How to set up a strong marketing automation foundation—and why your data and tech dictate your strategy

Profile photo of author Jax Connelly
Jax Connelly
17 min read
Marketing automation
October 31, 2023
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In marketing, a minimum viable product has its time and place—or, let’s be honest, lots of times and places.

Marketing automation isn’t one of them.

Marketing automation looks different for every business, but one thing is true across the board: It’s not something you can do by the seat of your pants.

In order to reap the benefits of marketing automation, “you definitely have to be thoughtful,” advises Sean Donahue, director of email marketing at nationally recognized digital marketing agency Power Digital.

Before you start digging in and setting up your automations, here’s what to keep in mind about selecting marketing automation technology and determining your marketing automation strategy.

Why experts say you need a single source of data truth, ASAP

When evaluating your marketing automation technology options, experts agree one consideration should be paramount above all others: data integration.

“That’s definitely the biggie,” says Heather Browne, director of performance marketing at leading digital customer experience company Blue Acorn iCi. “If you don’t have the data, it’s all worthless.”

If you don’t have the data, it’s all worthless.
Heather Browne
Director of performance marketing, Blue Acorn iCi

“Most marketing platforms provide great single-click integrations for ecommerce platforms, but it’s critical to understand what vendors and partners a brand works with and how much lift it’s going to take to get that data into the platform,” Donahue agrees. “The biggest challenge is getting your data in place and making sure you have what you need set up ahead of time.”

That’s because quality SMS and email marketing automation depends, largely, on quality data, and the sophistication of the technology that gives you access to it. It’s not just about understanding your audience as a whole—it’s also about understanding various groups, or segments, of customers and potential customers, based on:

  • Demographics like where they’re located and how old they are
  • What they’ve bought, or almost bought
  • How they’re engaging with your emails, texts, and website
  • The shopping and personal preferences they’ve shared with you
  • …and more

Donahue calls it “smart data”: largely behavioral data that’s clean, stored in a consistent format, and as up to date as possible.

“With marketing automation, the event triggering and the message launching is all happening in near real time,” he explains. “You need to make sure that data is there to back that up.”

Whether it’s your shipping platform, your order management system, your customer relationship management tool (CRM software), your project management system, your helpdesk provider, or all of the above plus more, it’s absolutely critical to make sure your marketing automation platform integrates seamlessly with the rest of your tech stack.

The data drives everything.
Sean Donahue
Director of email marketing, Power Digital

“The data drives everything,” Donahue emphasizes. “Your personalization, your recommendations, I mean, you name it for content within a message, it’s all being delivered based on the data being sent to the platform.”

How smart data drives sophisticated segmentation in Klaviyo

Klaviyo’s 300+ pre-built integrations work seamlessly with the tools you use to run your business every day. And Chris Gordon, head of client success at leading ecommerce and marketing agency Noticed, calls them “rock-solid”—they’re what enables the marketing automation solution’s “really, really strong segmentation capabilities,” he says.

“They allow you to segment off of all the data points you’d want—any sort of data that comes directly from engagement with your marketing, but also any of the platforms you’re using,” Gordon explains. “We can get super granular with it.”

Image shows an example of data integrations that can trigger flows in Klaviyo, including Recharge, Stamped, Octane AI, Loop, and ShipStation.

Gordon cites a client that sells sports hats in explaining the importance of smart data when it comes to not alienating customers. “Let’s say you’ve bought or viewed Yankees products in the past and the Yankees just won the World Series—we’ll send you this celebratory email,” he explains. “If you bought or viewed Red Sox stuff in the past, we will not send you that email.”

Browne and her Blue Acorn iCi colleague Lindsey Murray, VP of performance marketing, recall one project involving customers in 13 different locales, where “every flow we created had 13 variations of language and currency,” Murray says (“flow” is Klaviyo’s word for “automation”). “It was a lot of conditional splits, with a lot of show- and hide-type blocks based on profile variables.”

