By Bill McCloskey on Thursday, 07 November 2013
Category: The Email Profession

The Evolution of a Global Demand Center

"When we started this team almost 8 years ago, we were just trying to easily automate our email conversations and scale globally. Looking back on it now, I can see the phases of development to our current model. And, I can see where we are headed."

When we started this team almost 8 years ago, we were just trying to easily automate our email conversations and scale globally. Looking back on it now, I can see the phases of development to our current model. And, I can see where we are headed.

Phase 1: Punt it over the wall and pass it out: Distributed Model

Back then Corporate and US/Canada were one entity. All content was created with the corporate lens, but for the US/Canada market. At the time, they literally passed the information to us and we’d package the emails and automated programs and send it to the regions for pick-up. We explained the value and why regional teams should leverage this instead of re-creating local content, but all pick-up was optional. If the content was adopted, it was usually highly localized and was changed in many ways.

What worked:

What didn’t work:

Phase 2: Start taking some ‘orders’ and help out when needed

As our trust developed in the regions, the requests for help increased. We built highly modified automated programs to support their needs and specific requests. For a smaller high-growth region we agreed to send their monthly newsletter - this was a localized version of our global newsletter which they sent to 7 countries in the local language. For regions planning for employee’s maternity leave, we offered to send for them during that time. We developed standardized practices and SLAs to help streamline these processes and requests.

What worked:

What didn’t work:

Phase 3: Begin to build a regional account team

As our global trust grew and the requests became larger, we grew our team and developed regional account owners. These experienced employees worked directly with Europe or Asia and eventually LATAM/Americas. They became the regional experts, knew the local strategy and knew what was adopted, what worked and where the pain points were. They also helped bridge the corporate strategy and became more strategic instead of reactionary.

What worked:

What didn’t work:

Phase 4: Transition to a demand center model with specialization: Centralized Model (mostly)

As the organization grew the team grew and changed. We moved beyond regional support and developed three global areas of specialization: Strategy, Automation/Technical, and Analytics. We developed frameworks for global scalability and efficiency. This is when we started seeing the true makings of a demand center. The regions adopted more programs - without changing them - and information became clearer as everyone started using the same language, frameworks and strategies. We planned for maintenance phases of our information, not just for launches. We started tracking business metrics and not just open/clicks. We moved beyond reaction into strategy.

What worked:

What didn’t work:

Now, as we move forward, the Global Demand Center is expanding. The value of this model has been proven and we’ll expand our global marketing automation strategy beyond email automation. This will take integration of our broader business units, which will mean more change for the organization. However, with the models and structure we have in place, I’m confident we’ll be able to make it happen.

For those that have been through this type of change I’d love to hear your stories and experiences. Please share your comments below.

Leave Comments