Modern-day marketers have more ways to report on marketing performance than ever before. Although there’s a time and place for them all, two types of MarTech stand above the rest: Marketing Dashboards and Unified Marketing Intelligence. Despite having many similarities, they have critical differences that will determine your company’s reasons for using them. Let’s learn how they compare
and which of them is better suited for your unique needs.
Examples of Marketing Dashboards include Supermetrics and Klipfolio.
Supermetrics: A custom report based on compiled digital ad spend data.
Marketing Dashboards can be distinguished into 2 types, based on their data flexibility: off-the-shelf dashboards and custom dashboards. Off-the-shelf dashboards come pre-integrated with the data provided by the dashboard vendor. They are most popular among startups and SMEs. Off-the-shelf dashboards require little maintenance and are easy to set up, but the pre-integrated data
won't be enough for every company's needs.
Organizations with more sophisticated marketing tend to opt for custom dashboards, as they are flexible and tailor-made to a company's unique needs. The downside of this flexibility is higher cost. Off-the-shelf dashboards can be implemented quickly while building and maintaining custom dashboards is a long and sustained process. Maintaining a custom dashboard requires developers with SQL knowledge or other forms of technical expertise to set up reporting, calculate metrics, and switch between data sources.
Unified Marketing Intelligence (UMI) brings marketing, competitor, and category data across all digital channels into a single platform.
When marketing intelligence is paired with brand health and automated data science, they form Unified Marketing Intelligence.
These insights are all correlated to business impact or any other KPI marketers choose. More than merely compiling the data, marketing teams use UMI as their very own growth roadmap.
UMI platforms are made to be used by everyone in the marketing department, although for a different reason compared to the data of Marketing Dashboards. In the world of UMI, each marketing team knows what the other teams are doing, which strategies are effective, and how much it all contributes to their situational goals, North Stars, and performance synergies between teams. Unified Marketing Intelligence places these insights in context with competitors and benchmarks performance against them to reveal what it takes
to grow faster than anyone, and ultimately win the category.
In summary, the optimal use cases of Unified Marketing Intelligence are:
Traditionally, there weren’t accurate cross-channel analyses because marketers only had siloed, single-channel insights. True cross-channel analysis requires marketers to measure channels relative to data from other channels, and relative to business outcomes.
Unified Marketing Intelligence (UMI) platforms solved this problem by unifying the 7 marketing data silos including Search Intelligence, Web Analytics, Reputation Monitoring, Ad Performance, Media Monitoring, Social Listening, and Email Campaigns.
Here at BrandOps, we’re pioneering the category of Unified Marketing Intelligence platforms.
The BrandOps Unified Marketing Intelligence platform.
FIXED USE CASES
1) Growing the First-Look Funnel
The First-Look Funnel represents the probability of a company being the first to be discovered by prospects in their purchase journey.
Growing the First-Look Funnel is predicated on growing digital presence. It comes with benefits such as:
2) Brand Health
UMI platforms connect brand health to hard numbers, allowing marketers to predictably improve it and pinpoint what affects it.
These brand health metrics are backed with qualitative insights, such as social sentiment, brand mentions, brand promoters, and more.
The key brand metrics (Brand Pillars) in Unified Marketing Intelligence platforms include:
3) Automated Data Science
Marketers don’t have to be data scientists (or rely on one) to understand what Unified Marketing Intelligence platforms are telling them. This is because the data in UMI platforms is supplemented with Automated Data Science. Marketers are more efficient because Automated Data Science helps them find the right marketing move sooner, and are more effective because the marketing moves
they make deliver higher returns. Automated Data Science offers capabilities including:
An example of automated metric correlation analysis in the BrandOps UMI platform.
2. Unified Marketing Intelligence emphasizes breadth of data.
UMI might not be the best fit for marketers whose jobs revolve around a single channel or a small set of channels. UMI platforms are optimized for helping marketers see the big picture of their brand, for collaborating across the marketing department without needing
to be the expert in metrics and nuances of every channel, and for improving the marketing machine from the leader’s POV.
3. Unified Marketing Intelligence platforms require a large volume of external data to provide the most impactful insights.
Although they offer more data than Marketing Dashboards, some of that data still needs to exist in the world for a UMI platform to
collect it. Small companies usually don't produce enough of those external signals: they rarely get press coverage, not many people mention them online, they are not active on many channels, they aren't well-known enough to get product reviews, and so forth.
The bigger a company is, the more external signals it warrants, and therefore more insights it can derive from UMI platforms.
This is why medium-sized and large companies get the most value out of UMI platforms, and why UMI isn't the best fit for smaller ones.
Marketing Dashboards make it easy to compile all the marketing data marketers already have by pulling the data from scattered systems into one screen. It makes data sharing less of a hassle and it makes marketers more efficient.
While it is a solid starting point to improving marketing, unlike UMI, it tells marketers little about:
The Conclusion
When it’s all said and done, there is no perfect answer for your needs. Although Unified Marketing Intelligence platforms are technically superior to Marketing Dashboards, they are beyond the needs and means of many marketing teams and companies.
It’s hard to improve what you don’t measure, but measuring the wrong things makes it just as hard. Wherever you belong in the spectrum between the two, we hope we helped you find confidence in your next MarTech buying decision.