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Adobe is the global leader in digital media and digital marketing solutions. Their creative, marketing, and document solutions are powerful tools used by everyone - from emerging artists to global brands.
In this week’s episode of Pepper Content’s Top of the Funnel series, Natasha Puri, Content Marketing Lead at Pepper, chats with Sunder Madakshira, Chief Marketing Officer at Adobe Systems, about how content has taken the central place in Adobe’s overall marketing strategy, the role of the content function in B2B and B2C services, and a lot more.
Sunder has 25 years of extensive experience in leadership roles in sales and marketing across B2C, B2B products and services. He has worked with SAP, Infosys, Wipro, and VISA before his current role at Adobe. He has been recognised among India’s best CMOs at various thought leadership forums. Shedding light on how he has seen content and digital marketing evolve over time, he says that in 2011, digital platforms became something more than engagement platforms, and now they have become the cornerstones of marketing.
Today, a marketer’s biggest value add to their consumers is:
When asked about the difference between B2B and B2C as far as content and digital marketing are concerned, Sunder explains that B2B is centred around a finite segment of customers while B2C typically uses mass media and is seamless. “The main difference is between call to actions (CTA), channels, and messaging.”
In B2B, the CTA has to be very pronounced, focused, and short. It has to be clear in what it wants to convey. Sales cycle steps can be dismally short, and thus the interventions are very calibrated, focused and a certain outcome can be expected at the end of every intervention. Thus, here, the focus is on marketing ROI since the investments can be high, and so the returns have to be proportionate. So, in B2B, a data analytics platform can be very helpful to track success.
However, in B2C, a lot more effort must be put into achieving the same things since it is an omnichannel situation. Mass media is the way to go here, and because of it, you have marketing information coming in from various sources. Thus, you need a very robust platform to integrate that info and plan the future strategy.
At Adobe, as Sunder informs, there is a lot of focus on data, analysis, and delivery of the right content to the right audience.
“Content has changed in texture like using more video, audio, and text content. But the main aim is also that the right audience sees the suitable content with the right message. For example, a new user will not want to see advanced content. So tailoring is important,” he says.
Thus, Adobe leverages something called as Data-Driven Operative Model (DDOM). They also indulge in account-based marketing for strategic and transformational accounts.
Sunder sees Adobe delivering explicitly curated content to specific audiences in the next four years.
Sunder explains that ROI mapping gets complex when it is not done the right way. No system or metric is perfect. Every measurement system has an option to better itself and to make it better, you need:
Sunder gives three tips on how small businesses can start content marketing:
Lastly, talking about if content creation depends on the channel or is it vice versa, Sunder concludes,
“It is always content for me. If you have great content, things will work out no matter what. In the B2B scene, content makes a lot of impact. If the content isn’t right, the channel can’t do anything to hide the mediocrity.”