We’re in Boston, MA for #INBOUND19 – and loving every exhausting, thrilling moment – ya feel me?
This morning, we started our day with a couple of life’s loveliest things: a hearty breakfast and great conversation. Our account team hosted a panel session in the INBOUND village: “A Multi-Channel Approach to Non-Profit and Higher Ed Marketing Success,” and if you missed it, you’re in luck: it’s recap time!
The scene opened with a highlight reel of some of our clients in Non-Profit and Higher Ed created by our hybrid content specialist, Brandon Weiner:
After the crowd ooh-ed and aww-ed, we opened up the floor with a range of hot topics for marketers in the Higher Ed and Non-Profit sectors. We heard questions and comments from attendees all over the world, and it turns out that everyone is facing the same setbacks, so it was great to collaborate during the session. Check out an overview of our discussion:
Kassi Whitman, account manager, opened this question with some great ideas about making sure that you look at the big picture and start with strategy. Once you figure out what you want to accomplish, break it down into what’s most important and what will be the most effective. On a high level, you’re going to need to do an audit of your budget cycle and assets to correctly allocate and move forward properly.
Senior Partner Alex Moore showed a visual of the “Martech 5000” that shows the wide array of marketing and tech platforms now available on the market. He explained that you need to start from the inside out: make sure you have an effective core system (like HubSpot) and then ensure that it seamlessly connects to other applications as needed (for example: CRM, automation, and website – it should all work together to effectively market).
Digital Specialist Kelly Buck explained how we need to leverage every piece of traffic that comes to your site to make the best of every interaction, and then retarget. We should be using organic and complementing with paid advertising to intersect, and if we truly know our audiences and where they spend time, we will be the most effective.
As marketers, we are all communicators at heart, and we need to know how to properly tell our story, both for our target markets externally, AND for our internal team. At the end of the day, the most important information to unify stakeholders will be your data, which you will collect in order to support your position and use as proof to communicate to your organization.
When we polled the room, no one was currently using automation for communication campaigns, and our team discussed the importance of planning it out months in advance and mapping out basic touchpoints in order to engage your audience over time: this can be through email, social posting, or even chat bots. Build a system so that you have repeatability, make sure that your systems are connected, prove your efforts are effective through your data, and you will have more control in organizational buy-in. Once you have the right systems and communications in place, you will see the long-term results!
Check out our Non-Profit and Higher Ed Resources page for more great tech and integration ideas!