In Klaviyo, you can split based on just about anything you can think of. The sky is really the limit.
Chris Gordon
Head of client success, Noticed

Those variables included everything from the basics, like whether or not someone was subscribed to email and SMS, to populating specific content based on a customer’s zip code or past purchase behavior, to delivering different welcome emails based on whether a customer signed up in store or online.

Image shows an example of a segment you can create in the back end of Klaviyo called “Active female users,” based on the properties that someone’s gender is female and they were last active in the last 14 days. Next to the segment dashboard is an example of a text message that might go out to this segment, with a product photo and a message that reads, “Enjoy early access to our best-selling women’s sunglasses collection.”

In Klaviyo, “you can split based on just about anything you can think of,” Gordon says. “The sky is really the limit. You can just keep getting more and more granular as long as it makes sense, and as long as there are enough customers in that segment of people to make the juice worth the squeeze.”

Image shows an example of a segment you can create in the back end of Klaviyo called “Unengaged VIPs,” based on a predicted customer lifetime value (CLTV) of at least $500 and the conditions that the person has placed an order zero times in the last 120 days. Next to the segment dashboard is an example of an email that might go out to this segment, with a product photo and a message that reads, “This Labor Day weekend, enjoy 10% off all shoes with code LD10.”

Can’t you just mix and match different point solutions?

Not really. A good marketing automation tool not only collects all this data, but also stores it in one place for easy access—allowing you to develop a complex, 360-degree view of each customer that evolves over time alongside their wants, needs, and behaviors.

Image shows an example of a customer profile in the back end of Klaviyo. It features the customer’s name, recent purchase and browsing activity, metrics like placed order and total revenue, and channel consent for email and SMS.

If your marketing automation software’s data integrations aren’t up to that kind of task, Murray cautions, “make sure you have a development team or a tech team that’s going to be able to support you in that role.”

Without a platform like Klaviyo, which houses all your customer data in the same place where your email and SMS automations live, “it would be really difficult to personalize and automate messaging specific to each customer,” Murray explains. “Otherwise you’re dealing with all this disparate data and trying to export different lists of people who meet certain criteria, and it’s just a nightmare.”

The whole point of marketing automation is you don’t have to focus on those repetitive tasks. You get to focus on what actually moves the needle.
Lindsey Murray
VP of performance marketing, Blue Acorn iCi

“You accomplish so little just to keep the lights on,” Murray adds. “And then you spend all your time doing things that are mindless. The whole point of marketing automation is you don’t have to focus on those repetitive tasks. You get to focus on what actually moves the needle.”

9 questions for evaluating marketing automation technology

Beyond data integrations, Donahue encourages marketers to ask themselves a few other questions when selecting the right marketing automation technology for their business:

How complex is our marketing program?

“It’s important to understand the status of your lifecycle marketing program,” Donahue advises. “What level of personalization are you hoping to achieve? Will you utilize the platform to its full extent? Do you have the data available to leverage every area of the platform effectively?”

Do you have the data available to leverage every area of the platform effectively?
Sean Donahue
Director of email marketing, Power Digital

If you’re looking to greatly expand your reach in the next 12 months and therefore investing heavily in lifecycle marketing, for example, you’ll need to “ensure that there’s enough functionality and accommodation for greater complexity of automation, alongside data mapping that matches your customer data platform (CDP) or back-end schema,” Donahue suggests.

Think hard, too, about which marketing automation features you can’t live without. That might include:

The key, Donahue says, is to “find a platform that meets you where you are, with some headroom to grow.” In other words: “Don’t buy a Ferrari if you’re only planning on doing laps around the parking lot.”

Don’t buy a Ferrari if you’re only planning on doing laps around the parking lot.
Sean Donahue
Director of email marketing, Power Digital

What kind of reporting capabilities do we need?

“Finding a platform that has great out-of-the-box reporting metrics and charts is key for most brands,” Donahue points out. But beyond that, reporting needs can vary drastically business to business.

Think about what, specifically, you’re trying to accomplish, Donahue advises. Do you just need to pull metrics for a marketing manager to make quick business decisions? Or are you introducing a data intelligence team that needs to drill down into each KPI?

