

Last week, Mike Rizzo and the Marketinggops.com team organized their Annual Maps Apalooza event with more than 400 marketing people. I felt honored to be one of its main speakers, and I will share the main theme of my talk with you in a moment. But first …
They also launched their annual State of marketing operations professionalsAn epic 87 -page report that survey more than 600 marketing operations in almost all facets of their careers. It is a true data of gold and ideas about a discipline that is still relatively quite new and is not completely understood in the broader marketing industry.
That said, Marketing Ops has traveled a long way from “The Island of Misfit Toys” that a sarcastic analyst called him a decade ago. Here are some key points of the report:
Marketing OPS has become an established race, with decent 6 -digit salaries and a growing tempting talent group with more than 6 years of experience. On a scale of 1-7-1 as the least favorable response, 7 as more, they generally have a score of ~ 4.5 for feeling that they are fairly compensated, understood and valued by their employers. It is not great, but well above the midpoint. (And it is not bad in the current macro environment).


As shown in the upper part of this publication, Marketing OPS is clearly a combination entangled processes, technology and data with 77.8%, 72.7%and 73.3%or responsibilities that coincide with those three pillars. (When you are asked to choose one primary Responsibility, the answers were almost uniformly divided).
The data is becoming a central part of the strategy and marketing leadership, with emphasis on the enrichment of the data (52.4%), the quality of the data (46.8%) and data integration (45.8%) and the list.


This is reflected in the main technologies set in which marketing operations expect to invest during the next 12-18 months, with data enrichment tools and intention at the top (54.6%). Or course, the AI is in the top three (42.2%). But the following two are also centered on the data: analysis tools (39.2%) and ABM tools (35.5%).
So, since a central responsibility for marketing operations is the evolutionary of the technological marketing pile, and have a significant list of new technologies that are planning for next year, we arrive at the finding that it is my pet rock for a long time: integration.


The “ability to integrate” is, with much, the criterion #1 (81.3%), almost double the next highest factor in classification, which marketing operations professionals have when evaluating the new marketing technology.
That does not mean that price, scalability, compliance, ease of use, service and support, etc., are not important. Of course, they are.
But the most important Marsch purchases are (or should) make a shopping group, where other stakeholders or cover these other factors well. But marketing operations is the interested part that tune in with integration. Because they know that even if a new product or platform verifies all other boxes, if not it is not so, it is not no, it is not that it is not, no no, it cannot do not do it not to the rest of the technological battery, it is likely that it ends like an anchor more than a candle.
My other pet rock has been to legalize agile management approaches in marketing and Marsch since 2010. It is good to see that Agile is the dominant approach that professional marketing equipment is taking to manage their work.


It is also good to see that marketing operations now work closely not only with sales, sales operations and revolution options, but also with C-Suite and IT. Altheghs, as other data shows in the report, there is still a lot of space to improve alignment With thesis collaborations.
One more finding of this report that I want to highlight is the level of digital maturity that the operations marketing respondents described their organizations:


The relatively low digital maturity of these companies, mostly level 1 or level 2, Certs that, although we no longer talk about “digital transformation”, most compans have a long way to go. Or, for a more positive turn, there is still a great growth opportunity in digital operations in general.
Marketing operations teams can play – You must play – An essential role in this leveling.
What leads me to the main theme of my key note in Mops Apalooza. Marketing OPS has grown as a more integral part of marketing. But it is still under resources and underestimated in relation to other facets of the department. Strategy and creativity are appreciated above all. But that is not yet where the majority or marketing is assigned.
Most of the hours dedicated to marketing today go to various types of production and analysis. Because a lot of qualified work is needed to convert those strategic and creative ideas actually.


But I believe that in the next 5 years, AI authorizes and optimizes a large part of that production and analysis work. At the same time, it will drastically expand the scope and scale of creative experimentation that marketing can do. I think it will be a golden age of the marketing and creativity strategy. You haven’t seen yourself crazy, Don Draper – With much more human energy assigned by directing that work.
The warning, however, is that, despite the fact that the incredible automation of AI, optimization and creative empowerment for work, underlying technology and data infrastructure and the operating system must be extremely well managed.
That is the mission of marketing operations.
As that impact and recognition, investment and appreciation in large marketing operations grow, they will also.
Why a lot more excellent knowledge and data points in marketing operations? Download a free copy or The status of professional marketing operations Report. It is a fantastic resource. Congratulations, Mike and Team!