and Challenges
Top marketing challenge

The ability to prove the ROI of marketing activities remains a top challenge for marketers. While marketing departments are figuring out ways to make their marketing efforts more accountable, they are also struggling to collaborate with different departments and offices, and adapt to changing consumer behaviors.

What is your oganization's top marketing challenge?

Proving the ROI of our marketing activities

0%

Collaborating between departments

0%

Adapting to changing consumer behaviours

0%

Aligning content with Brand Guidelines

0%

Securing enough budget

0%

Finding top talent

0%

Other

0%

Content for an international audience

0%

Identifying necessary technology

0%

Top marketing challenges by company type

PriorityB2BB2CB2B & B2CNon-profit / Government
1Proving the ROI of our marketing activitiesProving the ROI of our marketing activitiesProving the ROI of our marketing activitiesAligning content with brand guidelines
2Collaborating between departments/officesSecuring enough budgetAdapting to changing consumer behaviorsProving the ROI of our marketing activities
3Adapting to changing consumer behaviorsCollaborating between departments/officesAligning content with brand guidelinesAdapting to changing consumer behaviors

B2B

  1. Proving the ROI of our marketing activities
  2. Collaborating between departments/offices
  3. Adapting to changing consumer behaviors

B2C

  1. Proving the ROI of our marketing activities
  2. Securing enough budget
  3. Collaborating between departments/offices

B2B & B2C

  1. Proving the ROI of our marketing activities
  2. Adapting to changing consumer behaviors
  3. Aligning content with brand guidelines

Non-profit / Government

  1. Aligning content with brand guidelines
  2. Proving the ROI of our marketing activities
  3. Adapting to changing consumer behaviors

Top marketing challenges by company size

Priority1-200201-50005001+
1Proving the ROI of our marketing activitiesProving the ROI of our marketing activitiesProving the ROI of our marketing activities
2Aligning content with brand guidelinesCollaborating between departments/officesCollaborating between departments/offices
3Adapting to changing consumer behaviorsAdapting to changing consumer behaviorsAligning content with brand guidelines

1-200

  1. Proving the ROI of our marketing activities
  2. Aligning content with brand guidelines
  3. Adapting to changing consumer behaviors

201-5000

  1. Proving the ROI of our marketing activities
  2. Collaborating between departments/offices
  3. Adapting to changing consumer behaviors

5001+

  1. Proving the ROI of our marketing activities
  2. Collaborating between departments/offices
  3. Aligning content with brand guidelines

Goals and Challenges
Adapting to changing consumer behaviour

In an open question, we asked our respondents how their marketing teams are adapting to changing consumer behaviors. The most common answers included increasing social media engagement, shifting budgets to digital and mobile, and more focus on the consumer lifecycle

“By tailoring messages to meet specific audience requirements while still ensuring that the core messages remain 100% aligned to our brand persona. We also use digital and social media as part of our communications efforts to showcase our nimble approach and expertise across different sectors.”
Julia Scheffer
Global Head of Communications
Brand & Marketing at AltoPartners
“We have changed our marketing strategy to reflect our customers’ position in the buying journey. We’re moving more into content marketing, and replacing spray and pray approach.”
Sascha Sinclair
In-house Creative Director and Brand Manager
McMillan Shakespeare Ltd.
“We have a customer insight team that provides all potential feedback from surveys, interviews and database analysis and then translates it into actions for our marketing and brand teams.”
Stella Tsiakalou
Senior Customer Insight Analyst
UBM EMEA Amsterdam

Goals and Challenges
Defining brand success

The consumer-brand relationship has undergone significant change in last few years, and so has the definition of a successful brand. Over half of the survey respondents agreed that customer experience is the hallmark of a brand’s success, eclipsing the more traditional aspects of brand building such as brand consistency and storytelling.

What is the most important component of a succesful brand?

User/customer experience 52%

Brand consistency 20%

Storytelling 14%

Audience knowledge 6%

Company culture 3%

Other 3%

Agility and speed 2%

Strategy and Organization
Documented brand strategy

The majority of our respondents have a dynamic brand strategy: 67% have a documented strategy while 21% have a verbal-only strategy. In an era where brands have to be adaptable and agile, it’s not surprising that almost half of the marketers surveyed update their brand strategy every year.