Image shows the user-friendly reporting dashboard in the back end of Klaviyo, featuring stats like total placed order value, site visits by initial source, and revenue by attributed channel.

Whatever your reporting goals, your marketing automation platform should be able to help you meet them.

What’s our budget?

This one’s “probably the simplest to measure a match,” Donahue says, but that doesn’t make it any less important.

Does your budget align with the platform? What’s the fee structure like? Is flexible pricing important to you? What commitment windows do you need to be aware of?

+ a few other questions worth asking yourself

  • What vertical are we in?
  • What does our product look like?
  • Am I looking to integrate SMS, a CDP, and/or customer reviews?
  • How big are my lists?
  • What’s most important to us? This might include:
    • Ease of implementation
    • Customizability
    • Low learning curve
    • Ability to scale as your business scales
    • All of the above
  • How’s the customer support?

The 3 components of an effective marketing automation strategy

Of course, technology is only half of the marketing automation equation. Ideally, the data is what gives you insights about your customers, and the technology is what helps it all make sense.

Once you have a solid understanding of your various target audience segments, though, you also need to ask:

  • What messages should I send?
  • Which customers should receive those messages?
  • Under which circumstances, and when?

With that in mind, here are 3 crucial steps to take when determining your marketing automation strategy:

1. Define your marketing automation goals

The biggest challenge in marketing automation, Gordon says, “is trying to prioritize your goals and figure out what’s most important for you as a company.”

Are you trying to boost customer lifetime value (CLTV)? Acquire new customers via inbound marketing? Improve lead generation, lead nurturing, and lead management in general? Increase up- and cross-sells? Enhance customer satisfaction?

You need to set a target somewhere and determine how to get there.
Sean Donahue
Director of email marketing, Power Digital

Donahue emphasizes the importance of building a “goal-aligned plan” so that you understand everything you need to implement in order to reach your business objectives.

If your goal is to simply increase revenue, for example, you might start with automations that target big spenders, or basic automations, like abandoned cart, that are proven to drive big-time conversion rates.

Image shows an example of a segment in the back end of Klaviyo that targets a hyper-specific group of customers—those who viewed more than 3 sunglass collections—with an abandonment email offering a free gift with purchase.

If your goal is to nurture and strengthen your relationships with your most loyal customers, on the other hand, you might look into SMS automations that make subscribers feel like VIPs.

Image shows an example of a VIP text message offering early access to a new product collection.

“Consideration No. 1 is just, ‘Where do we want to be?’ You need to set a target somewhere and determine how to get there,” Donahue points out.

2. Collaborate with other teams

Marketing automation shouldn’t live exclusively on your marketing team. Your sales team, IT team, developers, customer support folks, and creatives should all be on board with your automation strategy.

“Think about some of the teams within the company you’re working for,” Murray advises. “What kind of input do you need from them? If there are any automations based on contacts to your customer service team after product receipt, for example, you’re going to want to loop them in.”

It’s hard to create some of these journeys and automations when you don’t know how to talk to your customers.
Heather Browne
Director of performance marketing, Blue Acorn iCi

Your creative team, meanwhile, can help you optimize your content for UX and make sure it’s on-brand.

“Back in the day, we worked with some smaller brands that really hadn’t established their voice and tone,” Browne recalls. “Honestly, it’s hard to create some of these journeys and automations when you don’t know how to talk to your customers.”

3. Use product journeys to map content strategy to customer lifecycles

Speaking of the customer journey: Creating marketing content and personalized experiences mapped to each trigger event is where the heaviest up-front effort of marketing automation comes in.

Of course, this requires understanding your own products—and the various buyer’s journeys that could lead a consumer to purchase them.

The key to getting this step right is to think like a customer. Identify which customer touchpoints would benefit most from automation, then build out the communications and marketing processes that have the most potential to ease customers between those touchpoints.

