In the Spring ’23 release Account Engagement Users were able to opt-in to the beta version of the Account Optimizer. This tool surfaces factors that could be affecting the performance of your account and provides you with a recommended action and the priority for this. Continue reading “Account Optimizer for Account Engagement”
Category: Pardot
How to improve User Experience on Forms
When it comes to forms, a high submission rate is every marketer’s dream. However, quite often we face bad user experience on forms, which can even prevent the submission itself. Lucky for us, there are plenty of ways to make Account Engagement forms more user-friendly – read on for my top 3 picks.
Data Backups for Account Engagement
Any Administrator or Super User has experienced the painful realisation that something has gone wrong. It may have been an automation rule, an import, or a discrepancy between Salesforce and Account Engagement. Unfortunately, there isn’t a magical undo button for these things. However, if you follow good practices, you can protect your account against issues caused by mistakes. Continue reading “Data Backups for Account Engagement”
Retain Your Customers With Account Engagement (Pardot)
Looking to retain your customers with Account Engagement (Pardot)?
Often, organisations use Account Engagement to focus on new leads. It can be easy to forget to nurture and connect with existing customers. We can help you develop your customer strategy, and give you best practice advice around executing it.
Continue reading “Retain Your Customers With Account Engagement (Pardot)”
Validate your Email Sending Domain in Account Engagement (Pardot)
One of the changes for Account Engagement in the Spring 23 Release is a new way to validate your email sending domain. If you’ve been using Account Engagement for a while, chances are you set up your domain during implementation and haven’t thought much about it since. So, what does this change mean and what do you need to do?
Continue reading “Validate your Email Sending Domain in Account Engagement (Pardot)”
Power Up Your Events with Account Engagement
Events are a huge part of many organisations’ marketing strategies, including handling registrations and communications. Combining multiple platforms and lots of data can be a big challenge. But we can help you to level up your events with Account Engagement in no time.
Continue reading “Power Up Your Events with Account Engagement”
How to Run a Successful Global Account Engagement (Pardot) Account
Running any Account Engagement (Pardot) account can be a challenge, but even more so when your teams are based around the world. We helped many businesses with the implementation, day-to-day operations, and building strategy for global teams. From organisation and access to brand consistency and training, we’ve seen it all.
Continue reading “How to Run a Successful Global Account Engagement (Pardot) Account”
Files in Account Engagement (Pardot)
As with all digital platforms, it is impossible to work in Account Engagement (Pardot) without relying on files. The company logo, your latest whitepaper, or a Javascript file doing all the magic on your forms, all of these exist on the platform as files. However, we often take them for granted without thinking about how they should be used. Now, that’s all about to change!
Spring ‘23 Release for Marketing Cloud Account Engagement
The Spring ‘23 release seems to have a bit of a running theme around maintenance and technical setup, with no updates for the marketer’s experience on the platform. One of the core values of Salesforce is trust, and this release seems to be ensuring their platform can remain a trusted tool to use. We may see more updates to features and tools in later releases this year instead. Let’s dive into the updates and what you need to know. Continue reading “Spring ‘23 Release for Marketing Cloud Account Engagement”
Manage your Webinar Campaigns with Account Engagement
Integrating your webinar platform with Account Engagement allows webinars to become part of your marketing automation strategy. Lucky for us offers an out-of-the-box connection to the GoToWebinar platform that can work seamlessly with your campaigns.
Continue reading “Manage your Webinar Campaigns with Account Engagement”
May 2023 Update: Opt Out Sync Behaviour
Based on valued feedback, you can now use the most recently updated field value as a source of truth for the prospect Opted Out field.
In the Spring’23 release, you would need to set either Account Engagement (Pardot) or Salesforce to win if there is a discrepancy between the two systems. But in the recent Summer’23 release, the third sync option is back after community users raised the idea to reinstate the field sync behaviour of “If values differ when data is synced: Use the most recently updated record value” on the IdeasExchange. The value will be available again on 13 June 2023.
If you needed more time to prepare for the update, good news!
The date of this update has now been postponed to 18 October 2023 as detailed here – so make sure to mark the new date in your calendar. You can read our blog post about what this change means for you in greater detail and what steps you can take to prepare. Salesforce has also released their recommended workaround if you need to be able to sync the Opt Out from Salesforce to Account Engagement here.
Looking for help with Account Engagement?
Note that if you do choose to have neither Salesforce nor Account Engagement as the source of truth for the opt out field, you will need to collaborate with your Salesforce Administrator to enable Field History Tracking on the opt out field.
Find out more information about opt out field sync options here.
Define Your Global Marketing Strategy with Account Engagement
In the last few releases, the Account Engagement product team has given us some amazing enterprise-level features for global marketing automation. We’ve seen the introduction of Einstein, External Actions and a more powerful infrastructure to back up larger datasets and complex operations. Global enterprise businesses are now choosing Account Engagement more and more. But how does a famously simple tool fit the bill for these multinational organisations?
As with most strategies, success with global marketing automation is born out of planning. The two key parts of this recipe are People and Structure. In this blog, I’ll be focusing on how the structure of your organisation can drive excellence in Marketing Automation.
