7 Steps to Digital Transformation with a DXP
Phil Mandelbaum
Fractional CMO | Agency President + CEO | Publicist, Cat Brooks | Brand, Digital, Social, Content, PR and Political Strategist | Award-Winning Writer, Ghostwriter and Editor | Sold 1 Business
Why Your CDP Needs a Digital Experience Platform
Even standardized, validated, deduplicated and consolidated customer data used to create customer profiles for advanced targeting needs a conduit.?Customer data platforms?(CDPs) allow?marketers?and sales and?CX?professionals to use data for modeling, segmentation, targeting, testing and more, improving the performance and efficiency of your?lead generation, nurturing and conversion efforts. They also integrate with end channels, like?email marketing?or digital advertising platforms. But they don’t do everything. And that’s where the digital experience platform, or DXP, comes in, leveraging the CDP’s “solid bedrock of data” for “the delivery of personalized experiences that consumers have come to expect and demand from brands.” This is how you initiate your digital transformation.
DXP and CDP FAQs
What is a DXP?
A DXP, or digital experience platform, is “an integrated set of core technologies that support the composition, management, delivery and optimization of contextualized digital experiences,” according to the popularly accepted definition developed by Gartner. The best, like Bloomreach, Optimizely or Progress Sitefinity, comprise a single collaborative platform powered by AI to create frictionless omnichannel digital journeys; other DXPs would be better described as complicated marketing tech stacks, customized internally to function like a single platform. Either way, DXPs can prove highly valuable not only for consumers (B2C) but also employees (B2E) and business partners (B2B). For many organizations, the DXP has become the central hub for all these functions. Its core capabilities include content management, personalization and context awareness, customer journey mapping, and presentation, delivery and orchestration; they can also assist with eCommerce, product management and digital asset management.
To be included in the most widely read?DXP comparison guide, each platform has to meet the following criteria:?
They must also enable the following, at least via integration:
What is the difference between a DXP and a CDP?
DXP providers argue that the CDP will inevitably be absorbed by the DXP — with the CDP collecting, sifting, optimizing and delivering the data the AI-powered DXP uses to strategize and implement streamlined, consistent, authentic, empathic, personalized and predictive experiences via third-party integrations like email or social media marketing platforms. Other DXPs have capabilities that essentially mimic the functions of the CDP.
While a DXP is fundamentally designed for the management, creation and performance analysis of the content and experiences you provide customers, clients or employees, the CDP was built for the real-time collection, management and implementation of data — to optimize that content and those experiences. As DXP provider?Sitecore explains, “the CDP’s segmentation and decisioning capabilities refine the experience, allowing marketers to ‘read the room’ and ensure campaigns are perfectly pitched for their target audience.”
With a DXP, you can manage all the technical and tactical components of your digital marketing, sales and CX strategies, including eCommerce, digital asset management, customer relationship management and marketing automation; with a CDP, you can collect and organize data from all sources, online and off, including DMPs, CRMs and MMHs — or replace them entirely. (Don’t believe me??Read this.)?
With a?composable?DXP, you can decide which components you need; if you’ve already mastered your CDP, you may want to identify a composable DXP solution that incorporates your existing tech, whereas you might’ve otherwise preferred a DXP?with CDP capabilities.
What is a composable DXP?
The newest advancement in the DXP space is the deconstruction of the DXP; the composable DXP functions like a tech stack, with its parts combined into sets of PBCs (packaged business capabilities). Truly customizable, these next-gen, cloud-native and API-driven DXPs can be quickly purpose-built — and then rebuilt as needs, goals, opportunities and obstacles shift.
7 Steps to Implementing the Right DXP at Your Organization
As with any new technology investment, it can be tricky to convince your CEO, CTO, CMO, sales director or HR lead to transform how you centralize all your marketing, sales, CX and employee experience functions.?The following steps will help you make the case for a digital experience platform:
1. Identify the primary stakeholders, form a working group and design a comprehensive digital experience strategy
Implementing a digital experience platform can impact employees across your organization and even kickstart a firmwide digital transformation. It also requires a strategy, encompassing all digital touchpoints across the organization.
To finetune and streamline the process, invite?and include?a diverse group?of workers who:
This should include engaged employees — up and down the proverbial ladder — from marketing, sales, CX, employee experience/HR, procurement, IT, data science/analytics and legal (but should be unique to each organization).?
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2. Solicit input from each stakeholder on tech and data usability issues
Employees across your organization face different obstacles throughout the digital journey, resulting from tech deficiencies and incompatibilities and the inadequate management and use of data. Ask each member of your working group to create a list of the tech and data limitations impacting their productivity, efficiency, effectiveness, and employee experience.
3. Create a master list of issues from commonalities across job functions
Review each list, and document commonalities as well as disconnects. Analyze all the issues in terms of pain points, and how they’re impacted by tech and data weaknesses. Then, create a list stack-ranked by business impact; double-check it to ensure adherence to?DEI principles.
4. Review the benefits and weaknesses of your existing marketing, sales, CX and HR tools, and clearly outline how a DXP can address your pain points and advance your strategy
To summarize for your C-suite what a digital experience platform could mean for your organization, first articulate how your existing investments are falling short, causing marketing, sales, customer experience and even employee experience teams to underperform against critical KPIs. Then, be sure to address the following:
5. Compare and contrast DXP solutions based on predefined criteria
Before requesting demos, be sure you know exactly what you want your DXP to achieve — including?must-have?features, such as:
To aid you in the competitive analysis process, use these criteria:
6. Demo the DXP solutions that most meet your criteria
Start with the 10 best DXPs:
7. Train, test, monitor, analyze and upgrade your DXP solution
Many DXP providers offer trial periods, vendor/partner onboarding guidance, and support through implementation, utilization and upgrades, so:?
Need Help Creating or Amplifying Your Content?
Even with a powerful DXP and the most organized data in the industry, you may not see the performance results you seek.?Work with Customer Engagement Insider?to craft (and promote) value-add custom content that generates?the right leads?for your organization. It’s what we do best!
Originally published via?Customer Engagement Insider?|?More Like This