What are the job responsibilities of marketing technology management? - Chief Marketing... - 0 views
chiefmartec.com/...echnology-job-responsibilities
MarTech marketing technologies marketing automation marketing technology
shared by Carri Bugbee on 13 Mar 19
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One of the first things that jumps out from the year-over-year data is the consistency of the top five responsibilities. From martech staff and managers up to more senior directors and VPs, these are the core functions that these roles deliver to the organization: Research and recommend new marketing technology products. Operate marketing technology products as an administrator. Train and support marketing staff on using marketing technology products. Integrate marketing technology products with each other. Monitor data quality within marketing technology products.
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It is disappointing that, for the second year in a row, performing data privacy and compliance reviews and performing security reviews both remained at the bottom of the list of martech responsibilities — and even dropped a few percentage points.
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enior roles are much more likely — 37% to 42% more likely — to: Pay for marketing technology products from a budget, partially or fully (71%) Negotiate business terms for purchasing marketing technology products (68%) Approve or veto purchase of marketing technology products (68%)
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The majority of senior martech leaders also own these responsibilities: Architect the overall marketing stack of all marketing technology products (69%) Monitor the performance and other SLAs of marketing technology products (56%) Integrate marketing technology products with non-marketing systems (58%) Perform technical reviews of marketing technology products (56%) Identify and sundown outdated or unused marketing technology products (59%) Identify and consolidate multiple instances of same or similar marketing technology products (56%)
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Now every marketer is an app developer — even if they don’t know it. Marketers are tailoring marketing technology for their specific workflows and customer experiences, but they’re not explicitly doing “software development” with programming languages like Python or Javascript.