The key to structuring a successful global implementation of Account Engagement is defining ownership of the platform. The first step is to think about your overall approach to different areas of the platform. Will you opt for a collaborative, global approach or a decentralised, regional approach?
Collaboration AND decentralisation
First up, what does “collaboration and decentralisation” mean? These terms represent the two ends of the spectrum of ownership. In other words, the model for who owns what in your marketing strategy and the balance you strike between top-down central governance and regional independence.
Defining ownership is critical ensuring all the moving parts of your marketing automation platform work together. Poorly defined responsibility leads to duplication of effort, important details being missed, frustration amongst users, demotivation and ultimately, non-adoption.
Collaboration
The spectrum of ownership can be applied to any area of a business. The collaboration end focuses on areas of your strategy which must be globally consistent. This might look like:
- Central governance
- Top-down distribution of process, content or resources
- Consistent implementation across all global teams
- All users working together to adopt a common approach
In the marketing automation context, this might be your data handling policies or your core platform integrations.
Decentralisation
At the other end of the spectrum, you might implement a decentralised approach to strategy. This looks like:
- More flexibility for users in execution
- Regional or cultural differences
- Central guidance and support .
Newsletters or holiday campaigns are a common example of decentralised marketing automation.
Looking for help with Account Engagement?
Applying ownership to Marketing Automation
We’ve seen each end of the ownership spectrum, but it’s not quite as simple as picking a side. You can’t just say “We’re going to be decentralised” or “Let’s opt for collaborative strategies”. There’s a huge grey area, as what works for one element of your marketing automation strategy won’t work for another. So, you may need to be flexible. Ownership of each area is a spectrum and each organisation will fall on different parts of this scale. This position may even shift as time goes on and the market changes. Typically, as organisations grow there is tendency towards the decentralised end, but this is by no means a rule.
Spectrum of ownership
In the diagram below, you can see examples of what each end of the spectrum looks like when applied to different areas of Account Engagement. Try plotting where your organisation sits on the scale for each area. You will probably find you land somewhere more in the middle than right at either end.
Let’s look at an example to illustrate why that is. When it comes to data, you can have an entirely open sharing model. All users can access, segment and market to all records. This is a simple structure but can raise governance concerns, particularly around regional privacy laws and capacity for human error.
On the other end, you could have a totally segregated model, with multiple distinct partitions of data. This means each team “owns” their own portion of the data and users can only access and market to data which “belongs” to their team. This creates more confidence from a governance and security perspective, but can introduce challenges with architecture, permissions and duplicates, potentially creating unnecessary technical debt.
So perhaps you land somewhere more in the middle. This might mean having some way of controlling which regions have access to which data but with some degree of flex where it makes logical sense for a record to be shared. For example, a Prospect lives and works in the US but attends an event in Germany. Both the Americas and EMEA teams are likely to need to communicate with that record without creating duplicates.
How to define your ownership strategy
If you haven’t yet mapped out your ownership strategy, use these points and the questions in the table below to help you understand where your company falls on the scale for each area of Marketing Automation.
-
Related processes
Parallel or downstream processes could have a big impact on how you are able to structure your marketing automation strategy. For example, if your sales data is heavily locked down, an open marketing data model may not be appropriate or even possible.
-
Team structure
You may want to have centrally created email templates, but if there is only one central marketing manager with limited capacity, this creates a bottleneck and decentralising template creation may be a better option.
-
Named owners
You may already have Product Owners or BPOs in your organisation but if not, it’s important that the buck eventually stops with someone. Then, once you’ve decided on an approach, it’s also critical that everyone knows who those owners are. You must not get into a situation of users being passed from pillar to post because everyone thinks someone else is responsible for this field on the preference centre or that newsletter list. Take ownership, write it down and share it. With everyone.
-
Technical feasibility
It’s important to understand what the tools you have will do out of the box vs. what you’ll need to create custom. Although every Business Analyst will tell you not to solutionize when defining your objectives, you do need to keep a foot on the ground and make sure where you land is technically possible. If you’re ready to undertake a significant project to heavily customise Salesforce and Account Engagement to achieve exactly what you need then great. But if you don’t have the budget, resource or timeline to do that, you’ll have to colour within the lines a little more carefully and take that into account when defining your strategy.
Once you have defined ownership, it’s much easier to implement a platform that will deliver the results you want. And this applies right from the big structural decisions – whether to use Business Units – all the way through to the detail of execution – who creates the Dynamic Content for your email campaigns.
Summary
Trying to implement Account Engagement (or any Salesforce product) without a clear understanding of how you want it to work from a business perspective or what success looks like is a recipe for disaster. Understanding how you want to approach key areas of Marketing Automation will help ensure you get the platform delivering on that strategy more quickly and more effectively.
If you take nothing else away from this blog post, please remember this: Strategy comes FIRST. The technology is there to support and deliver on that strategy. Define who owns what in your marketing strategy BEFORE you try to design your architecture.
And if you’ve enjoyed this post, you can watch my full presentation of this topic at MarDreamin’ and here are some other resources you might find useful: