
B2B marketing sector worth £10 billion yet still undervalued, says Cicero report.
Cicero has conducted and released a significant new study into the world of B2B marketing.
The major piece of market research, carried out in conjunction with industry publication B2B Marketing and research company Ci Research, gathered detailed data directly from senior practitioners in the field of B2B during 2006.
Cicero managing director Danny Turnbull says, “This is almost certainly the first, and definitely the most in-depth study of its kind ever to probe into the UK B2B landscape, which our data shows is an industry turning over just under £10 billion a year.
“It is long overdue, as B2B marketers have been keen for many years to demonstrate that we are a viable and distinct audience, and cannot simply be dismissed as an adjunct to the higher-profile consumer marketing sector.”
The report, which is now on sale, will prove invaluable to B2B marketers themselves as they seek to make sense of the various challenges confronting them in their daily roles, and to the service sector of agencies and suppliers, seeking to meet the needs and objectives of this audience.
Turnbull continues, “The report in places makes for disquieting reading, as it shows marketing to be undervalued in British businesses, with 37% of respondents even stating that marketing was seen as a cost rather than a value contributor within their business. This is very much at odds with the often-espoused view that marketing should be at the heart of every organization.
“But armed with the new knowledge gleaned from this research, I hope that as an industry we can meet the challenge to balance the need for short term, easy to measure response with a more holistic approach to building business brands and to put marketing where it belongs at the heart of organisation strategy.”
Summary and highlights of the research
It was agreed that one of the main problems the sector had was the low level of understanding and visibility in the wider marketing world. This was hindered by a lack of meaningful, thorough and reliable insight. Therefore the research set out to address this by producing the first comprehensive analysis of the UK B2B marketing industry, the practitioners within it and how it is evolving.
The objective was to help raise the profile of the industry by facilitating greater understanding of its size, scope and the issues that are shaping it, and to further shape and define the B2B community. It was aimed to provide a reliable document that practitioners from all areas of the B2B sector could use as a touchstone to help contextualise their activities, learn from trends in the wider community, and ultimately drive more success in their marketing.
What did we want to know?
There were a number of questions that we wanted to answer through this research.
Target audience
In order to get an accurate picture of the B2B marketing space, we felt it was important that we only spoke to marketing decision makers; in other words marketing managers or above, but marketing directors wherever possible.
Methodology
Participants were recruited during September 2006 via a telemarketing campaign to a database of B2B marketers, and promised their choice of voucher (from a limited selection) in return for completing an online questionnaire. In all 147 people completed the questionnaire, from a wide range of different companies, in different industry sectors.
Size and scope of the market
The research produced a number of key insights into the B2B marketing sector. The first amongst these was the most accurate indication yet for its size and scale, both in terms of amount of annual spend and number of practitioners.
(For more information on how these figures were attained, see the main report.)
These figures confirm that the B2B sector is a significant audience within its own right, and that it should not be seen as simply a subdivision of the overall marketing community. The ‘poor relation’ tag must finally be recognised as unwarranted, and should be discarded.
Key findings
The research also identified some important trends, issues and concerns underlying the B2B marketing sector, which will all have considerable impact on its future development.
Conclusion
For the first time, we can see that B2B marketing is a distinct, sizeable and identifiable community, and one that it is both vibrant and buoyant. However, it faces its own set of challenges for the future, many of which relate to education and ensuring its practitioners are equipped for all possible eventualities.