outcomes. ‘Doing the
a process. ‘Doing the
623
Chapter 12 Digital business service implementation and optimisation
●
resourcing issues – lack of time (perhaps suggesting lack of staff motivation), the necessary
technology and integrated systems;
●
data problems – data overload or of poor- quality, limited data for benchmarking.
To avoid these pitfalls, a coordinated, structured measurement process such as that shown in
Figure 12.6 is required. Figure 12.6 indicates four key stages in a measurement process. These
were defined as key aspects of annual plan control by Kotler (1997). Stage 1 is a goal- setting
stage where the aims of the measurement system are defined – this will usually take the strategic
Internet marketing objectives as an input to the measurement system. The aim of the measure-
ment system will be to assess whether these goals are achieved and specify corrective market-
ing actions to reduce variance between target and actual key performance indicators. Stage 2,
performance measurement, involves collecting data to determine the different metrics that
are part of a measurement framework as discussed in the next section. Stage 3, performance
diagnosis, is the analysis of results to understand the reasons for variance from objectives (the
‘performance gap’ of Friedman and Furey, 1999) and selection of marketing solutions to reduce
variance. The purpose of Stage 4, corrective action, according to Wisner and Fawcett (1991), is:
to identify competitive position, locate problem areas, assist the firm in updating strategic
objectives and making tactical decisions to achieve these objectives and supply feedback
after the decisions are implemented.
In an Internet marketing context, corrective action is the implementation of these solutions
as updates to website content, design and associated marketing communications. At this
stage the continuous cycle repeats, possibly with modified goals. Bourne et al. (2000) and
Plant (2000) suggest that in addition to reviewing objectives, the suitability of the metrics
should also be reviewed and revised.
Measurement is not something that can occur on an ad hoc basis because if it is left to
the individual they may forget to collect the data needed. A ‘measurement culture’ is one in
which each employee is aware of the need to collect data on how well the company is per-
forming and on how well it is meeting its customers’ needs.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: