All things digital marketing, social media, chat online, SEO, SEM and mobile related experiences. I have been working in digital since 1997. Occasionally I'll write about girlie things - chocolate, cupcakes, fashion, travel and yoga. Passionate about animal welfare and trying to live an organic lifestyle.
The postings on this site are my own and do not represent Juniper Networks’ positions, strategies or opinions. Note that the views and opinions expressed are mine alone and do not represent the official views of Juniper Networks.
Copyright 2012 Zoe Sands
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Catching Elephant is a theme by Andy Taylor
Last night I attended an event organised and hosted by the Institute of Direct and Digital Marketing themed ”Engineering your Business for Digital” (I was live tweeting at the event, to check out the tweets from last night go to Twitter and search on #idmdigital). The event consisted of a presentation from Richard Hartigan of Google; where he outlined the changes in digital looking back at the past 10 years to now. None of which was new to me having been working in digital since 1997, I’ve seen and been party to a lot of the significant changes in online marketing over the past 15 years. But what stuck accord with me was the panel discussion, which one of my friends Tim Bush, Microsoft was on. The general consensus of the panel was that organisations shouldn’t rely on agencies to deliver digital marketing excellence and that organisations should invest in up skilling their marketing teams with knowledge on how to execute the digital toolbox efficiently and effectively in integrated marketing campaigns. All too often organisations are lead by agencies because marketing teams capabilities lie in project management and are inexperienced in leading and driving digital strategies and plans themselves.
In these austere times increasingly marketers and in particular digital marketers are under greater pressure to create and implement effective digital marketing campaigns on little or no budget and without the assistance and support of agencies. Without strong digital skills and a good knowledge base, these marketers will find themselves pigeon holed into project management roles and missing out on future strategic communication, digital and marketing roles.
Education is key for a successful digital marketing career
As a digital veteran I have always been keen to maintain both my digital and project management skills, as I feel it opens up many more career opportunities. Education doesn’t have to mean expensive intensive courses; you can support your learning by attending industry conferences, exhibitions, open courses, online courses, reading books and blogs all of which should help you keep up to speed on the ever changing world of digital marketing.
Often as a digital marketer your marketing team or other departments will be looking at you to be an educator on digital best practice and have the experience to implement that knowledge into actual digital campaigns, programmes, processes and procedures. So, I would urge all digital marketers to develop a lifelong learning approach to online marketing. If you’re unsure where or who to study with when it comes to digital education, then check out the following reputable organisations;
The Chartered Institute of Marketing
The Institute of Direct and Digital Marketing
Econsultancy
All of whom have accredited professional short and long digital marketing courses and qualifications.
After 15 years of working in digital, I’ve recently started my IDM Diploma in Digital Marketing, which I should finish in December 2012. I decided to undertake this qualification because I wanted my experience professionally validated; you may have other reasons why you want to start your digital education journey, whatever it is good luck with your studies.
Digital Sail 2009
This year’s Digital Sail hosted by Econsultancy started in Portsmouth then the 8 crewed boats sailed over to Cowes, the Isle of Wight and back in one day. I was placed on Storm, which was skippered by Jakko with his first mate Fiona; both were excellent sailors, which enabled “the Motley Crew” to win this year’s Digital Sail. The victorious team is pictured with their gongs courtesy of ecblogger for more photos of the event go to Flickr. By the way, I’m pictured in the middle of the group! :-)
The event was attended by a mixture of agency, client-side and consultancy folks and was an excellent way to mix and network with other digital professionals. I would definitely recommend attending the next Econsultancy Digital Sail in 2010.
Reference sites:
Econsultancy - Digital Marketers United
Econsultancy Blog
Econsultancy Flickr