By Chantel Hall, Marketing Content Specialist
Agile software development is a popular methodology that prioritizes high-value features, frequent releases, and continual improvement over long development periods and full-scale releases. This methodology allows developers to quickly push their product to market, get feedback, and make adjustments based on data collected about each release.
Other industries have caught on to the benefits of agile development and implemented their own version of it, including marketers. Businesses find that it makes their teams more productive and better aligns their marketing with their organization’s overall goals. Agile marketing helps companies move quickly and focus on projects with the highest returns.
Learn how agile marketing can help you recession-proof your lead generation strategy.
Traditional and agile marketing have foundational differences in how teams plan, execute, and evaluate work.
Agile marketing moves quickly and makes intelligent, incremental changes based on past successes and failures. Where traditional marketing plans require months of work up-front, agile marketers deliver early and often. Agile teams prioritize high-value projects they can complete in one- or two-week sprints, using their time more effectively and generating a higher ROI.
Agile marketing is also data-driven. Every piece of content, paid ad, and social media post does double duty as market research, and data collected about them is used to plan the next sprint. Traditional teams don’t see the results of their work on a campaign until after they launch it.
Finally, agile marketing teams break down the siloes and hierarchies of a traditional team and use collaboration to their advantage. Agile teams have regular meetings, and every member contributes to each project using their unique skillset. This level of collaboration goes hand-in-hand with agility; instead of focusing on individual long-term projects, team members are all working together to achieve the goals they set together at the beginning of each sprint.
A few examples of agile marketing in practice are:
Marketing teams that believe their traditional marketing process is successful might not see an agile approach as necessary or beneficial. However, agile marketing has clear benefits for marketing teams and businesses.
If your team is struggling to get the results you’re looking for with your marketing activities, an agile marketing strategy can empower you to take control of your process and results. When market forces or customer needs change, agile marketing allows you to change direction and focus on content that converts. Surveys have shown that agile marketing makes your marketing efforts and your team members more efficient and effective:
The benefits of transitioning to an agile marketing strategy outweigh the challenges of adopting a new methodology. Marketers should always strive to be customer-focused, evaluate their campaigns’ success, and fine-tune their approach. Agile marketing empowers teams to accomplish these goals in a structured, measurable way that creates more successful and efficient marketing campaigns.
McKinsey, Agile marketing: A step-by-step guide November 2016
B2B Marketing Alliance, Agile marketing: what is it and how can it benefit your B2B brand? July 2021
Agile Sherpas, Agile Ascending: 3rd Annual State of Agile Marketing Report 2020
Agile Sherpas, Agile Acceleration: 4th Annual State of Agile Marketing Report 2021
Atlassian, How to create an agile marketing team 2021
Atlassian, What is Agile Marketing: From Buzzword to Best-in-Class Way of Working 2021
Agile Marketing, What Is Agile Marketing? 2014