One way to get this right is using if-then flowcharts for various trigger events. When mapping this out, experts recommend considering factors like average order value and number of SKUs. Here are a few examples:

  • If you sell replenishable consumer-packaged goods, “you need to understand the typical timelines between ordering and replacing that item, so that you know when to trigger a reminder email to repurchase,” Murray says.
  • If you sell high-ticket items, consider building out product-specific automations for your top performers. Here, Gordon points to mattress company and Noticed/Klaviyo client Layla Sleep, whose two hero products clock in at around $1.5K. “Each one of those purchases is a huge, huge deal every time that sale comes through,” Gordon says. “That makes it worth it to put in the time and effort to build out product-specific abandon cart flows.”
  • If you have a high number of SKUs, stick to the basics. Consider a company that sells Mustang parts with incredibly granular fitments: In a case like this, where the number of SKUs could be in the hundreds of thousands, “you’d probably be better off taking an overarching category-based approach” to marketing automation, Gordon says—category-broad abandon carts, for example, for cars vs. rims vs. engines.
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AI, machine learning, and predictive intelligence can help here, too, Murray adds. Klaviyo, for example, can estimate important dates for you, like when a customer is most likely to purchase again, when they’re likely to lapse, and more—and help you develop an automation strategy that keeps your brand top of mind at the most opportune moment possible.

Image shows a customer profile in the back end of Klaviyo, including customer behavior data like when they last viewed a product and their average time between orders. Next to that is a summary of predictive analytics about that profile, including their churn risk and expected date of next order.

Overall, know your audience. If a customer just spent $2K on a mattress or a waterproof winter coat, don’t follow up with a similar mattress or waterproof winter coat.

“That’s where you can get into ‘complete your set-up’ kinda stuff,” Gordon says. “You bought the mattress, now get the sheets, get the pillows. You bought the camping chair, but you don’t have the table, you don’t have the cot, you don’t have the full experience.”

“You don’t want it to be one size fits all,” Murray agrees. “Those types of ‘You may also like’ cross-sells should vary for every client and every product.”

You don’t want it to be one size fits all.
Lindsey Murray
VP of performance marketing, Blue Acorn iCi

Or, skip the cross-sell altogether. There are some industries and business models where it doesn’t make sense at all, warns Gordon—for example, a company that sells only wiper blades.

“That’s something you only need every two years or so, so they have a really long customer win-back timeframe,” Gordon points out. “Unless the product is faulty or the customer has a second vehicle, there’s not really a post-purchase opportunity there once someone buys.”

Want to go beyond marketing automation strategy? We cover everything you need to know about building and executing a smart, effective marketing automation strategy in this series. Check out:

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Marketing automation strategy FAQs

How to get started with marketing automation?

The first step in getting started with marketing automation is developing a blueprint for your marketing automation strategy. This process involves defining your marketing automation goals, collaborating with cross-functional teams beyond marketing, and using product journeys to map content strategy to customer lifecycles.

How to implement marketing automation?

To implement marketing automation, you first need to select the right marketing automation technology for your business. When selecting marketing automation technology, make sure it offers strong data integrations and the kind of reporting capabilities you need, and that it aligns with the complexity of your marketing program and your budget.

What are the technologies used for marketing automation?

Quality marketing automation depends, largely, on quality data, and the sophistication of the technology that gives you access to it. Klaviyo leverages your audience’s historical and real-time data from multiple integrated sources, streamlining workflows and maximizing your team’s efficiency while also helping you understand what’s meaningful to your customers. In turn, it empowers you to surface more relevant content for them, precisely when they’re most likely to act on it.

Jax Connelly
Jax Connelly
Lead editor
Jax Connelly (they/she) brings 15 years of editorial experience to their role as lead editor at Klaviyo. She started her career doing SEO at a small digital ad agency and spent most of her twenties managing a financial magazine for a trade association based in Washington, DC. Most recently, they studied and taught writing at Columbia College Chicago during the peak years of the pandemic. Outside of her day job, Jax is an award-winning creative writer who has received honors including 4 Notables in the Best American Essays series, contest awards from publications like Nowhere Magazine and Prairie Schooner, and a residency from the Ragdale Foundation. Jax lives in Chicago, a block away from Lake Michigan.

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