Which aspects are included in your brand strategy?

8% Other

39% Audience poll or research study

46% Deep understanding of audience personas

77% Brand guidelines

87% Our story and value proposition

94% Brand vision and mission

How often do you update your brand strategy?

Once a year

0%

Once every 2 years

0%

Never

0%

Every few months

0%

Strategy and Organization
Documenting and sharing brand strategy

From the open question responses, we concluded that most brand strategies are documented and distributed digitally, while some organizations share their strategy offline in management meetings and employee trainings. The most common formats are PDFs and Google Docs.

“Our Marketing and Growth department runs projects to better understand our customers and their needs. We do that and implement different documentation to help our team members communicate in the right way to external audiences. All documentation is saved and kept in our online storage tool and part of onboarding for every new employee.”
Hugo Pereira
Head Marketing & Growth
EV-Box

Goals and Challenges
Undocumented brand strategy

When we asked respondents why their brand strategy is not documented, the majority said that they were a small organization focusing on experimentation and rapid growth, making it difficult to have a static brand strategy. Other reasons included: lack of time and resources, focusing on short-term sales goals, and building a proof of concept.

“As a startup we allow ourselves to experiment in the early phase in order to find out what works and what not. Many things change so we need to be flexible.”
Amir Abdin
Head of Marketing
Payments & Cards Network
“We are diversifying our product offering and moving into new undefined territories. Once defined, we can build and execute our strategy.”
Sascha Sinclair
In-house Creative Director and Brand Manager
McMillan Shakespeare Ltd.

Strategy and Organization
Developing brand strategy

Organizations planning to develop a brand strategy in 2017 will focus more on consumer insights with 80% of respondents planning to include a deep understanding of audience personas and 57% wanting to include an audience poll or research study. Brand vision and mission, story and value proposition, and brand guidelines remain the most common elements.

Which aspects are you planning to include in your brand strategy?

Brand vision and mission

0%

our story and value proposition

0%

Brand guidelines

0%

Audience personas

0%

Audience poll or research study

0%

Other

0%

Strategy and Organization
Importance of brand marketing

Even with the increasing pressure to prove the ROI of marketing activities and the temptation of short- term marketing tactics, 87% of our respondents said that brand marketing is an integral part of their organization’s marketing strategy.

Brand marketing is an important componenet of our marketing program.

Short-term brand marketing goals are part of long-term vision.

Strategy and Organization
Building audiences with brand marketing

72% of our respondents are focused on building audiences as opposed to directly selling to consumers. This only confirms that in today’s digital landscape where consumers are blocking ads and choosing what to engage with, brands need to earn their attention.

Our brand marketing focuses on building audiences.

Our marketing provides an excellent experience for our audience.

Brand Marketing Metrics
Defining brand marketing success

The majority of our respondents use new customer acquisition numbers to determine the success of brand marketing activities, followed by engagement metrics such as social media engagement and qualitative feedback from customers.

Which metrics or KPIs does your organization use to determine the success of brand marketing activities.

New customer acquisition 75%

Social media engagement 72%

Qualitative feedbck from customers 58%

Subscriber/Community growth 51%

Brand lift 45%

Earned media 39%

Customer renewal rate 37%

Purchase intent 34%

Other 9%

Brand Marketing Metrics
Customer acquisition and retention

While the majority of our respondents can prove that brand marketing has increased new customer acquisition, 18% stated that they could not prove an increase in customer renewal rate, with 36% choosing “indifferent”. This data suggests that marketers do not focus on retention as much as acquisition, and that it’s more difficult to track retention numbers.

Brand marketing has increased our new customer acquisition.

Strongly agree

0%

Agree

0%

Indifferent

0%

Disagree

0%

Strongly disagree

0%

Brand marketing has increased customer renewal rate.

Strongly agree

0%

Agree

0%

Indifferent

0%

Strongly disagree

0%

Disagree

0%

Brand Marketing Metrics
Subscriber growth and audience engagement

As we can see from the previous results, marketers are focusing their brand marketing efforts on building audiences and communities. When it comes to measuring these activities, 66% said that they can prove that brand marketing has increased audience growth, while 70% can prove that it has increased audience engagement.

