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4 Non-Marketing Skills You Need to Become a Better Marketer

become a better marketer

By Kerry Gorgone, {grow} Contributing Columnist

Marketing isn’t a department. It needs to be a way of life throughout your organization.

To truly become a better marketer, you need to work with all of these departments and learn to speak the language of these disciplines.

Here are a few things to think about to be taken seriously and have an impact across your organization.

Human resources: promote the value—and values—of your company

Your company can’t be the best in your industry without the best team: attracting top talent is a key function of any organization.

By supporting HR this way, marketers help to attract talent, improve brand perception, and potentially even reduce the cost of recruitment by using content to expand the applicant pool. 

Legal: Respect others’ copyrights

I’ve written extensively on legal aspects of marketing on this site and on my blog, but there are a couple of basics that will make your relationship with legal more amicable.

Respect other people’s copyrights: don’t copy/paste other people’s content onto your company’s blog or use images you found on Google search to dress up the company website.

That’s a pretty good start, but you get bonus points if you work with the legal department to create a standard set of rules for giveaways and a template agreement for working with influencers.

Operations: Align marketing goals with financial/legal best practices

True confession time: finance was one of my worst subjects in business school. I’ve been known to say that my personal version of hell involves financial reports. But it really is necessary for marketers to understand some finance and refer to some of the same business metrics the finance team does.

For example, Ben Kaplan, director of mobile strategy and product at the American Cancer Society, championed the development of a new mobile app for the organization. The app streamlined the user experience, increased engagement, and brought the company plenty of social reach, but the key benefits were operational. The new mobile app increased revenue 80% over the previous year.

As if that wasn’t enough to cause a stir at the board meeting, the app also enabled users to scan checks, the most commonly used method of donation. By improving the app’s check scanning capability, American Red Cross saved money it would otherwise have spent on check scanning machines and personnel.

Customer service: Work to retain customers

One moment can make or break your relationship with a customer and create years of positive or negative buzz.

Great marketing isn’t just about copywriting and analytics—the best marketers take a more holistic view of their role in the business. So learn the lingo of your colleagues in other departments, focus on the way other teams impact marketing goals, and help them to help you achieve marketing success.

Kerry O’Shea Gorgone is a writer, lawyer, speaker and educator. She’s also Director of Product Strategy, Training, at MarketingProfs. Kerry hosts the weekly Marketing Smarts podcast. Find Kerry on Twitter.

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