#Agile marketing tips to grow your startup even faster

#Agile marketing tips to grow your startup even faster

#Agile marketing tips to grow your startup even faster

Marketing is a volatile landscape in which the only certainty is change, especially when it comes to digital marketing. Every day, huge amounts of content are created, collected, consumed, and distributed across an increasing number of media channels.

Brands compete over increasingly short attention spans of potential and existing customers. Agile marketing helps startups create their own digital presence and reach prospective customers — so you better know how to make it work for you.

What is agile marketing?

Before diving into how to go about adopting it, let’s start by defining what agile marketing means.

Agile marketing is a strategy that you can use to find, test, and implement focused marketing projects. In general, agile strategies involve breaking projects down into component pieces and working on those pieces in sprints (set time periods).

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After each sprint, you evaluate your progress and the overall project to ensure it is moving in the right direction and to verify if any changes need to be made. 

When implementing for marketing projects, these strategies can be used to break down larger projects, including ad campaigns, website user testing, or rebranding. The benefits of implementing agile in marketing workflows include:

  • Clear focus — goals are clearly defined from the start and projects are crafted to fit those goals rather than vice versa. 
  • Nuanced campaigns — a focus on user experience enables teams to leverage customer behaviors and preferences. This enables businesses to create campaigns that are more cost effective and successful, even with smaller audiences. 
  • Consistent growth — feedback loops help teams identify effective strategies and eliminate ineffective ones. This promotes growth and predictable marketing results.

4 reasons your startup needs agile marketing

In my experience, overhauling your marketing strategy may seem like a task best to leave for later, but implementing agile early on is often easier in the long run. Agile workflows require a mindset and cooperation that can be difficult to create once teams have established workflows.

As a startup, you can optimize your marketing with this strategy more easily due to the following advantages — so use them to encourage early adoption.

1. Opportunities for consistent practices and processes

Startups tend to have fluid responsibilities and lots of cross-functionality in their team members which naturally encourages collaboration. Agile can operationalize this collaboration, enabling teams to develop structures for support and joint responsibility. 

Since teams were never siloed in the first place, agile supports staff in naturally sharing ideas and workflows. This structure can then help ensure that timelines are met and processes are refined without interrupting productivity as a startup grows. 

2. Faster knowledge sharing creates shared understanding

Due to the overlapping responsibility and collaboration that comes with agile teams, it is easier for team members to share knowledge and skills sets.

This can help reduce back and forth cycles of creation and approval and ensure that members better understand each other’s perspectives and capabilities. 

3. Incorporating agile marketing values in leadership early

Since startups do not come with an extensive history of “how things are done” leaders may be less likely to oppose agile strategies. Likewise, early startup hires who begin with agile workflows are more likely to carry that understanding and mindset into leadership roles in the future. 

This early indoctrination of agile enables startups to create a business culture that supports and promotes agile. When implemented well, this can grant teams greater flexibility to do what they know and can drive marketing innovation for the company. 

4. Agile project management tools from the start

Another way the freedom of startups feeds into agile benefits is in tooling. New companies do not have the technical debt or contract limitations that older companies do.

This means they can more easily adopt tooling that supports agile workflows. This reduces the overall IT burden since you can avoid costly integrations or retraining.