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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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Marketing 101 for techies By Suzanne Ross, TechRepublic March 07, 2003 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/business/soa/Marketing-101-for-techies/0,139023166,120272692,00.htm
IT has been embroiled in many interdepartmental battles over the years, with finance and HR once considered mortal enemies, but no single group has the capacity to send shivers through an IT department quite as fast as marketing.
Like most IT managers, I've been peripherally involved in many marketing initiatives over the years. Usually, though, my encounters have not been much more than a last-minute request for someone in marketing to take a look at something before I sent it on. In other less-frequent encounters, I've often discovered that marketing proposals are completely impractical in the IT world, or the costs haven't been thoroughly considered. For example, I've run up against rebranding issues, where stylish but unworkable fonts are chosen for "market differentiation." Sure, the glossy promos look terrific, but the text can't be read on-screen in its natural size, and hundreds of boilerplate documents will have to be reformatted. It seems, though, that things are changing, and particularly as businesses move toward e-commerce, the demarcation line between the two groups is becoming somewhat blurred. And, in all fairness, marketing folks are natural communicators, something their counterparts in IT have never been renowned for. This convergence of skills can be seen in the increasing number of ads appearing for technical staff to work in marketing or business development groups, particularly those responsible for online services. This new shift has made me wonder whether it's time for technically qualified marketing and communications professionals to have a role in IT departments.
The marketing/IT niche
And it's not just in major projects that this person could make a valuable contribution. Acting as a liaison with users, marketing the group's services, educating line managers and users about the capabilities (and limitations) of IT, and bridging the gap between IT and marketing in the content and direction of online services would all form part of this niche role. Pieces of the role already exist now, with various aspects spread across a range of job functions including IT management, project management, change management, online services, and training.
Reality bites
In this same vein, e-commerce has brought with it an explosion of courses structured around IT and marketingââ,¬"a combination of skills that now seem essential in an online world. Andrew Caro, who lectures on "Managing Client Relations" at the University of Technology in Sydney, Australia, has no doubt that there is now more convergence between the theory and practice of IT and marketing than there was five or six years ago. Caro suggested that this trend would continue in the current climate, where more IT people are looking for fewer jobs, and that with some of the shine gone from the IT world following the tech wreck, the smart IT operators would realize that the success or failure of their jobs depended on those old-fashioned skills like good management and marketing. In fact, "Managing Client Relations" is basically Marketing 101 for techs. When quizzed by one of his students as to the slightly disingenuous title, Caro responded tongue-in-cheek, "Well, if we said it was marketing, none of you would come, would you?"
Leave it to the experts
While such a -cross-pollination" role is not the answer for every organisation, and it's obviously a role more likely to appear in a larger IT department with the budget to support it, smaller IT shops should still look out for people in support roles who could prove to be naturals in this area and would benefit from a little diversity. And there are actually quite a lot of good communicators in IT; they're just hiding out in project management and training. With aspects of IT and marketing on a convergent path, due largely to e-commerce, perhaps it's time to consider how marketing and communications skills could be put to good use in an IT department.
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