Brand marketing has increased subscriber/community growth.

Strongly agree

0%

Agree

0%

Indifferent

0%

Disagree

0%

Strongly disagree

0%

Brand marketing has increased audience engagement.

Strongly agree

0%

Agree

0%

Indifferent

0%

Strongly disagree

0%

Disagree

0%

Audience Targeting
Buyer personas

While the vast majority of those surveyed have a documented or verbal-only buyer persona, 41% said buyer personas are only moderately effective in helping their organization target its ideal customers. Interviewing real buyers, consulting internal stakeholders and online surveys are the top three ways marketers build their buyer personas.

Do you have a buyer persona?

Yes, documented

0%

Yes, non documented

0%

No, but planned in 2017

0%

No plans to have one

0%

How did you build your buyer persona?

Interviewed real buyers

0%

Consulted stakeholders

0%

Online surveys

0%

Social media analysis

0%

Analyst reports

0%

Web research

0%

Web analytics

0%

Other

0%

Audience Targeting
Buyer persona effectiveness

According to our research, buyer personas are more effective for B2B organizations (63%) than B2C organizations (53%). Almost half of the marketers from B2C organizations said that buyer personas are only moderately effective at helping them target ideal customers, showing that audience targeting is more difficult for consumer-facing brands.

How effective is your buyer persona in helping your organization target its ideal customers?

Why are you not planning to build a buyer persona?

“The specific industry, and market we are in, includes a diverse range of customer types; from gender, to ethnicity, to geographical location.”
Aaron Russo
Brand Territory Manager
Marathon Petroleum Company LP

Technology
Current marketing tools

New technology and tools continue to play an important role in the day-to-day operations of marketing departments. Social media monitoring (78%), marketing analytics (76%), and brand guidelines (67%) are the most used marketing tools.

Which marketing tools does your organization currently use?

Technology
Investing in marketing tools

With customer experience being one of the top three marketing priorities for 2017, it’s not surprising to see that 45% of our respondents will invest in customer experience tools this year, compared to the 34% who currently invest in them. Marketing analytics (57%) and social media monitoring (49%) remain the top two investments for marketing departments.

Which marketing tools will your organization invest in, in 2017?

Marketing analytics 58%

Social media monitoring 49%

Customer experience tools 45%

Content management systems 43%

DAM / Branding automation 40%

Marketing automation 38%

Brand guidelines 38%

Other 8%

Technology
Understanding target audience

Despite all of the tools available that provide audience insights, customer feedback is the most common way for organizations to gain knowledge about its target audience. Website analytics (72%) and social listening (56%) are the most common digital methods, while 57% of marketers implement a competitive analysis to understand a competitor’s target audience.

Which techniques does your organization use to gain knowledge about its target audience?

Customer feedback

0%

Website analytics

0%

Competative analysis

0%

Social listening

0%

Keyword search

0%

A/B testing

0%

Other

0%

Technology
Inversting in new technology

Virtual reality, augmented reality and chatbots dominated the trend reports last year. However, a clear majority of our respondents (65%) stated that they would not be investing in new technologies in 2017. 360 video (19%) and virtual reality (14%) were the most popular investments, followed by chatbots (9%), beacon technology (8%), and augmented reality (7%).

Which of the following technologies will you invest in for marketing purposes in 2017?

None of the above

0%

360 video

0%

Virtual reality

0%

Chatbots

0%

Beacon technology

0%

Augmented reality

0%

Biometrics technology

0%

Other

0%

Technology
Innovations impacting marketing

According to our respondents, virtual reality (24%) will have the biggest impact on marketing in the next 5 years, closely followed by machine learning (23%). 70% of the marketers that believe VR and AR will have the biggest impact on marketing, will not invest in VR and AR in 2017, suggesting that there’s still a lot of insecurity and uncertainty about new technologies.

Which technology do you think will have the biggest impact on marketing in the next 5 years?

Technology
The most disruptive force

We asked our respondents to tell us what they think will be most disruptive force or channel to affect their job in the next 3-5 years. Here are our favorites.

