“A jury verdict is just a guess – a well-intentioned guess, generally, but you simply cannot tell fact from fiction by taking a vote.” – William Landay
Despite what they believe, not everyone is a marketing expert.
As a growth-focused member of leadership teams across a diverse number of organizations over the last 20 years, I have witnessed an interesting phenomenon: almost everyone has a strong opinion about marketing.
Moreover, they usually are not shy about sharing it.
It is truly a unique dynamic in the c-suite. You do not see this level of interest and meddling very often in the other management disciplines like Finance, IT, or HR.
However, in marketing it is commonplace. Why?
As I shared in an earlier blog article on reasons why CMOs fail, I think it stems from the fact we are all consumers, exposed to “marketing” (at least the part visible to buyers) countless times every day. This proximity tends to translate into a familiarity, which then leads to the dangerous assumption that we know what works and what doesn’t based on our personal opinion.
Not everyone is a marketing expert.
A Few Marketing Expert Examples
Like many growth executives, I have been on the receiving end for plenty of unsolicited marketing and sales feedback. A few representative examples:
- “That font just doesn’t look right…”
- “Our sales reps should target ABC INDUSTRY…”
- “That shade of blue in our logo is too blue…”
- “We should advertise in XYZ publication, I read it every month…”
- “That picture on our homepage doesn’t make us look big enough…”
- “Sponsoring BIG EVENT is a perfect fit for our brand…”
- Etc…I could go on, but I think you get the idea!
All of this feedback was well meaning, and delivered with sincerity, but also completely unfounded in anything but subjective opinion.
Not everyone is a marketing expert.
The Marketing Jury Framework
I like frameworks. I find that they help me think through challenges and explain concepts to others.
Here is one I have been playing with to help reconcile this issue of everyone being a marketing expert.
I call it the Marketing Jury. It goes like this…
Over the years I have found that almost every marketing or growth idea is judged not once, but four times.
It does not matter whether the topic is a new strategy, creative concept, sales channel, or marketing tactic. Everything gets scrutinized.
By whom? I like to call them the marketing jury.
However, unlike a normal jury, in this jury there is only one vote that matters.
I’m sure you are wondering who are the four Justices in this marketing Supreme Court?
Juror 1 – Your Loved One
This juror is your spouse, partner, parent, or child.
Before you start laughing, recognize that more glossy, gimmicky, trendy, vanity advertising is bought each year because the business leader’s in-house advisor happened to “like it” than for any other reason.
The unfortunate impact of this jury vote is that many solid go-to-market ideas never see the light of day because a significant other didn’t think it was a good idea when they heard it across the dinner table.
Juror 2 – Your Colleague
This juror is one of your co-workers. Just like clockwork, as soon as you make the decision to implement a new marketing strategy, your CFO, admin, and the stockroom clerk all magically become marketing experts. Complete with strong opinions, based on nothing but gut feel.
This goes without saying, but I’ll say it anyway: It is okay to listen politely to this input, but be very careful about taking any action.
Juror 3 – Guess Who?!
You should be very familiar with the third juror. Why? Because it is you!
It is very easy for seasoned marketing and sales executives to have big egos, and to think we know it all because we have seen and done a lot in our careers.
Here’s the news flash: I don’t know everything about marketing and sales, and neither do you.
In fact, we may be one of the worst judges of our own marketing or sales ideas. Over the years, I have run little experiments and asked marketing and sales professionals to guess the outcome of various A/B split tests. The experts are wrong as often as they are right.
The takeaway: Stay humble. Always be in learning mode. If you listen and look hard enough, you just might learn something new.
Juror 4 – The One to Focus On
Spoiler alert: This is the only one of the four jurors with a vote that matters. Why? Because they are your potential or actual customer.
You see, these jurors vote with their wallets. At least figuratively. In a typical complex B2B sales process they vote by clicking on a link, viewing a web page, answered the phone, taking a meeting, requesting more information, stopping by your booth, attending a webinar, signing a contract, etc.
Whatever the action, they responded in a positive manner to some marketing or sales tactic, thereby advancing the sales process.
Always pay close attention to this juror.
They are the only juror with a vote.
How Do You Arrive at a Verdict?
Growth leaders, and their teams, are in a position where they must play judge in this courtroom drama.
They own the growth agenda and strategy. They own the go-to-market program, and budget.
When it comes to jurors #1, 2, and 3 – How you choose to take their feedback will always be situational. Some you can politely listen to, and then ignore. Others you may have to engage in an educational discussion. Still others you might need to do some due diligence and explore the idea further.
Listen to juror #4 – this is your client or prospect. Having a comprehensive go-to-market strategy and defined process is your best friend when it comes to juror #4. When done well, you will have performance metrics for every step of the customer journey through your marketing and sales process. Over time, you will know what works, and more importantly, what doesn’t. You will be able to hear and respond appropriately to juror #4 from Lead status to Closed Won.
In conclusion, beware of the marketing jury – there are many competing voices, but only one you must listen to!
-Onward