This week, I had the pleasure of speaking at the B2B Marketing Exchange (B2BMX) conference on the topic of B2B email creative. At a conference of more than sixty sessions (by my count), as best I could determine there was exactly one (1) session on anything to do with creative: mine.
That fact is both odd, and a little sad. It speaks volumes about where creative fits (or doesn’t fit) into today’s version of B2B marketing. Creative, and good creative in particular, is still vitally important to the success of any B2B initiative, and yet no-one talks about it. Scan the blogosphere, social media, B2B publishing, and conferences like B2BMX, and you’ll read and hear plenty about data, intent, alignment, ABM, personalization and other technology-driven trends, but precious little about copy or design.
Technology has radically changed the way we market, and enabled us marketers to reach our audience with a precision, and at a scale, that would have been unimaginable only a few years ago. And yet, without good creative (I would argue), all the data, content, personalization, programmatic, AI and [insert buzzword here] is for nought. Bad creative has the potential to render any technological advantage moot.
How did we get here? Firstly, we now have a generation of young B2B marketers who believe that successful marketing revolves around the tech stack. B2B has become so technology-driven that creative is a mere afterthought.
Second, a byproduct of the efficiency with which marketing campaigns can now be spun up, launched and managed means anyone can do it. This is especially true of B2B email, the subject of my conference session, where truly awful creative reigns supreme.
What you learn in talking first-hand to so many marketing practitioners at a conference like B2BMX (our agency was a sponsor and exhibitor) is that creative is no longer the province of creative professionals. The attitude of marketing management seems to be: It’s an email – how difficult can it be? (I’ve had more than one client tell me that one of the primary reasons they invested in marketing automation technology is so anyone on the team could create and launch email campaigns.)
As an agency owner, it sounds undeniably self-serving to say it, but genuinely good, effective creative…