“Staying on top of understanding touchpoints while still being able to prioritize the relevant ones. Secondly, the need of more and more specialized agencies - how do we get them in the same direction. And, the demand for talent both on the strategic side and the technical side.”
Anders Fisker Olesen
CMO
System Frugt A/S
“Ever-changing shopper behavior. Blurred lines between online and offline purchases. Maximizing the shopper experience wherever the shopper is, digital shelf or retail shelf.”
Paige Perdue
Director Digital Marketing
WD-40 Company
“Digital innovations concerning individual user experiences (individualized/ personalized marketing) will be the most disruptive force for my segment.”
Michelle Johnson
Segment Marketing Manager
LP Building Products

Technology
The most disruptive force

The answers we received varied from artificial intelligence to changes in online shopping, from sustainable businesses to demands for talent.

“AI automating the creative process so a non-creative can generate logos, icons, infographics, illustrations, build websites and collateral, etc.”
Angela Hill
CEO
Incitro
“The millennial generation coming of age and becoming the dominate spending force will have the most disruptive force on our industry.”
Rob Holder
Director of Beverage & Brand Development
JNK Concepts
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“The political climate, technological swings in behavior, migration to online-only shopping.”
Cozette Phifer
VP Marketing & Communications
Swift Transportation
“AI, sustainable businesses, consumer pressure, and further digital development.”
Eva Karlsson Nordlöf
Consultant Brand Manager
Akrida AB

Technology
Approaches to digital marketing

While 87% of our respondents claim that digital permeates most or all of their marketing activities, only 39% experiment with online campaigns, and only 43% said that their marketing department is an early adopter of new channels and technologies.

Our marketing includes more experimentation to reduce risk.

Agree

0%

Indifferent

0%

Disagree

0%

Strongly agree

0%

Strongly disagree

0%

Our team is an early adopter of new channels and technologies.

Agree

0%

Indifferent

0%

Disagree

0%

Strongly agree

0%

Strongly disagree

0%

Technology
Approaches to digital marketing

Nowadays marketers have a wealth of data at their disposal, but only 33% of our respondents leverage data to create personalized and human interactions with consumers. Despite mobile consumption rising exponentially, only 35% of marketers surveyed take a mobile-first approach to marketing campaigns.

Our marketing uses big data to unlock new brand experiences.

Agree

0%

Disagree

0%

Indifferent

0%

Strongly disagree

0%

Strongly agree

0%

We take a mobile first approach to marketing and ad campaigns.

Disagree

0%

Agree

0%

Indifferent

0%

Strongly disagree

0%

Strongly agree

0%

Conclusions
17 key takeaways for 2017

While new customer acquisition will still be a major focus for brand and marketing managers in 2017, building audiences is more valuable than direct sales for over two thirds of our respondents. Marketers will continue to invest in tools that make their marketing activities more effective and measurable, but they will not be investing in new technologies such as virtual reality, despite recognizing their inherent value.

  • 1. New customer acquisition is the top marketing priority for 2017.
  • 2. Proving ROI remains top challenge for marketing teams.
  • 3. Large organizations recognize the importance of internal collaboration.
  • 4. The value of customer relationships is on the rise.
  • 5. Almost 50% of marketing managers have a dynamic brand strategy.
  • 6. Digitally distributed brand strategies are 23% more effective than verbal-only.
  • 7. SMBs focusing on rapid growth struggle to create a rigid brand strategy.
  • 8. Consumer insights will be fundamental for CMOs developing brand strategy in 2017.
  • 9. Building audiences is more valuable than direct sales for over 70% of marketers.
  • 10. Marketers use engagement metrics to determine the success of brand marketing.
  • 11. Buyer personas are only moderately effective for 41% of marketers.
  • 12. Customer experience tools will be a major investment for marketers in 2017.
  • 13. 70% of marketers recognize the value of VR and AR, but will not invest in 2017.
  • 14. Virtual reality will have the biggest impact on marketing in the next five years.
  • 15. Early adoption of new channels and tech is crucial for more than 40% of marketers.
  • 16. Two thirds of marketers don’t take a mobile-first approach to marketing campaigns.
  • 17. AI will be the most disruptive force to affect marketing jobs in the next 5 years.