Some 54% of companies intend to increase their overall marketing budgets in 2013, up from only 45% in 2012, according to the Marketing Budgets 2013 report by Econsultancy and Responsys, which also noted planned increases in both digital and traditional marketing spending.
Perhaps surprisingly the report paints a picture of very buoyant conditions for marketing investments for the rest of this year, both for overall and digital marketing budgets. Apart from the finding that more companies are planning to increase their marketing budgets, today's more stable economic environment was reflected in the specific findings that 71% reported increases in their digital marketing budgets, while 20% are increasing their traditional (offline) marketing budgets.
The annual research surveyed more than 800 marketers (mainly in the UK) and examined the relative levels of planned spending for 2013 across a range of marketing channels, comparing online and offline budgets while also looking at planned investment in different types of marketing technology. Among the other key findings from the report:
"Investments in digital marketing and associated technologies during 2013 will be buoyant as companies seek to meet financial objectives for customer acquisition and retention," said Econsultancy's research director, Linus Gregoriadis. "Companies will be looking to adopt a more joined-up approach to marketing, so that different channels are working in harmony rather than in silos."
"The 'mass marketing era' is gone, and we've entered the 'relationship era'. To succeed, companies will need to flip their approach to marketing on its head and design cross-channel strategies to deliver long-term relationships, not short-term transactions," concluded Simon Robinson, senior marketing and alliances director (EMEA) for Responsys. "The good news is that marketing budgets are shifting accordingly. Successful marketers in the relationship era will be those who dedicate more resources toward forging real, individual relationships with their prospects and customers."
The report is available for purchase from the Econsultancy web site - click here.
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